/jekyll-toc

Jekyll plugin which generates a table of contents.

Primary LanguageRubyMIT LicenseMIT

jekyll-toc

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Table of Contents

Installation

Add jekyll-toc plugin in your site's Gemfile, and run bundle install.

gem 'jekyll-toc'

Add jekyll-toc to the gems: section in your site's _config.yml.

plugins:
  - jekyll-toc

Set toc: true in posts for which you want the TOC to appear.

---
layout: post
title: "Welcome to Jekyll!"
toc: true
---

Usage

There are three Liquid filters, which can be applied to HTML content, e.g. the Liquid variable content available in Jekyll's templates.

Basic Usage

toc filter

Add the toc filter to your site's {{ content }} (e.g. _layouts/post.html).

{{ content | toc }}

This filter places the TOC directly above the content.

Advanced Usage

If you'd like separated TOC and content, you can use {% toc %} tag (or toc_only filter) and inject_anchors filter.

{% toc %} tag / toc_only filter

Generates the TOC itself as described below. Mostly useful in cases where the TOC should not be placed immediately above the content but at some other place of the page, i.e. an aside.

<div>
  <div id="table-of-contents">
    {% toc %}
  </div>
  <div id="markdown-content">
    {{ content }}
  </div>
</div>

⚠️ {% toc %} Tag Limitation

{% toc %} works only for Jekyll Posts and Jekyll Collections. If you'd like to use {% toc %} except posts or collections, please use toc_only filter as described below.

<div>
  <div id="table-of-contents">
    {{ content | toc_only }}
  </div>
  <div id="markdown-content">
    {{ content | inject_anchors }}
  </div>
</div>

inject_anchors filter

Injects HTML anchors into the content without actually outputting the TOC itself. They are of the form:

<a class="anchor" href="#heading1-1" aria-hidden="true">
  <span class="octicon octicon-link"></span>
</a>

This is only useful when the TOC itself should be placed at some other location with the toc_only filter.

Generated HTML

jekyll-toc generates an unordered list by default. The HTML output is as follows.

<ul id="toc" class="section-nav">
  <li class="toc-entry toc-h1"><a href="#heading1">Heading.1</a>
    <ul>
      <li class="toc-entry toc-h2"><a href="#heading1-1">Heading.1-1</a></li>
      <li class="toc-entry toc-h2"><a href="#heading1-2">Heading.1-2</a></li>
    </ul>
  </li>
  <li class="toc-entry toc-h1"><a href="#heading2">Heading.2</a>
    <ul>
      <li class="toc-entry toc-h2"><a href="#heading2-1">Heading.2-1</a>
        <ul>
          <li class="toc-entry toc-h3"><a href="#heading2-1-1">Heading.2-1-1</a></li>
          <li class="toc-entry toc-h3"><a href="#heading2-1-2">Heading.2-1-2</a></li>
        </ul>
      </li>
      <li class="toc-entry toc-h2"><a href="#heading2-2">Heading.2-2</a></li>
    </ul>
  </li>
</ul>

screenshot

Customization

jekyll-toc is customizable on _config.yml.

Default Configuration

# _config.yml
toc:
  min_level: 1
  max_level: 6
  ordered_list: false
  no_toc_section_class: no_toc_section
  list_id: toc
  list_class: section-nav
  sublist_class: ''
  item_class: toc-entry
  item_prefix: toc-

TOC levels

# _config.yml
toc:
  min_level: 2 # default: 1
  max_level: 5 # default: 6

The default heading range is from <h1> to <h6>.

Enable TOC by default

You can enable TOC by default with Front Matter Defaults:

# _config.yml
defaults:
  - scope:
      path: ""
    values:
      toc: true

Skip TOC

The heading is ignored in the toc by adding no_toc class.

<h1>h1</h1>
<h1 class="no_toc">This heading is ignored in the TOC</h1>
<h2>h2</h2>

Skip TOC Sectionally

The headings are ignored inside the element which has no_toc_section class.

<h1>h1</h1>
<div class="no_toc_section">
  <h2>This heading is ignored in the TOC</h2>
  <h3>This heading is ignored in the TOC</h3>
</div>
<h4>h4</h4>

Which would result in only the <h1> & <h4> within the example being included in the TOC.

The class can be configured on _config.yml:

# _config.yml
toc:
  no_toc_section_class: exclude # default: no_toc_section

Configuring multiple classes are allowed:

# _config.yml
toc:
  no_toc_section_class:
    - no_toc_section
    - exclude
    - your_custom_skip_class_name

CSS Styling

The toc can be modified with CSS. The sample CSS is the following.

.section-nav {
  background-color: #fff;
  margin: 5px 0;
  padding: 10px 30px;
  border: 1px solid #e8e8e8;
  border-radius: 3px;
}

screenshot

Each TOC li entry has two CSS classes for further styling. The general toc-entry is applied to all li elements in the ul.section-nav.

Depending on the heading level each specific entry refers to, it has a second CSS class toc-XX, where XX is the HTML heading tag name. For example, the TOC entry linking to a heading <h1>...</h1> (a single # in Markdown) will get the CSS class toc-h1.

Custom CSS Class and ID

You can apply custom CSS classes to the generated <ul> and <li> tags.

# _config.yml
toc:
  list_id: my-toc-id # Default: "toc"
  list_class: my-list-class # Default: "section-nav"
  sublist_class: my-sublist-class # Default: no class for sublists
  item_class: my-item-class # Default: "toc-entry"
  item_prefix: item- # Default: "toc-":

Using Unordered/Ordered lists

By default the table of contents will be generated as an unordered list via <ul></ul> tags. This can be configured to use ordered lists instead <ol></ol>. This can be configured in _config.yml:

# _config.yml
toc:
  ordered_list: true # default is false

In order to change the list type, use the list-style-type css property. Add a class to the sublist_class configuration to append it to the ol tags so that you can add the list-style-type property.

Example

# _config.yml
toc:
  ordered_list: true
  list_class: my-list-class
  sublist_class: my-sublist-class
.my-list-class {
  list-style-type: upper-alpha;
}

.my-sublist-class: {
  list-style-type: lower-alpha;
}

This will produce:

screenshot

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