# Customization Project documentation is as diverse as the projects themselves and Material for MkDocs is a great starting point for making it look beautiful. However, as you write your documentation, you may reach a point where small adjustments are necessary to preserve your brand's style. ## Adding assets [MkDocs] provides several ways to customize a theme. In order to make a few small tweaks to Material for MkDocs, you can just add CSS and JavaScript files to the `docs` directory. [MkDocs]: https://www.mkdocs.org ### Additional CSS If you want to tweak some colors or change the spacing of certain elements, you can do this in a separate style sheet. The easiest way is by creating a new style sheet file in the `docs` directory: ``` { .sh .no-copy } . ├─ docs/ │ └─ stylesheets/ │ └─ extra.css └─ mkdocs.yml ``` Then, add the following lines to `mkdocs.yml`: ``` yaml extra_css: - stylesheets/extra.css ``` ### Additional JavaScript If you want to integrate another syntax highlighter or add some custom logic to your theme, create a new JavaScript file in the `docs` directory: ``` { .sh .no-copy } . ├─ docs/ │ └─ javascripts/ │ └─ extra.js └─ mkdocs.yml ``` Then, add the following lines to `mkdocs.yml`: ``` yaml extra_javascript: - javascripts/extra.js ``` ## Extending the theme If you want to alter the HTML source (e.g. add or remove some parts), you can extend the theme. MkDocs supports [theme extension], an easy way to override parts of Material for MkDocs without forking from git. This ensures that you can update to the latest version more easily. [theme extension]: https://www.mkdocs.org/user-guide/styling-your-docs/#using-the-theme-custom_dir ### Setup and theme structure Enable Material for MkDocs as usual in `mkdocs.yml`, and create a new folder for `overrides` which you then reference using the [`custom_dir`][custom_dir] setting: ``` yaml theme: name: material custom_dir: overrides ``` !!! warning "Theme extension prerequisites" As the [`custom_dir`][custom_dir] setting is used for the theme extension process, Material for MkDocs needs to be installed via `pip` and referenced with the [`name`][name] setting in `mkdocs.yml`. It will not work when cloning from `git`. The structure in the `overrides` directory must mirror the directory structure of the original theme, as any file in the `overrides` directory will replace the file with the same name which is part of the original theme. Besides, further assets may also be put in the `overrides` directory: ``` { .sh .no-copy } . ├─ .icons/ # Bundled icon sets ├─ assets/ │ ├─ images/ # Images and icons │ ├─ javascripts/ # JavaScript files │ └─ stylesheets/ # Style sheets ├─ partials/ │ ├─ integrations/ # Third-party integrations │ │ ├─ analytics/ # Analytics integrations │ │ └─ analytics.html # Analytics setup │ ├─ languages/ # Translation languages │ ├─ actions.html # Actions │ ├─ comments.html # Comment system (empty by default) │ ├─ consent.html # Consent │ ├─ content.html # Page content │ ├─ copyright.html # Copyright and theme information │ ├─ feedback.html # Was this page helpful? │ ├─ footer.html # Footer bar │ ├─ header.html # Header bar │ ├─ icons.html # Custom icons │ ├─ language.html # Translation setup │ ├─ logo.html # Logo in header and sidebar │ ├─ nav.html # Main navigation │ ├─ nav-item.html # Main navigation item │ ├─ pagination.html # Pagination (used for blog) │ ├─ post.html # Blog post excerpt │ ├─ search.html # Search interface │ ├─ social.html # Social links │ ├─ source.html # Repository information │ ├─ source-file.html # Source file information │ ├─ tabs.html # Tabs navigation │ ├─ tabs-item.html # Tabs navigation item │ ├─ tags.html # Tags │ ├─ toc.html # Table of contents │ └─ toc-item.html # Table of contents item ├─ 404.html # 404 error page ├─ base.html # Base template ├─ blog.html # Blog index page ├─ blog-archive.html # Blog archive index page ├─ blog-category.html # Blog category index page ├─ blog-post.html # Blog post page └─ main.html # Default page ``` [custom_dir]: https://www.mkdocs.org/user-guide/configuration/#custom_dir [name]: https://www.mkdocs.org/user-guide/configuration/#name ### Overriding partials In order to override a partial, we can replace it with a file of the same name and location in the `overrides` directory. For example, to replace the original `footer.html` partial, create a new `footer.html` partial in the `overrides` directory: ``` { .sh .no-copy } . ├─ overrides/ │ └─ partials/ │ └─ footer.html └─ mkdocs.yml ``` MkDocs will now use the new partial when rendering the theme. This can be done with any file. ### Overriding blocks recommended { #overriding-blocks data-toc-label="Overriding blocks" } Besides overriding partials, it's also possible to override (and extend) template blocks, which are defined inside the templates and wrap specific features. In order to set up block overrides, create a `main.html` file inside the `overrides` directory: ``` { .sh .no-copy } . ├─ overrides/ │ └─ main.html └─ mkdocs.yml ``` Then, e.g. to override the site title, add the following lines to `main.html`: ``` html {% extends "base.html" %} {% block htmltitle %}