4.1 KiB
icon | status |
---|---|
material/tooltip-plus | new |
Tooltips
Technical documentation often incurs the usage of many acronyms, which may need additional explanation, especially for new user of your project. For these matters, Material for MkDocs uses a combination of Markdown extensions to enable site-wide glossaries.
Configuration
This configuration enables abbreviations and allows to build a simple
project-wide glossary, sourcing definitions from a central location. Add the
following line to mkdocs.yml
:
markdown_extensions:
- abbr
- attr_list
- pymdownx.snippets
See additional configuration options:
Improved tooltips
When improved tooltips are enabled, Material for MkDocs replaces the browser's
rendering logic for title
attribute with beautiful little tooltips.
Add the following lines to mkdocs.yml
:
theme:
features:
- content.tooltips
Now, tooltips will be rendered for the following elements:
- Content – elements with a
title
, permalinks and code copy button - Header – home button, header title, color palette switch and repository link
- Navigation – links that are shortened with ellipsis, i.e.
...
Usage
Adding tooltips
The Markdown syntax allows to specify a title
for each link, which will
render as a beautiful tooltip when improved tooltips are enabled. Add a
tooltip to a link with the following lines:
[Hover me](https://example.com "I'm a tooltip!")
Tooltips can also be added to link references:
[Hover me][example]
[example]: https://example.com "I'm a tooltip!"
For all other elements, a title
can be added by using the Attribute Lists
extension:
:material-information-outline:{ title="Important information" }
:material-information-outline:{ title="Important information" }
Adding abbreviations
Abbreviations can be defined by using a special syntax similar to URLs and
footnotes, starting with a *
and immediately followed by the term or
acronym to be associated in square brackets:
The HTML specification is maintained by the W3C.
*[HTML]: Hyper Text Markup Language
*[W3C]: World Wide Web Consortium
The HTML specification is maintained by the W3C.
*[HTML]: Hyper Text Markup Language *[W3C]: World Wide Web Consortium
Adding a glossary
The Snippets extension can be used to implement a simple glossary by moving all abbreviations in a dedicated file1, and auto-append this file to all pages with the following configuration:
=== ":octicons-file-code-16: includes/abbreviations.md
"
```` markdown
*[HTML]: Hyper Text Markup Language
*[W3C]: World Wide Web Consortium
````
=== ":octicons-file-code-16: mkdocs.yml
"
```` yaml
markdown_extensions:
- pymdownx.snippets:
auto_append:
- includes/abbreviations.md
````
-
It's highly recommended to put the Markdown file containing the abbreviations outside of the
docs
folder (here, a folder with the nameincludes
is used), as MkDocs might otherwise complain about an unreferenced file. ↩︎