middleman-navtree
is an extension for the Middleman static site generator that lets you generate navigation trees and menus based on your site structure.
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'middleman-navtree'
And then execute:
$ bundle install
Activate the extension with default options by adding the following to middleman's config.rb
:
activate :navtree
Alternatively, you can specify the options you want. Here's an example showing the explicit defaults:
activate :navtree do |options|
options.data_file = 'tree.yml' # The data file where our navtree is stored.
options.automatic_tree_updates = true # The tree.yml file will be updated automatically when source files are changed.
options.ignore_files = ['sitemap.xml', 'robots.txt'] # An array of files we want to ignore when building our tree.
options.ignore_dir = ['assets'] # An array of directories we want to ignore when building our tree.
options.home_title = 'Home' # The default link title of the home page (located at "/"), if otherwise not detected.
options.promote_files = ['index.html.erb'] # Any files we might want to promote to the front of our navigation
options.ext_whitelist = [] # If you add extensions (like '.md') to this array, it builds a whitelist of filetypes for inclusion in the navtree.
end
When you activate the extension, a tree.yml file will be added to your data
folder, mimicking your directory structure. Suppose the structure looks like this:
We can print the entire navigation tree to our template with the tree_to_html
helper:
<ul><%= tree_to_html(data.tree) %></ul>
Here's the tree.yml file and the resulting rendered navtree (styled):
data.tree
refers to the contents of /data/tree.yml
(see http://middlemanapp.com/advanced/local-data/ for more information about data files).
You can just as easily print subtrees at any level:
<ul><%= tree_to_html(data.tree['chapter-1']) %></ul>
<ul><%= tree_to_html(data.tree['chapter-1']['exercises']) %></ul>
A second paramter allows you to limit the depth of your trees and subtrees:
<ul><%= tree_to_html(data.tree, 2) %></ul>
You can combine both techniques to print menus at any level, with a specific depth:
<ul><%= tree_to_html(data.tree['chapter-1'], 1) %></ul>
Another helper in the gem allows you to add next/previous links for paginating through the tree. For example:
<%= previous_link(data.tree) %> <%= next_link(data.tree) %>
You can likewise limit pagination to a specific subtree:
<%= previous_link(data.tree['chapter-2']) %><%= next_link(data.tree['chapter-2']) %>
Default locale is :en
. If you want to change it for example to :pl
, configure middleman:
activate :i18n, :mount_at_root => :pl
and put locales file pl.yml
in locales
directory in format:
---
pl:
previous_page: 'Poprzednia'
next_page: 'Następna'
Middleman Navtree does not currently support links to files using Directory Indexes. For details and the status of this feature, see #12 Support Directory Indexes.
- Fork the project
- Create your feature branch (git checkout -b my-new-feature)
- Commit your changes (git commit -am 'Add some feature')
- Push to your github repository (git push origin my-new-feature)
- Submit a Pull Request