auto-toc.js
:book: minimal 1KB on-the-fly TOC generator
Creates a table of contents automatically in your generated markdown or any other HTML page.
Demo
Try the online editor
Why another TOC generator?
Of course there are already tools to generate a TOC, but they need to be
executed during build time. If you convert markdown to HTML you need a build
process anyway, but generation of a TOC might be another build step in your pipeline,
if you don't use Jekyll with Kramdown which suports a TOC out of the box.
This library generates the TOC at runtime in the browser. If you use HTML (not generated from markdown)
you can use this library as well. It helps you to avoid updating your TOC at build time completely.
Comparision:
Usage
NOTE This won't work for your README.md files on github.com, see here why.
This feature needs to be provided by GitHub, see here
You can use this with README.md files on your GitHub pages or any other
pages, where you have control to the (sub)domain.
Your README.md before
# My fancy library
## Installation
### Windows
### OSX
## Usage
### Basic
### Advanced
Assuming all the headings are children of a div with the class content
in your generated HTML file.
Then just add a div element with a special class and add two script tags:
# My fancy library
## Table of contents
<div class="toc-placeholder"></div>
## Installation
### Windows
### OSX
## Usage
### Basic
### Advanced
<script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/auto-toc.js/0.0.6/dist.js"></script>
<script>
autoToc('.content', '.toc-placeholder');
</script>
API
autoToc(contentSelector, placeholderSelector, options)
- contentSelector - CSS selector of the parent of all headings
- placeholderSelector - CSS selector where to inject the TOC
- contentSelector - options object
- max - Maximum heading level for TOC generation
- ignore - Array of strings which will be ignored for TOC generation
Embed auto-toc.js
You can either use jsdelivr to embed auto-toc.js (see example above) to your page or install it via npm:
npm i auto-toc --save
auto-toc.js is bundled as Universal Module Defition.
So you can use it with CommonJS, AMD or just via
the global window scope.
See it in action
CommonJS
var autoToc = require('auto-toc')
Ignoring headings via CSS class
You can also ignore headings by using the toc-ignore
class:
<h2 class="toc-ignore">Ignore this heading in the TOC</h2>