By default, the navigation includes only normal pages. However, you can configure Just the Docs to include also pages from Jekyll collections.
You store collection pages in directories that start with an underscore (
_), e.g.,_tests. You won’t see yourtestscollection pages in the navigation if you store them in atestsdirectory!1
To define a Jekyll tests collection named Tests in your main navigation, store its pages in the _tests directory, and add the following to _config.yml:
collections:
tests:
output: true
just_the_docs:
collections:
tests:
name: Tests
Together with the name to be used for a collection in the navigation, you can configure the following options:
nav_exclude: true to exclude the entire collection from the main navigationnav_fold: true to fold the collection, instead of showing links to all its top-level pages2search_exclude: true to exclude all the collection pages from search resultsThe main navigation for all your normal pages (if any) is displayed before those in collections. When all your pages are in a single collection, its name is not displayed.
You can configure multiple collections. This creates categories in the main navigation with the configured names.
collections:
tests:
output: true
tutorials:
output: true
just_the_docs:
collections:
tests:
name: Tests
search_exclude: true
tutorials:
name: Tutorials
nav_fold: true
The navigation for each collection is a separate name space for page titles: a page in one collection cannot be the parent of a page in a different collection, nor of a normal page.
You can optionally specify a directory to store all your collections. For example, if you specify collections_dir: my_collections in _config.yml, you should then store the pages of the tests collection in the my_collections/_tests directory. ↩
When JavaScript is disabled in the browser, all folded collections are automatically expanded, since clicking expander symbols has no effect. ↩