Docs Introduction
The docs feature provides users with a way to organize Markdown files in a hierarchical format.
#
Document IDEvery document has a unique id
. By default, a document id
is the name of the document (without the extension) relative to the root docs directory.
For example, greeting.md
id is greeting
and guide/hello.md
id is guide/hello
.
website # Root directory of your siteβββ docsΒ Β βββ greeting.md βββ guide βββ hello.md
However, the last part of the id
can be defined by user in the front matter. For example, if guide/hello.md
's content is defined as below, its final id
is guide/part1
.
---id: part1---Lorem ipsum
If you want more control over the last part of the document URL, it is possible to add a slug
(defaults to the id
).
---id: part1slug: part1.html---Lorem ipsum
note
It is possible to use:
- absolute slugs:
slug: /mySlug
,slug: /
... - relative slugs:
slug: mySlug
,slug: ./../mySlug
...
#
Home page docsIf you want a document to be available at the root, and have a path like https://docusaurus.io/docs/
, you can use the slug frontmatter:
---id: my-home-docslug: /---Lorem ipsum
#
Docs-only modeIf you only want the documentation feature, you can run your Docusaurus 2 site without a landing page and display your documentation page as the index page instead.
To enable docs-only mode, set the docs plugin routeBasePath: '/'
, and use the frontmatter slug: /
on the document that should be the index page (more infos).
caution
You should delete the existing homepage at ./src/pages/index.js
, or else there will be two files mapping to the same route!
tip
There's also a "blog-only mode" for those who only want to use the blog feature of Docusaurus 2. You can use the same method detailed above. Follow the setup instructions on Blog-only mode.