Matt Wang 0ca69334b0
Fix ARIA labels for all anchors with href="#"; adds aria-pressed information for toggles (#1262)
This follows up from #1259 and closes #1261. Basically, this PR accomplishes the two items discussed in the issue:

1. for all anchors that are *actually* buttons (i.e., have `href="#"`), I've replaced them with a semantic `<button>`
    - under the hood, I've made a `.btn-reset` class pulling out the reset from #1259, so there's no visual change
2. for anchors that are ["toggle buttons"](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/Accessibility/ARIA/Roles/button_role#toggle_buttons) (the mobile menu nav, sidebar children/grandchildren toggles), I've added an `aria-pressed` property that is updated as the button is clicked

I've also slightly modified some of the `aria-label`s to make them more consistent. Observe that we *shouldn't* update these as the button is clicked; screen readers use the `aria-pressed` property to add an annotation to each button.

To test this,

- the sidebar children and grandchildren can be done on the deploy preview:
    - open an arbitrary page; observe that the sidebar children/grandchildren dropdown ticks now have a proper `aria-label` and `aria-pressed`, as well as otherwise work as intended
    - toggle one of the buttons; observe the `aria-pressed` role changing as this is done
    - open a grandchild page; observe that the `aria-pressed` has a correct default wrt whether or not the page is active
- the mobile menu can be done on the deploy preview; on a smaller viewport, observe the correct `aria-pressed`
- two features require local changes to test:
    - the `site.search.button` needs to be enabled in the `_config.yml`. To test this, locally clone the repo, change the flag, and observe that the button still works as intended + has no visual regressions.
    - the collections feature is a bit more complicated. To test this, locally clone the repo, add an arbitrary collection and changes to `_config.yml`, and observe the same behaviour for the sidebar children/grandchildren above
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Just the Docs

A modern, highly customizable, and responsive Jekyll theme for documentation with built-in search.
Easily hosted on GitHub Pages with few dependencies.

See it in action!




A video walkthrough of various Just the Docs features

https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/85418632/211225192-7e5d1116-2f4f-4305-bb9b-437fe47df071.mp4

Installation

Use the template

The Just the Docs Template provides the simplest, quickest, and easiest way to create a new website that uses the Just the Docs theme. To get started with creating a site, just click "use the template"!

Note: To use the theme, you do not need to clone or fork the Just the Docs repo! You should do that only if you intend to browse the theme docs locally, contribute to the development of the theme, or develop a new theme based on Just the Docs.

You can easily set the site created by the template to be published on GitHub Pages the template README file explains how to do that, along with other details.

If Jekyll is installed on your computer, you can also build and preview the created site locally. This lets you test changes before committing them, and avoids waiting for GitHub Pages.1 And you will be able to deploy your local build to a different platform than GitHub Pages.

More specifically, the created site:

  • uses a gem-based approach, i.e. uses a Gemfile and loads the just-the-docs gem
  • uses the GitHub Pages / Actions workflow to build and publish the site on GitHub Pages

Other than that, you're free to customize sites that you create with the template, however you like. You can easily change the versions of just-the-docs and Jekyll it uses, as well as adding further plugins.

Use RubyGems

Alternatively, you can install the theme as a Ruby Gem, without creating a new site.

Add this line to your Jekyll site's Gemfile:

gem "just-the-docs"

And add this line to your Jekyll site's _config.yml:

theme: just-the-docs

And then execute:

$ bundle

Or install it yourself as:

$ gem install just-the-docs

Alternatively, you can run it inside Docker while developing your site

$ docker-compose up

Usage

View the documentation for usage information.

Contributing

Bug reports, proposals of new features, and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/just-the-docs/just-the-docs. This project is intended to be a safe, welcoming space for collaboration, and contributors are expected to adhere to the Contributor Covenant code of conduct.

Submitting code changes:

  • Submit an Issue that motivates the changes, using the appropriate template
  • Discuss the proposed changes with other users and the maintainers
  • Open a Pull Request
  • Ensure all CI tests pass
  • Provide instructions to check the effect of the changes
  • Await code review

Design and development principles of this theme:

  1. As few dependencies as possible
  2. No build script needed
  3. First class mobile experience
  4. Make the content shine

Development

To set up your environment to develop this theme: fork this repo, the run bundle install from the root directory.

A modern devcontainer configuration for VSCode is included.

Your theme is set up just like a normal Jekyll site! To test your theme, run bundle exec jekyll serve and open your browser at http://localhost:4000. This starts a Jekyll server using your theme. Add pages, documents, data, etc. like normal to test your theme's contents. As you make modifications to your theme and to your content, your site will regenerate and you should see the changes in the browser after a refresh, just like normal.

When this theme is released, only the files in _layouts, _includes, and _sass tracked with Git will be included in the gem.

License

The theme is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.

Description
A modern, high customizable, responsive Jekyll theme for documentation with built-in search.
Readme 9.6 MiB
Languages
SCSS 39.8%
HTML 26.8%
JavaScript 14.8%
Liquid 11.2%
Ruby 4.8%
Other 2.6%