Table of Contents extension
The TableOfContents extension lets you get a list of anchors from your document and passes on important information about each anchor (for example the depth, the content and a unique ID for each heading but also the active state and scroll states for each anchor). This can be used to render the table of content on your own.
Install
Once done, you can install the extension from our private registry:
npm install @tiptap/extension-table-of-contentsSettings
anchorTypes
The types of the nodes you want to use for your Table of Content. By default this is ["heading"] but in case you create your own custom Heading extension OR extend the existing one and use a different name, you can pass that name here.
Default: ["heading"]
TableOfContents.configure({ anchorTypes: ['heading', 'customAnchorType'], })getIndex
This option can be used to customize how the item indexes are calculated. By default this is using an internal function but it can be overwritten to do some custom logic.
TableOfContents.configure({ getIndex: (anchor, previousAnchors, level) => { // do some custom logic, but for this example we will just return 1 return 1 }, })We expose two ready to use functions - one to generate linear indexes which continue to count from 1 to n and one to generate hierarchical indexes that will count from 1 to n for each level.
import { getLinearIndexes, getHierarchicalIndexes } from '@tiptap/extension-table-of-contents' // generate linear indexes TableOfContents.configure({ getIndex: getLinearIndexes, }) // generate hierarchical indexes TableOfContents.configure({ getIndex: getHierarchicalIndexes, })getLevel
This option can be used to customize how item levels are generated. By default the normal level generation is used that checks for heading element level attributes. If you want to customize this because for example you want to include custom anchors in your heading generation, you can use this to do so.
TableOfContents.configure({ getLevel: (anchor, previousAnchors) => { // do some custom logic, but for this example we will just return 1 return 1 }, })getId
A builder function that returns a unique ID for each heading. Inside the argument you get access to the headings text content (for example you want to generate IDs based on the text content of the heading).
By default this is a function that uses the uuid package to generate a unique ID.
Default: () => uuid()
// here we use an imaginary "slugify" function // you should probably also add a unique identifier to the slug TableOfContents.configure({ getId: (content) => slugify(content), })scrollParent
The scroll parent you want to attach to. This is used to determine which heading currently is active or was already scrolled over. By default this is a callback function that returns the window but you can pass a callback that returns any HTML element here.
Default: () => window
// For example the editors DOM element itself is the scrolling element TableOfContents.configure({ scrollParent: () => editor.view.dom, })onUpdate
The most important option that you must set to use this extension. This is a callback function that gets called whenever the Table of Content updates. You get access to an array of heading data (see below) which you can use to render your own Table of Content.
To render the table of content you can render it by any means you want. You can use a framework like Vue, React or Svelte or you can use a simple templating engine like Handlebars or Pug. You can also use a simple document.createElement to render the table of content.
You can pass a second argument to get the information whether this is the initial creation step for the ToC data.
Default: undefined
// with vanilla JS const tocElement = document.createElement('div') document.body.appendChild(tocElement) TableOfContents.configure({ onUpdate: (anchors, isCreate) => { tocElement.innerHTML = '' if (isCreate) { console.log('This is the inital creation step for the ToC data') } anchors.forEach((anchor) => { const anchorElement = document.createElement('div') anchorElement.innerHTML = anchor.content anchorElement.dataset.id = anchor.id anchorElement.dataset.depth = anchor.depth anchorElement.dataset.active = anchor.active anchorElement.dataset.scrolled = anchor.scrolled tocElement.appendChild(anchorElement) }) }, })// with react const [anchors, setAnchors] = useState([]) // inside the useEditor hook you could then do something like that: TableOfContents.configure({ onUpdate: (anchors) => { setAnchors(anchors) }, })// with vue const anchors = ref([]) TableOfContents.configure({ onUpdate: (anchors) => { anchors.value = anchors }, })Storage
content
The heading content of the current document
editor.storage.tableOfContents.contentanchors
An array of HTML nodes
editor.storage.tableOfContents.anchorsscrollHandler
The scrollHandler used by the scroll function. Should not be changed or edited but could be used to manually bind this function somewhere else
editor.storage.tableOfContents.scrollHandler()scrollPosition
The current scrollPosition inside the scrollParent.
editor.storage.tableOfContents.scrollPositionThe anchors array
The array returned by the storage or the onUpdate function includes objects structured like this:
{ dom: HTMLElement // the HTML element for this anchor editor: Editor // the editor id: string // the node id isActive: boolean // whether this anchor is currently active isScrolledOver: boolean // whether this anchor was already scrolled over itemIndex: number // the index of the item on its current level level: number // the current level of the item - this could be different from the actual anchor level and is used to render the hierarchy from high to low headlines node: Node // the ProseMirror node for this anchor originalLevel: number // the actual level pos: number // the position of the anchor node textContent: string // the text content of the anchor }This should give you enough flexibility to render your own table of content.