Full mode
A demo of mode full — both the nav and the TOC are hidden for centered, distraction-free reading.
This page uses mode: full. Both the left nav and the right TOC are gone.
What’s left is a single centered column — nothing in the margins competing for
attention. The site header stays, so you can always navigate away.
This page uses mode: full. Both the left nav and the right TOC are gone.
What’s left is a single centered column — nothing in the margins competing for
attention. The site header stays, so you can always navigate away.
Some pages read best with nothing around them: a launch announcement, a release
note, a long-form guide, an architecture write-up. full strips the chrome and
centers the content at a comfortable measure so the words carry the page.
Why drop the chrome
A persistent sidebar is great for browsing a doc set, but on a page someone has arrived at to read end-to-end, it’s visual noise. Removing it — and the TOC — narrows the focus to one thing. The content still uses a capped width (wider than the default reading column, but not edge-to-edge), because long lines of prose are tiring to read.
When to reach for it
- Announcements and changelogs that are read top to bottom.
- Marketing or overview pages that want a clean canvas but still need readable text.
- Any page where the global nav is a distraction rather than a help.
When not to
If readers need to jump between many sections of the same page, prefer
toc-only — it drops the nav but keeps the “On this page”
list. And if you want true edge-to-edge graphics, use uncapped.
Still reachable
Notice the header bar above is untouched: the logo, the tabs, search, and the
light/dark toggle all stay. full removes the page’s sidebars, not the site’s
navigation entirely — so a reader is never stranded.