Thanks for the suggestion, Komiya. I'm not sure how to implement the code, 
but I'll read up on that when I get the chance. Much appreciated.

On Friday, August 19, 2016 at 8:35:07 PM UTC-7, Komiya Takeshi wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> It seems there are no special template variable to show a toctree for a 
> specific document.
> The following code might help you::
> def on_html_page_context(app, pagename, tempaltename, context, docname):
>     # get ToC for "a" document
>     toc_for_a = self.env.get_toc_for('a', self)
>
>     # set up template variable "toc_for_a"
>     context['toc_for_a'] = self.render_partial(toc_for_a)['fragment']
>
> def setup(app):
>     app.connect('html-page-context', on_html_page_context)
>
> I don't test this locally, but it might work. But I don't know how 
> customize the readthedocs theme.
> Please refer templating section of sphinx docs.
>
> Thanks,
> Takeshi KOMIYA
>
> 2016年8月17日水曜日 8時16分52秒 UTC+9 Mark Peters:
>>
>> Hi,
>>
>> A snippet of our doc file structure looks like the following:
>>
>> index.rst
>>
>> .. toctree::
>>     a
>>
>> a.rst
>>
>>
>> .. toctree::
>>
>>     a.1
>>
>>     a.2
>>
>> Would it be possible to insert a toctree on pages a.1 and a.2 that 
>> includes links to each other (siblings) and no other links? For example, in 
>> our multi-page tutorials, I'd like to include a toctree on each page of the 
>> tutorial that lists all of the other steps in the tutorial, so that readers 
>> can move forward or backward multiple steps, if desired.
>>
>> I'm using the Sphinx ReadTheDocs theme.
>>
>> Thanks,
>> Mark
>>
>>

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