Updated documentation TOCs

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# CI and other odd pieces
**Contents**<br>
[Continuous Integration systems](#continuous-integration-systems)<br>
[Other reporters](#other-reporters)<br>
[Low-level tools](#low-level-tools)<br>
[CMake](#cmake)<br>
This page talks about how Catch integrates with Continuous Integration
Build Systems may refer to low-level tools, like CMake, or larger systems that run on servers, like Jenkins or TeamCity. This page will talk about both.

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[Usage](#usage)<br>
[Specify the section to run](#specify-the-section-to-run)<br>
[Filenames as tags](#filenames-as-tags)<br>
[Override output colouring](#use-colour)<br>
[Override output colouring](#override-output-colouring)<br>
Catch works quite nicely without any command line options at all - but for those times when you want greater control the following options are available.
Click one of the followings links to take you straight to that option - or scroll on to browse the available options.

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[stdout](#stdout)<br>
[Fallback stringifier](#fallback-stringifier)<br>
[Default reporter](#default-reporter)<br>
[C++11 toggles](#c-11-toggles)<br>
[C++17 toggles](#c-17-toggles)<br>
[Other toggles](#other-toggles)<br>
[Windows header clutter](#windows-header-clutter)<br>
[Enabling stringification](#enabling-stringification)<br>
[Disabling exceptions](#disabling-exceptions)<br>
Catch is designed to "just work" as much as possible. For most people the only configuration needed is telling Catch which source file should host all the implementation code (```CATCH_CONFIG_MAIN```).

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# Supplying main() yourself
**Contents**<br>
[Let Catch take full control of args and config](#let-catch-take-full-control-of-args-and-config)<br>
[Amending the config](#amending-the-config)<br>
[Adding your own command line options](#adding-your-own-command-line-options)<br>
[Version detection](#version-detection)<br>
The easiest way to use Catch is to let it supply ```main()``` for you and handle configuring itself from the command line.
This is achieved by writing ```#define CATCH_CONFIG_MAIN``` before the ```#include "catch.hpp"``` in *exactly one* source file.

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# Release notes
**Contents**<br>
[2.4.0](#240)<br>
[2.3.0](#230)<br>
[2.2.3](#223)<br>
[2.2.2](#222)<br>
[2.2.1](#221)<br>
[2.2.0](#220)<br>
[2.1.2](#212)<br>
[2.1.1](#211)<br>
[2.1.0](#210)<br>
[2.0.1](#201)<br>
[Older versions](#older-versions)<br>
[Even Older versions](#even-older-versions)<br>
# 2.4.0
**This release brings two new experimental features, generator support

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# String conversions
**Contents**<br>
[operator << overload for std::ostream](#operator-overload-for-std-ostream)<br>
[Catch::StringMaker<T> specialisation](#catch-stringmaker-t-specialisation)<br>
[Catch::is_range<T> specialisation](#catch-is_range-t-specialisation)<br>
[Exceptions](#exceptions)<br>
Catch needs to be able to convert types you use in assertions and logging expressions into strings (for logging and reporting purposes).
Most built-in or std types are supported out of the box but there are two ways that you can tell Catch how to convert your own types (or other, third-party types) into strings.