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    githubnext

    documentation

    githubnext/documentation
    Writing
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    About

    SKILL.md

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    About

    Documentation Brief description for SEO and navigation

    SKILL.md

    Documentation

    The documentation for this project is available in the docs/ directory. It uses GitHub-flavored markdown with Astro Starlight for rendering and follows the Diátaxis framework for systematic documentation.

    Diátaxis Framework

    Documentation must be organized into four distinct types, each serving a specific purpose:

    1. Tutorials (Learning-Oriented)

    Purpose: Guide beginners through achieving a specific outcome to build confidence.

    • Start with what the user will build or achieve
    • Provide a clear, step-by-step path from start to finish
    • Include concrete examples and working code
    • Assume minimal prior knowledge
    • Focus on the happy path (avoid edge cases and alternatives)
    • End with a working result the user can see and use
    • Use imperative mood: "Create a file", "Run the command"

    Avoid: Explaining concepts in depth, multiple options, troubleshooting

    2. How-to Guides (Goal-Oriented)

    Purpose: Show how to solve a specific real-world problem or accomplish a particular task.

    • Title format: "How to [accomplish specific goal]"
    • Assume the user knows the basics
    • Focus on practical steps to solve one problem
    • Include necessary context but stay focused
    • Show multiple approaches only when genuinely useful
    • End when the goal is achieved
    • Use imperative mood: "Configure the setting", "Add the following"

    Avoid: Teaching fundamentals, explaining every detail, being exhaustive

    3. Reference (Information-Oriented)

    Purpose: Provide accurate, complete technical descriptions of the system.

    • Organized by structure (CLI commands, configuration options, API endpoints)
    • Comprehensive and authoritative
    • Consistent format across all entries
    • Technical accuracy is paramount
    • Include all parameters, options, and return values
    • Use descriptive mood: "The command accepts", "Returns a string"
    • Minimal narrative or explanation

    Avoid: Instructions, tutorials, opinions on usage

    4. Explanation (Understanding-Oriented)

    Purpose: Clarify and illuminate topics to deepen understanding.

    • Discuss why things are the way they are
    • Explain design decisions and tradeoffs
    • Provide context and background
    • Connect concepts to help form mental models
    • Discuss alternatives and their implications
    • Use indicative mood: "This approach provides", "The engine uses"

    Avoid: Step-by-step instructions, exhaustive reference material

    General Style Guidelines

    • Tone: Neutral, technical, not promotional
    • Voice: Avoid "we", "our", "us" (use "the tool", "this command")
    • Headings: Use markdown heading syntax, not bold text as headings
    • Lists: Avoid long bullet point lists; prefer prose with structure
    • Code samples: Minimal and focused; exclude optional fields unless relevant
    • Language tag: Use aw for agentic workflow snippets with YAML frontmatter

    Example workflow code block:

    on: push
    # Your workflow steps here
    

    GitHub-Flavored Markdown Syntax

    Documentation files use GitHub-flavored markdown with Astro Starlight for rendering. Key syntax elements:

    Frontmatter

    Every documentation page must have frontmatter:

    title: Page Title
    description: Brief description for SEO and navigation
    

    GitHub Alerts

    Use GitHub's alert syntax for notes, tips, warnings, and cautions:

    > [!NOTE]
    > Important information the reader should notice.
    
    > [!TIP]
    > Helpful advice for the reader.
    
    > [!WARNING]
    > Warning about potential issues or pitfalls.
    
    > [!CAUTION]
    > Critical warning about dangerous operations.
    
    > [!IMPORTANT]
    > Key information users need to know.
    

    Code Blocks

    • Use syntax highlighting with language tags
    • Add title attribute for file names: ```yaml title=".github/workflows/example.yml"
    • Use aw language for agentic workflow files with YAML frontmatter
    • Add wrap for line wrapping: ```aw wrap

    Links

    • Internal links: Use relative paths between documentation pages
    • External links: Open in new tab automatically
    • Link text: Use descriptive text, avoid "click here"

    Tabs

    Use tabs for showing alternatives (e.g., different languages, platforms):

    import { Tabs, TabItem } from '@astrojs/starlight/components';
    
    <Tabs>
      <TabItem label="npm">
        ```bash
        npm install package
        ```
      </TabItem>
      <TabItem label="yarn">
        ```bash
        yarn add package
        ```
      </TabItem>
    </Tabs>
    

    Cards

    Use cards for navigation or highlighting multiple options:

    import { Card, CardGrid } from '@astrojs/starlight/components';
    
    <CardGrid>
      <Card title="Getting Started" icon="rocket">
        Quick introduction to the basics.
      </Card>
      <Card title="Advanced Usage" icon="setting">
        Deep dive into advanced features.
      </Card>
    </CardGrid>
    

    Remember: Keep components minimal. Prefer standard markdown when possible.

    Content to Avoid

    • "Key Features" sections
    • Marketing language or selling points
    • Excessive bullet points (prefer structured prose)
    • Overly verbose examples with all optional parameters
    • Mixing documentation types (e.g., tutorials that become reference)

    Avoiding Documentation Bloat

    Documentation bloat reduces clarity and makes content harder to navigate. Common types of bloat include:

    Types of Documentation Bloat

    1. Duplicate content: Same information repeated in different sections
    2. Excessive bullet points: Long lists that could be condensed into prose or tables
    3. Redundant examples: Multiple examples showing the same concept
    4. Verbose descriptions: Overly wordy explanations that could be more concise
    5. Repetitive structure: The same "What it does" / "Why it's valuable" pattern overused

    Writing Concise Documentation

    When editing documentation, focus on:

    Consolidate bullet points:

    • Convert long bullet lists into concise prose or tables
    • Remove redundant points that say the same thing differently

    Eliminate duplicates:

    • Remove repeated information
    • Consolidate similar sections

    Condense verbose text:

    • Make descriptions more direct and concise
    • Remove filler words and phrases
    • Keep technical accuracy while reducing word count

    Standardize structure:

    • Reduce repetitive "What it does" / "Why it's valuable" patterns
    • Use varied, natural language

    Simplify code samples:

    • Remove unnecessary complexity from code examples
    • Focus on demonstrating the core concept clearly
    • Eliminate boilerplate or setup code unless essential for understanding
    • Keep examples minimal yet complete
    • Use realistic but simple scenarios

    Example: Before and After

    Before (Bloated):

    ### Tool Name
    Description of the tool.
    
    - **What it does**: This tool does X, Y, and Z
    - **Why it's valuable**: It's valuable because A, B, and C
    - **How to use**: You use it by doing steps 1, 2, 3, 4, 5
    - **When to use**: Use it when you need X
    - **Benefits**: Gets you benefit A, benefit B, benefit C
    - **Learn more**: [Link](url)
    

    After (Concise):

    ### Tool Name
    Description of the tool that does X, Y, and Z to achieve A, B, and C.
    
    Use it when you need X by following steps 1-5. [Learn more](url)
    

    Documentation Quality Guidelines

    1. Preserve meaning: Never lose important information
    2. Be surgical: Make precise edits, don't rewrite everything
    3. Maintain tone: Keep the neutral, technical tone
    4. Test locally: Verify links and formatting are still correct

    Structure by File Type

    • Getting Started: Tutorial format
    • How-to Guides: Goal-oriented, one task per guide
    • CLI Reference: Reference format, complete command documentation
    • Concepts: Explanation format, building understanding
    • API Reference: Reference format, complete API documentation
    Repository
    githubnext/gh-aw
    Files