wagtail/docs/contributing/documentation_guidelines.md

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# Documentation guidelines
```eval_rst
.. contents::
:local:
:depth: 1
```
## Formatting recommendations
Wagtails documentation uses a mixture of [Markdown](https://commonmark.org/help/) and [reStructuredText](https://www.sphinx-doc.org/en/master/usage/restructuredtext/basics.html). We encourage writing documentation in Markdown first, and only reaching for more advanced reStructuredText formatting if there is a compelling reason.
Here are formats we encourage using when writing documentation for Wagtail.
### Paragraphs
It all starts here.
Keep your sentences short, varied in length.
Separate text with an empty line to create a new paragraph.
### Heading levels
Use heading levels to create sections, and allow users to link straight to a specific section. Start documents with an `# h1`, and proceed with `## h2` and further sub-sections without skipping levels.
```md
# Heading level 1
## Heading level 2
### Heading level 3
```
### Lists
Use bullets for unordered lists, numbers when ordered. Prefer dashes `-` for bullets. Nest by indenting with 4 spaces.
```md
- Bullet 1
- Bullet 2
- Nested bullet 2
- Bullet 3
1. Numbered list 1
2. Numbered list 2
3. Numbered list 3
```
<details>
<summary>Rendered output</summary>
- Bullet 1
- Bullet 2
- Nested bullet 2
- Bullet 3
1. Numbered list 1
2. Numbered list 2
3. Numbered list 3
</details>
### Inline styles
Use **bold** and _italic_ sparingly, inline `code` when relevant.
```md
Use **bold** and _italic_ sparingly, inline `code` when relevant.
```
### Code blocks
Make sure to include the correct language code for syntax highlighting, and to format your code according to our coding guidelines. Frequently used: `python`, `css`, `html`, `html+django`, `javascript`, `console`.
```python
INSTALLED_APPS = [
...
"wagtail.core",
...
]
```
### Links
Links are fundamental in documentation. Use internal links to tie your content to other docs, and external links as needed. Pick relevant text for links, so readers know where they will land.
Dont rely on [`links over code`](https://www.example.com/), as they are impossible to spot.
```md
An [external link](https://wwww.example.com).
An [internal link to another document](/reference/contrib/legacy_richtext.md).
A [link to a reference](register_reports_menu_item).
```
<details>
<summary>Rendered output</summary>
An [external link](https://wwww.example.com).
An [internal link to another document](/reference/contrib/legacy_richtext.md).
A [link to a reference](register_reports_menu_item).
</details>
Reference links rely on creating a reference in reStructuredText. Prefer linking to the whole document if at all possible, otherwise create a reference by embedding reStructuredText with `eval_rst`:
```eval_rst
.. _register_reports_menu_item:
```
### Note and warning call-outs
Use notes and warnings sparingly, as they rely on reStructuredText syntax which is more complicated for future editors.
```eval_rst note:: Notes can provide complementary information.
```
```eval_rst warning:: Warnings can be scary.
```
<details>
<summary>Rendered output</summary>
```eval_rst note:: Notes can provide complementary information.
```
```eval_rst warning:: Warnings can be scary.
```
</details>
### Images
Images are hard to keep up-to-date as documentation evolves, but can be worthwhile nonetheless. Here are guidelines when adding images:
- All images should have meaningful [alt text](https://axesslab.com/alt-texts/) unless they are decorative.
- Images are served as-is – pick the correct format, and losslessly compress all images.
- Use absolute paths for image files so they are more portable.
```md
![Screenshot of the workflow editing interface, with fields to change the workflow name, tasks, and assigned pages](/_static/images/screen44_workflow_edit.png)
```
<details>
<summary>Rendered output</summary>
![Screenshot of the workflow editing interface, with fields to change the workflow name, tasks, and assigned pages](/_static/images/screen44_workflow_edit.png)
</details>
### Autodoc
With its [autodoc](https://www.sphinx-doc.org/en/master/usage/extensions/autodoc.html) feature, Sphinx supports writing documentation in Python docstrings for subsequent integration in the projects documentation pages. This is a very powerful feature which we highly recommend using to document Wagtails APIs.
```eval_rst
.. module:: wagtail.core.utils
.. autofunction:: cautious_slugify
```
<details>
<summary>Rendered output</summary>
```eval_rst
.. module:: wagtail.core.utils
.. autofunction:: cautious_slugify
```
</details>
### Tables
Only use tables when needed, with the “simple” reStructuredText syntax, which is hard enough to format as it is.
```eval_rst
============= =============
Browser Device/OS
============= =============
Stock browser Android
IE Desktop
Safari Windows
============= =============
```
<details>
<summary>Rendered output</summary>
```eval_rst
============= =============
Browser Device/OS
============= =============
Stock browser Android
IE Desktop
Safari Windows
============= =============
```
</details>
### Tables of content
`toctree` and `contents` can be used as reStructuredText embeds.
```eval_rst
.. toctree::
:maxdepth: 2
:titlesonly:
getting_started/index
topics/index
```
```eval_rst
.. contents::
```
### Version added, changed, deprecations
Sphinx offers release-metadata directives to generate this information consistently. Use as appropriate.
```eval_rst
.. versionadded:: 2.15
```
```eval_rst
.. versionchanged:: 2.15
```
<details>
<summary>Rendered output</summary>
```eval_rst
.. versionadded:: 2.15
```
```eval_rst
.. versionchanged:: 2.15
```
</details>
### Progressive disclosure
We can add supplementary information in documentation with the HTML `<details>` element. This relies on HTML syntax, which can be hard to author consistently, so keep this type of formatting to a minimum.
```html
<details>
<summary>Supplementary information</summary>
This will be visible when expanding the content.
</details>
```
Example:
<details>
<summary>Supplementary information</summary>
This will be visible when expanding the content.
</details>
## Formatting to avoid
There is some formatting in the documentation which is technically supported, but we recommend avoiding unless there is a clear necessity.
### Call-outs
We only use `note::` and `warning::` call-outs. Avoid `important::`, `topic::`, and `tip::`. If you find one of these, please replace it with `note::`.
### Glossary
Sphinx glossaries (`.. glossary::`) generate definition lists. Use plain bullet or number lists instead, or sections with headings, or a table.
### Comments
Avoid documentation source comments in committed documentation.
### Figure
reStructuredText figures (`.. figure::`) only offer very marginal improvements over vanilla images. If your figure has a caption, add it as an italicised paragraph underneath the image.
### Other reStructuredText syntax and Sphinx directives
We generally want to favour Markdown over reStructuredText, to make it as simple as possible for newcomers to make documentation contributions to Wagtail. Always prefer Markdown, unless the documents formatting highly depends on reStructuredText syntax.
If you want to use a specific Sphinx directive, consult with core contributors to see whether its usage is justified, and document its expected usage on this page.
### Arbitrary HTML
While our documentation tooling offers some support for embedding arbitrary HTML, this is frowned upon. Only do so if there is a necessity, and if the formatting is unlikely to need updates.