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Styles
We base our styles on the Microsoft Writing Style Guide
- Headings: sentence case (more info)
- UI elements: bold (more info)
- User input: bold, with italics for placeholders (see User input part way down this page for more info)
- File names, directory names, and paths: code formatted.
- Make sure you match brand names precisely. For example: "GitHub", not "Github".
Write zero to nine in letters, 10 and above in numerals.
All external links open in new tab. Use the following syntax:
[commits](https://github.com/n8n-io/n8n/compare/[email protected]@0.177.0){:target="_blank" .external-link}
Note that the .external-link
class currently doesn't do anything. However, it effectively tags all external links, making them easy to find - and to re-style in future if we want to.
Use tabs not spaces. This is important because:
- The n8n node linter enforces this convention. Any code samples in the 'Creating nodes' section could be copied into a user's node, then cause a linter fail if they use spaces.
- To accommodate the node linter, we've configured MkDocs to use the preserved_tabs option in the SuperFences extension (more details here), along with some custom CSS to make the tabs a sensible width. Spaces should still display ok, but tabs are safer.
We have access to all the admonitions styles provided by the Material theme. Use them as follows:
-
note
for general notes, information you want to stand out. -
warning
if something has risks or unexpected behaviours. -
danger
if something is a high security risk (such as opening a tunnel to your local n8n instance), or destructive (the user can permanently lose data if they do this wrong) -
info
for feature restriction boxes (features limited to certain platforms or pricing tiers)
Don't over-use admonitions. They lose their effectiveness if they're used a lot.
Details are similar to admonitions, but are collapsed. The user clicks to expand. You can see an example in the Google Credentials docs.
n8n uses Vale to lint documentation. Linting supports writing quality, and helps writers use the style guide.
The setup comprises:
- A
.vale.ini
file in the root of the repo, containing the configuration - A
styles
directory, containing the style definitions. This includes off-the-shelf style libraries for Microsoft, write-good, and alex.
Vale can be run locally (on your machine) or remotely (as part of a CI process) Due to the current state of the docs, we are holding off on implementing the Vale GitHub Action in our CI.
- Follow the Vale docs to install Vale CLI.
- Choose whether to lint from the command line, or install a text editor plugin:
- Running
vale --glob='*.md' docs
will lint all Markdown files in thedocs
directory - Or install a plugin and view problems automatically in your text editor. If using VS Code, install vale-vscode by ChrisChinchilla.
- Running
- Plain language:
- Clearly explain each step of the process you are documenting.
- Use present tense, active voice, and "you"-form to address the readers.
- Keep your writing as concise as possible. Hemingway is a free browser app to measure language complexity. There is no fixed rule about what grade to aim for, but the lower the reading grade, the better.