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Style Guide for Tutorials
Brian Doyle edited this page Feb 13, 2024
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This document is a guide for writing content for within Base Camp, and tutorials under the Guides
of the docs site. While not a rigid set of rules, all content within the above sections should adhere to it as much as possible.
These guidelines are not for traditional documentation.
- Aim for a Flesch-Kincaid readability score between 70 and 80 (8th grade). Our material is complex and our pace is high. You are not helping the learner by saying posthaste when fast will do
- Write inclusively and for an international audience
- Write and produce video with a collaborative point of view. Generally, you should speak to the reader and instruct them with you, saving we for the point of the view of the authors
- Good: Next, you'll need to add a function to fetch the data from the server.
- Bad: Next, we'll need to add a function to fetch the data from the server.
- Good: You'll want to be careful that the API call doesn't timeout. We've found that under 5 seconds is safe, but were unable to find a documented source to confirm.
- Change is constant. Write about how things are now. When they change, update them!
- It's not enough to list simply what to do to accomplish a task. Explain why and teach how to find this out. Link to docs and primary sources as often as possible. If it's not documented, document it!
- With great care and professionalism, include humor and a light-hearted attitude in your work
- Do not plagiarize or use unauthorized images. Cite sources when required, and use media only as allowed
- This does not mean that you are required to cite a source for all thoughts or ideas
- The Oxford Comma adds clarity. We use it
- Writers may chose to use 1 or 2 spaces after a period as both are rendered the same in html. Enabling format-on save is recommended, which will shorten them to 1 space
- Lists
- We use dashes for lists, which Docusaurus converts to round bullets
- Lists do not have a period at the end of the only, or last sentence
- Use numbered lists when items are a part of an ordered series. Use the number 1 for each item. Doing so will render the correct number automatically and ensure that changes to the list don't break the numbering
- Use an external tool to find and correct spelling and grammar errors before submitting a PR. Code editor plugins are helpful, but generally deficient
- Types of emphasis:
- Bold text is used for emphasis. It is always applied in markdown with 2 asterisks
- Italic text is used to introduce, or highlight technical terms. It is always applied in markdown with 1 underscore
-
Backticks
are used for filenames and code elements written inline, including filenames, variable or function names, and short snippets of code -
Example: When adding a redirect to a Farcaster Frame, you must return
status: 302
as a part of yourNextResponse.redirect
- Use > to indent quotes
- Code blocks start and end with three backticks. You must specify the correct language
- Filenames are kebab-case.md
- Files are set to 2 or 4 spaces depending on the the dominant programming language used in the document. When in doubt, use 2 spaces
- Videos must never be longer than 3 minutes. Instead of making a 30 minute video with 10 sections, make 10 3 minute videos
- All headings have exactly 1 blank line after them
- Documents must end with exactly 1 blank line
- Use reference-style links only
- All documents must have appropriate frontmatter, including the
title
,description
, andkeywords
. - All other headings must be H2 (##) or lower
- Immediately after the title and frontmatter is an overall summary of the experience and goals of the activity
- After the summary is a header for ## Learning Objectives
- Include appropriate learning objectives with Bloom's Taxonomy verbs in a bulleted list
- If the document is a Step-by-Step, the remaining subsections are given H2 headers starting with "Part # - ", for example "Part 2 - Compiling the Code"
- Otherwise, remaining subsections are named as appropriate, using H2 and H3 headers
- Do not use H4, H5, or H6
- All documents end with a ## Conclusion
- The conclusion is short and describes what the learner has accomplished. It should be a paragraph, not a bulleted list or repeat of the learning objectives
- Place relative-style links after the conclusion
- onchain
- Not on-chain or on chain
- app, or onchain app if differentiating from web 2
- Not dapp, Dapp, or dApp
- frontend and backend
- Not front-end or front end
- Coinbase Wallet
- Not just Coinbase in the context of the self-custodial wallet