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70 lines
2.2 KiB
Markdown
70 lines
2.2 KiB
Markdown
(contributing:docs)=
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# Contributing Documentation
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Documentation is often more important than code. This page helps
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you get set up on how to contribute to JupyterHub's documentation.
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We use [Sphinx](https://www.sphinx-doc.org) to build our documentation. It takes
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our documentation source files (written in [Markedly Structured Text (MyST)](https://mystmd.org/) and
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stored under the `docs/source` directory) and converts it into various
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formats for people to read.
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## Building documentation locally
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To make sure the documentation you write or
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change renders correctly, it is good practice to test it locally.
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```{note}
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You will need Python and Git installed. Installation details are avaiable at {ref}`contributing:setup`.
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```
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1. Install the packages required to build the docs.
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```bash
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python3 -m pip install -r docs/requirements.txt
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python3 -m pip install sphinx-autobuild
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```
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2. Build the HTML version of the docs. This is the most commonly used
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output format, so verifying it renders correctly is usually good
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enough.
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```bash
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sphinx-autobuild docs/source/ docs/_build/html
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```
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This step will display any syntax or formatting errors in the documentation,
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along with the filename / line number in which they occurred. Fix them,
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and the HTML will be re-render automatically.
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3. View the rendered documentation by opening <http://127.0.0.1:8000> in
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a web browser.
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(contributing-docs-conventions)=
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## Documentation conventions
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This section lists various conventions we use in our documentation. This is a
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living document that grows over time, so feel free to add to it / change it!
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Our entire documentation does not yet fully conform to these conventions yet,
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so help in making it so would be appreciated!
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### `pip` invocation
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There are many ways to invoke a `pip` command, we recommend the following
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approach:
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```bash
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python3 -m pip
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```
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This invokes `pip` explicitly using the `python3` binary that you are
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currently using. This is the **recommended way** to invoke pip
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in our documentation, since it is least likely to cause problems
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with `python3` and `pip` being from different environments.
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For more information on how to invoke `pip` commands, see
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[the `pip` documentation](https://pip.pypa.io/en/stable/).
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