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Style Guide
- Documents are written in markdown files.
- Those files should be written in
lowercase-with-dashes.md
.- Underscores in filenames are allowed only when they are present in the
topic the document will describe (e.g.,
child_process
). - Filenames should be lowercase.
- Some files, such as top-level markdown files, are exceptions.
- Older files may use the
.markdown
extension. These may be ported to.md
at will. Prefer.md
for all new documents.
- Underscores in filenames are allowed only when they are present in the
topic the document will describe (e.g.,
- Documents should be word-wrapped at 80 characters.
- The formatting described in
.editorconfig
is preferred.- A plugin is available for some editors to automatically apply these rules.
- Mechanical issues, like spelling and grammar, should be identified by tools, insofar as is possible. If not caught by a tool, they should be pointed out by human reviewers.
- American English spelling is preferred. "Capitalize" vs. "Capitalise", "color" vs. "colour", etc.
- Though controversial, the Oxford comma is preferred for clarity's sake.
- Generally avoid personal pronouns in reference documentation ("I", "you",
"we").
- Pronouns are acceptable in more colloquial documentation, like guides.
- Use gender-neutral pronouns and mass nouns. Non-comprehensive
examples:
- OK: "they", "their", "them", "folks", "people", "developers", "cats"
- NOT OK: "his", "hers", "him", "her", "guys", "dudes"
- When combining wrapping elements (parentheses and quotes), terminal
punctuation should be placed:
- Inside the wrapping element if the wrapping element contains a complete clause — a subject, verb, and an object.
- Outside of the wrapping element if the wrapping element contains only a fragment of a clause.
- Place end-of-sentence punctuation inside wrapping elements — periods go inside parentheses and quotes, not after.
- Documents must start with a level-one heading. An example document will be linked here eventually.
- Prefer affixing links to inlining links — prefer
[a link][]
to[a link](http://example.com)
. - When documenting APIs, note the version the API was introduced in at the end of the section. If an API has been deprecated, also note the first version that the API appeared deprecated in.
- When using dashes, use emdashes ("—", Option+Shift+"-" on macOS) surrounded by spaces, per the New York Times usage.
- Including assets:
- If you wish to add an illustration or full program, add it to the
appropriate sub-directory in the
assets/
dir. - Link to it like so:
[Asset](/assets/{subdir}/{filename})
for file-based assets, and![Asset](/assets/{subdir}/{filename})
for image-based assets. - For illustrations, prefer SVG to other assets. When SVG is not feasible, please keep a close eye on the filesize of the asset you're introducing.
- If you wish to add an illustration or full program, add it to the
appropriate sub-directory in the
- For code blocks:
- Use language aware fences. ("```js")
- Code need not be complete — treat code blocks as an illustration or aid to
your point, not as complete running programs. If a complete running program
is necessary, include it as an asset in
assets/code-examples
and link to it.
- When using underscores, asterisks, and backticks, please use proper escaping (\_, \* and \` instead of _, * and `).
- References to constructor functions should use PascalCase.
- References to constructor instances should use camelCase.
- References to methods should be used with parentheses: for example,
socket.end()
instead ofsocket.end
. - To draw special attention to a note, adhere to the following guidelines:
- Make the "Note:" label italic, i.e.
*Note*:
. - Use a capital letter after the "Note:" label.
- Preferably, make the note a new paragraph for better visual distinction.
- Make the "Note:" label italic, i.e.