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MDN Web Docs contribution guide

Thanks for taking the time to contribute to MDN Web Docs! 🎉

This document covers project setup steps along with a set of guidelines for contributing to MDN Web Docs content. Everyone participating in this project is expected to follow our Code of Conduct. If you want to jump right in, see Getting started with MDN Web Docs for an overview of how to join, and the Contribute page on MDN for a filtered list of tasks.

Getting started

Before contributing, make sure you're familiar with the project guidelines and conventions:

  • Writing guidelines - This page covers everything from how and what we write to general project guidelines.
  • Writing style guide - This covers the language and style we use and how we write and format code examples.
  • How to write in Markdown - This covers the Markdown features we support on MDN and custom extensions we've added.

Prerequisite knowledge

We expect contributors to MDN to have some knowledge of web technologies before working on content. We've put together relevant resources to get up to speed on specific topics before contributing:

Documentation conventions

There are a few things to keep in mind about content on MDN and how it is maintained:

Front matter

Each document's index.md starts with front-matter, which is written in YAML. The YAML is read by the MDN build system and is used to read the metadata of a document.

The front-matter must be the first thing in the file and must take the form of valid YAML set between triple-dashed lines (---). Front-matter defines the document's title and slug, and may also include status, browser-compat and specification information. Here's an example of front-matter from the JavaScript page:

---
title: JavaScript
slug: Web/JavaScript
---

Setting up git and GitHub

You'll need a GitHub account to contribute to MDN Web Docs. If you are comfortable working with git and GitHub, you can skip ahead to Contributing to MDN. If you've created a new GitHub account and want to know what to do next, you can choose one of the following ways to manage changes:

  • GitHub UI - This is the easiest way to contribute small changes described in Simple changes.
  • GitHub Desktop - A desktop app for managing interaction with GitHub.
  • GitHub CLI - A command-line wrapper for interacting with GitHub.
  • git - You can use git from the command line to interact with GitHub. The examples in this document assume you are using this method. The git cheat sheet and Using Git guide are useful resources for beginners and advanced users.

Simple changes

If you want to make a small change like fixing a typo, the GitHub UI is the easiest way to get started. If you've found a typo on the JavaScript landing page, for example, you can propose a fix as follows:

  1. Sign in to GitHub
  2. Navigate to https://github.com/mdn/content
  3. Find the source file files/en-us/web/javascript/index.md
  4. Click the edit (pencil) button

From there, the GitHub UI will walk you through the rest by creating a fork and a branch to commit your changes to. After you have made changes to your branch, the goal is to open a pull request for your changes to be incorporated.

A pull request represents the work you want to be reviewed, approved, and merged into the main branch of the MDN repository. See the Creating a pull request for more details on creating and handling pull requests successfully.

If you're not certain of the changes that you want to make, get in touch with us!

Note: You can click the View the source on GitHub link at the bottom of an MDN page to jump directly to the page source on GitHub.

Forking and cloning the repository

If you want to make changes to more than one file, the GitHub UI is not very efficient because you have to make separate pull requests for each file you want to change. Instead of using the GitHub UI, you need to use git or a client like the GitHub Desktop or GitHub CLI. The following examples are using plain git commands, but you can use any of the clients mentioned above to perform the equivalent actions.

To fork and clone the repository:

  1. Create a fork of the mdn/content repository to freely experiment with branches and changes. Assuming your GitHub username is octocat, your fork would be a copy of the mdn/content repository in your account at https://github.com/octocat/content.

  2. Clone your fork to your local machine. Assuming your GitHub username is octocat, you would do something like this:

    # starting in a directory of your choice
    cd ~/repos
    # clone your fork of the repository
    git clone [email protected]:octocat/content.git
  3. Create a remote to keep your clone and fork (https://github.com/octocat/content) up-to-date. This example adds a remote named upstream, but you can name it mdn or any other name you like.

    # starting in your clone directory
    cd ~/repos/content
    git remote add upstream [email protected]:mdn/content.git

    When you run git remote -v, you'll see that you have two remotes: upstream and origin. The origin remote is your fork (https://github.com/octocat/content) and the upstream remote is the mdn/content repository.

  4. Keep your fork up-to-date often. You can do this by fetching the latest changes from the mdn/content repository and merging them into your fork.

    cd ~/repos/content
    # checkout your local clone's main branch
    git checkout main
    git fetch upstream
    # merge the latest content from the main branch of the mdn repository
    git merge upstream/main
  5. Create a branch for your changes. This example creates a branch named fix-typo:

    cd ~/repos/content
    # checkout your local clone's main branch
    git checkout main
    # create a new branch named fix-typo
    git checkout -b fix-typo

Contributing to MDN

The previous sections describe how to get started using the GitHub UI to make small changes to a single file and how to create a fork and clone the repository to prepare for making larger changes. This section describes how to build the project locally and how to prepare your changes for submission.

Preparing the project

To serve the site locally, you need to have Node.js and Yarn 1 (Classic) installed. You can check if these are installed by running the following commands:

node -v
yarn -v

After you have installed Node.js and Yarn, you can install the dependencies using yarn:

# Assuming your fork is in ~/repos/content
cd ~/repos/content
yarn

Running the project

After you have installed all dependencies, you can start the local preview using yarn start:

yarn start

Once started, a live preview is available at http://localhost:5042/

Set your preferred editor by adding EDITOR=... into a .env file in the project root. To specify VS Code as your preferred editor, for example, use the following command:

echo 'EDITOR=code' >> .env

You can set the EDITOR environment variable to any editor you like. When browsing a page server locally, you can press Open in your editor to edit the current file in your preferred editor.

Editing files and tracking changes in git

To edit files and track your changes, you should use feature branches. Feature branches are created from the main branch and should be named after the feature you're working on. This will make it easier to submit a pull request for your changes.

Note: Open a discussion if your changes will contain large, complex or structural changes. Ask for feedback before embarking on large tasks.

  1. When the server is running, make the changes you would like to make to one or more index.md files.

  2. Open a browser and navigate to the equivalent pages you've changed. If you changed files/en-us/web/javascript/index.md, you would navigate to http://localhost:5042/en-us/docs/web/javascript in your browser, for example.

  3. Check for errors by clicking Show flaws on each previewed page. You may be able to fix flaws by running:

    yarn content flaws <page_slug>
  4. Commit your changes to the branch (our example is using the fix-typo branch) and push the changes to your fork's remote:

    # Adding all files to the commit
    git add .
    # Making a commit with a message describing the changes
    git commit -m "Fix typo"
    # Pushing the commit to your fork
    git push
    # or "git push --set-upstream origin fix-typo" if you haven't pushed this branch before

Linting edited files

To ensure that all MDN documents follow the same formatting, we use both Prettier and Markdownlint to format and lint Markdown files. This helps us enforce uniform styling across all documents with minimal reviewer intervention.

If you have a local checkout of the repository and have installed the dependencies, or you are using github.dev, a pre-commit hook will be installed which automatically runs while making a commit. To save some headache and improve your work flow while authoring, you may wish to configure your editor to automatically run Prettier. Alternatively, you may run yarn fix:md in the command line to manually format all Markdown files.

Note: Automatically formatting changes does not work for pull requests opened using the GitHub Web UI as described in the "Simple changes" section. This may result in failed status checks on pull requests. If you're not sure about how to fix this, get in touch with us for help.

Adding a new document

Adding a new document is relatively straightforward, especially if you can start by copying the index.md of a similar document. There are a few things to keep in mind:

  • Documents must be written in Markdown.
  • A document is represented by an index.md file.
  • If you're creating a new CSS document for a property called foo, create a new folder files/en-us/web/css/foo/ and put the Markdown file in this folder (files/en-us/web/css/foo/index.md).
  • A document's index.md file must start with front-matter that defines the title, slug, and, most of the time, page-type. You might find it helpful to refer to the front-matter within a similar document's index.md.

Moving documents

Moving one or more documents (or an entire tree of documents) is made easier with the yarn content move command. This command moves the file and fixes up redirects automatically. You can use this command as shown below:

yarn content move <from-slug> <to-slug> [locale]

Warning Don't edit the _redirects.txt file manually. See the Redirecting a document section for more information.

To use yarn content move, provide the slug of the document you'd like to move (e.g., Learn/Accessibility), and the slug of its new location (e.g., Learn/A11y). The locale of the existing document can be provided as an optional third argument (this defaults to en-US). If the document you'd like to move contains child documents (i.e. it represents a document tree), the yarn content move command will move the entire tree.

Let's say you want to move the entire /en-US/Learn/Accessibility tree to /en-US/Learn/A11y, you can do so as follows:

  1. Starting from a fresh branch:

    cd ~/repos/content
    # Fetch the latest changes from the main branch on mdn/content
    git fetch upstream
    git checkout main
    git merge upstream/main
    # create a new branch for your work
    git checkout -b moving-a11y
  2. Move files with yarn content move. This will delete and modify existing files, as well as create new files.

    yarn content move Learn/Accessibility Learn/A11y
  3. Commit all of the changes and push your branch to the remote:

    git add .
    git commit -m "Move Learn/Accessibility to Learn/A11y"
    git push
    # or git push --set-upstream origin moving-a11y

Deleting a document

Similar to moving files, you can delete documents or a tree of documents easily by using the yarn content delete command.

Warning: Don't delete files or directories from the repository manually; the yarn content delete command handles the necessary changes such as updating the _wikihistory.json file.

You can use this command as shown below:

yarn content delete <document-slug> [locale] --redirect <redirect-slug-or-url>

To use yarn content delete, provide the slug of the document you'd like to delete (e.g., Learn/Accessibility), and the locale as an optional second argument (this defaults to en-US). If the slug of the page you wish to delete contains special characters, include it in quotes. For example:

yarn content delete "Glossary/Round_Trip_Time_(RTT)" --redirect Glossary/Latency

If the document has child documents (i.e., the document represents a document tree), you must specify the -r, --recursive option, else the command will fail. Say you want to delete the entire /en-US/Learn/Accessibility tree and redirect all the deleted documents to Web/Accessibility. You can perform the following steps:

  1. Start from a fresh branch.

    cd ~/repos/content
    # Fetch the latest changes from the main branch on mdn/content
    git fetch upstream
    git checkout main
    git merge upstream/main
    # create a new branch for your work
    git checkout -b deleting-a11y
  2. Run the yarn content delete command and redirect all deleted documents.

    yarn content delete Learn/Accessibility --recursive --redirect Web/Accessibility

    Warning: You should always add a redirect when deleting documents. If there is no obvious alternative, redirect to the nearest "parent" of the deleted topic. If you forget to redirect when deleting a file, you can do it afterwards. See the Redirecting a document section.

  3. Commit all of the changes and push your branch to the remote.

    git add .
    git commit -m "Delete Learn/Accessibility pages"
    git push
    # or git push --set-upstream origin moving-a11y

Redirecting a document

If you are moving a document as shown above you don't need to create a redirect. However, you may need to do so when fixing a broken link or after deleting a document without the --redirect flag.

You may do this by using the yarn content add-redirect command.

  1. Start a fresh branch to work in:

    cd ~/repos/content
    # Fetch the latest changes from the main branch on mdn/content
    git fetch upstream
    git checkout main
    git merge upstream/main
    # create a new branch for your work
    git checkout -b deleting-a11y
  2. Add a redirect with yarn content add-redirect. The target page can be a page on MDN or an external URL:

    yarn content add-redirect /en-US/path/of/deleted/page /en-US/path/of/target/page
  3. Commit all of the changed files and pushing your branch to your fork:

    git add .
    git commit -m "Adding redirect after deleting Learn/Accessibility pages"
    git push
    # or git push --set-upstream origin deleting-a11y

Creating a pull request

Once you've made your changes and pushed them to a branch on your fork, you can create a pull request to propose your changes to the mdn/content repository. Someone from the MDN team or the MDN Web Docs community will review your changes and provide feedback.

For details on what to do next, see the pull request etiquette section to see how to handle pull requests and get your content merged successfully.

Pull request etiquette

This is the exciting part of contributing to MDN as you're almost done with the contribution process! Here are some things to keep in mind at this point:

  • Your pull request must be reviewed and approved before it's merged into the main branch.
  • You do not need to request a review; one or more reviewers will be selected for you automatically.
  • It can be up to 48 hours for merged pull requests to have their changes published to MDN Web Docs.

During reviews, you may be asked to answer questions about your work or to make changes to your suggested edits. This is a common part of the process of making changes in open source projects. There are some important rules of etiquette to remember that will help during the review stage.

  1. Check tests that are run automatically for pull requests (see .github/workflows). If one or more of these tests fail, you must fix them. Your pull request will not be approved and merged if there are failing tests. If you don't know how to resolve the underlying issue(s), you can ask for help.

  2. Resolve conflicts if your pull request has merge conflicts with the main branch. This is usually done by merging the main branch into your feature branch (git pull upstream main), and then pushing the updated branch to your fork (git push).

  3. Group logical changes in each pull request so that it contains a single change or a related set of changes. If a pull request becomes too large or contains too many unrelated changes, a reviewer may close your pull request and ask you to submit a new pull request for each set of changes.

  4. Don't re-open pull requests closed by a reviewer.

  5. Don't use git rebase of main over your branch. Your changes are replayed on top of the current main branch at that point in time. This might confuse reviewers as notifications on GitHub lead to nowhere.

License

When contributing to the content you agree to license your contributions according to our license.