Documentation

Creates, structures, and reviews technical documentation following the Diátaxis framework (tutorials, how-to guides, reference, and explanation pages). Use when a user needs to write or reorganize docs, structure a tutorial vs. a how-to guide, build reference docs or API documentation, create explanation pages, choose between Diátaxis documentation types, or improve existing documentation structure. Trigger terms include: documentation structure, Diátaxis, tutorials vs how-to guides, organize docs, user guide, reference docs, technical writing.

Published by @mcollina·0 agent reads / 30d·0 saves·

When to use

Use this skill when you need to create, review, or improve technical documentation following the Diátaxis framework. Examples include:

  • Creating user guides
  • API documentation
  • Tutorial content
  • Restructuring existing documentation to better serve different user needs and contexts

Instructions

Organize documentation into four distinct types — tutorials, how-to guides, reference material, and explanations — each serving different user needs and contexts.

Always ask clarifying questions about the user's context, audience, and goals before creating documentation.


Step 1 — Identify the documentation type

Use the following decision checklist based on user signals:

User signalDocumentation type
"I'm new to X and want to learn it" / "walk me through"Tutorial
"How do I…?" / "I need to accomplish X"How-to guide
"What are the parameters/options/syntax for X?"Reference
"Why does X work this way?" / "Help me understand X"Explanation

Quick decision tree:

  • Is the user learning by doing for the first time? → Tutorial
  • Do they need to solve a specific problem they already understand? → How-to guide
  • Do they need technical facts to look up? → Reference
  • Do they want conceptual background? → Explanation

Step 2 — Apply type-specific patterns

Tutorials (learning-oriented)
  • Title pattern: Start with a verb — "Build your first X", "Create a Y from scratch"
  • Structure: Goal → Prerequisites → Numbered steps → Immediate verifiable result at each step → Final outcome
  • Minimise explanation; maximise doing
  • Every step must produce a visible, testable result
  • Validation: A beginner must be able to complete the tutorial without external help

Example intro:

"In this tutorial, you will build a simple REST API using Express. By the end, you will have a running server that responds to GET requests. No prior Express experience is needed."


How-to guides (problem-oriented)
  • Title pattern: Frame as a task — "How to configure X", "How to deploy Y to Z"
  • Structure: Goal statement → Assumptions/prerequisites → Numbered steps → Expected result
  • Assume baseline knowledge; skip conceptual explanations
  • Allow for variation; note alternatives where they exist
  • Validation: An experienced user can complete the task without confusion or backtracking

Example intro:

"This guide shows how to add JWT authentication to an existing Express app. It assumes you have a working Express server and basic familiarity with middleware."


Reference (information-oriented)
  • Title pattern: Name the thing — "Configuration options", "API endpoints", "CLI flags"
  • Structure: Consistent repeatable format per entry (name → type → default → description → example)
  • State facts; avoid instruction beyond minimal usage examples
  • Keep current; version-stamp if needed
  • Validation: A user can look up a specific fact in under 30 seconds without reading surrounding content

Example entry:

timeout (integer, default: 5000) Maximum time in milliseconds to wait for a response before the request fails. Example: { timeout: 3000 }


Explanations (understanding-oriented)
  • Title pattern: Frame as a concept — "How X works", "Understanding Y", "Why Z is designed this way"
  • Structure: Context → Core concept → Alternatives/trade-offs → Higher-level perspective
  • Avoid step-by-step instruction or technical specification
  • Validation: After reading, the user can explain the concept in their own words and understands the rationale behind design decisions

Example intro:

"Authentication and authorisation are often confused. This page explains the distinction, why both matter, and how common patterns (sessions, tokens, OAuth) approach each concern differently."


Step 3 — Maintain separation and integration

  • Keep each document a single type — don't mix tutorial steps with reference tables or conceptual digressions
  • Cross-link between types: a tutorial can link to the relevant reference page; a how-to guide can link to an explanation for background
  • Use consistent headings and terminology across all types so users can navigate the full documentation system

Step 4 — Validate before delivering

TypeValidation check
TutorialCan a beginner complete it end-to-end without external help?
How-to guideDoes it solve the stated problem for an experienced user?
ReferenceCan the user find a specific fact in under 30 seconds?
ExplanationDoes the user understand the why, not just the what?

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