- Contributing to Documentation
- Running Locally
- Style and Configuration Guide
- Internationalization
- License
The Polkadot Wiki is the central source of truth for Polkadot. It is a community-focused initiative led by Web3 Foundation to keep an up-to-date resource on the best information for learning, building, or maintaining on Polkadot.
The Technical Education team at Web3 Foundation are the primary maintainers of the Wiki and will review all issues and pull requests created in this repository. If you notice typos or grammatical errors, please feel free to create pull requests with these corrections directly. Larger contributions may start as issues to test the waters on the subject with the maintainers. It is generally preferable to create a pull request over an issue to propose a change to the Wiki content.
✨ The Wiki belongs to the community, help generate its identity. ✨
identity.mp4
📥 There will be an upcoming initiative that will promote and encourage contributions towards Polkadot-based content and documentation. In the meantime, feel free to share any ideas or feedback you may have for the Wiki by opening a Feature Request issue.
Keep engaged by checking out these common Polkadot ecosystem resources.
Both the Polkadot Wiki and the Kusama Guide are built from the source files in this repository.
After cloning the source locally, you can start the websites with each of these respective commands
(ensure you run yarn
at the root of the repository first to install dependencies).
Using yarn, run:
yarn install
The Wiki is currently in the process of being deployed onto IPFS and will follow the same configuration to build the static files.
🐦 Building the Kusama Guide:
yarn kusama:build
🟣 Building the Polkadot Wiki:
yarn polkadot:build
🐦 Starting the Kusama Guide:
yarn kusama:start
🟣 Starting the Polkadot Wiki:
yarn polkadot:start
🐦 Publishing the Kusama Guide:
yarn kusama:publish-gh-pages
🟣 Publishing the Polkadot Wiki:
yarn polkadot:publish-gh-pages
Use the style guide from the Substrate Knowledge Base
Prettier is automatically run when making a local commit. Verify that all changes render as expected after making new commits by running the projects locally.
See the Conditional Rendering and React Components sections for additional details regarding how to properly format syntax for elements outside of the standard markdown library.
Algolia DocSearch is the search engine that is used, which is built into Docusaurus. Indexing via Algolia provides faster lookup; the actual configuration for lookup is located in another repository that Algolia DocSearch maintains.
We have enabled searching on the Wiki by declaring the algolia
section in the siteConfig.js
file
in scripts
, and defining an API key and index name that are provided by DocSearch.
algolia: {
apiKey: "53c6a4ab0d77c0755375a971c9b7cc3d",
indexName: "kusama_guide",
algoliaOptions: {
facetFilters: ["language:LANGUAGE"],
}, // Optional, if provided by Algolia
}
If you would like to access and modify this, you can re-submit the documentation url via DocSearch Program, where they will send a JavaScript snippet that you can re-integrate into the configuration, similar to the one shown above.
The Polkadot Wiki is built on the gh-pages
branch and automatically deployed to GitHub Pages. The
Kusama Wiki is also deployed to GitHub Pages (via a separate repository).
Development servers exist at https://staging.polkadot.network
and
https://staging.kusama.network
. The servers will reflect the latest master
commit or PR put up
against the master branch by a member of the Technical Education team. The latest version of
master
is staged and checked by the team. If all is well, the new commits on master
are
transferred into the production branch,prod
, by rebasing master
on prod
. The CICD production
workflow will deploy prod
to the public sites: Polkadot Wiki and
Kusama Guide, respectively.
The two Wikis support conditional rendering depending on which Wiki is being deployed. This is
useful for mirrored pages with most content in common but have minor differences. To use this
functionality, surround Kusama specific content with
{{ kusama: KUSAMA_SPECIFIC_CONTENT :kusama }}
, and polkadot specific content with
{{ polkadot: POLKADOT_SPECIFIC_CONTENT :polkadot }}
.
For example the syntax:
The {{ polkadot: Polkdadot Wiki :polkadot }} {{ kusama: Kusama Guide :kusama }} is a great resource!
Will render:
The Polkdadot Wiki is a great resource!
or
The Kusama Guide is a great resource!
depending on which project is currently loaded.
To verify the appropriate values have been substituted in each scenario, run polkadot:start
and
kusama:start
in separate terminals. If prompted with
[WARNING] Something is already running on port 3000. Would you like to run the app on another port instead?
,
proceed with yes
. This will likely launch one project on port 3000 and the other on 3001, allowing
you to compare the rendered outputs for both projects locally and simultaneously.
Occasionally you may require additional functionality that is outside of the scope of basic markdown. React components can be used inline in existing markdown documents as a solution, allowing you to render custom elements. This is currently the strategy used to retrieve live on-chain values and display them directly in the docs without the need to recompile or even reload the web app using RPCs.
If you are looking to invoke and embed data from 3rd party APIs or sources, checkout the Http-Request-Sample component. A full list of sample components can be found here.
Try and reuse existing components as much as possible instead of creating new ones to keep the code lean and comprehensive. It is also important to verify prettier has not modified the formatting of your component after making a commit. Below are some best practices for achieving common formatting that will not be modified by the prettier command:
Always wrap RPC components in conditional rendering & keep them on new lines:
{{ polkadot: <RPC network="polkadot" path="query.staking.validatorCount" defaultValue={297}/> :polkadot }}
{{ kusama: <RPC network="kusama" path="query.staking.validatorCount" defaultValue={297}/> :kusama }}
To add grammar without added spacing, place the grammar inside the conditional brackets:
The validator count followed by a period is
{{ polkadot: <RPC network="polkadot" path="query.staking.validatorCount" defaultValue={297}/>. :polkadot }}
{{ kusama: <RPC network="kusama" path="query.staking.validatorCount" defaultValue={297}/>. :kusama }}
The validator count in parentheses is
{{ polkadot: (<RPC network="polkadot" path="query.staking.validatorCount" defaultValue={297}/>) :polkadot }}
{{ kusama: (<RPC network="kusama" path="query.staking.validatorCount" defaultValue={297}/>) :kusama }}
Failing to follow this schema can results in unexpected formatting, such as added line-breaks or spacing, especially after running prettier.
❗ The Wiki is currently being reorganized and updated. Work will resume on translations after the Wiki revamp is completed. |
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The Polkadot Wiki is licensed under the GPL-3.0 free software license.