--- title: "Standards" --- To ensure that the documentation for Home Assistant is consistent and easy to follow for both novice and expert users, we ask that you follow a very strict set of standards for developing the documentation. ## General Documentation Broadly speaking documentation should be written following Microsoft's house style, which is detailed [here](https://learn.microsoft.com/style-guide/welcome/). - The language of the documentation should be American-English. - Don't put two spaces after a period. - Use a serial comma (also known as the Oxford comma) before the conjunction in a list of three or more items. E.g., "Through the use of additional adapters, Home Assistant allows the use of Zigbee, Z-Wave, and other protocols". - There is no limit for the line length. You are allowed to write in a flowing text style. This will make it easier to use the GitHub online editor in the future. - Be objective and not gender favoring, polarizing, race related or religion inconsiderate. Contributions which do not follow this may be in breach of our [Code of Conduct](https://github.com/home-assistant/core/blob/master/CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md). - The case of brand names, services, protocols, integrations and platforms must match its respective counterpart. E.g., "Z-Wave" **not** "Zwave", "Z-wave", "Z Wave" or "ZWave". Also, "Input Select" **not** "input select" or "Input select". - Do not use ALL CAPITALS for emphasis - use _italics_ instead. - All examples containing Jinja2 templates should be wrapped **outside** of the code markdown with the `{% raw %}` tag. ## Integration and Platform Pages - All examples should be formatted to be included in `configuration.yaml` unless explicitly stated. - Use capital letters and `_` to indicate that the value needs to be replaced. E.g., `api_key: YOUR_API_KEY` or `api_key: REPLACE_ME`. - Integration and platform names should be a link to their respective documentation pages. ### Configuration Variables - The **Configuration Variables** section is only used for YAML configuration. - The **Configuration Variables** section must use the `{% configuration %}` tag. - Configuration variables must document the requirement status (`false` or `true`). - Configuration variables must document the default value, if any. - Configuration variables must document the accepted value types (see [Configuration variables details](documenting/create-page.md#configuration)). - For configuration variables that accept multiple types, separate the types with a comma (i.e. `string, integer`). #### Example Configuration Variables Block ```yaml {% configuration %} some_key: description: This is a description of what this key is for. required: false type: string default: Optional default value - leave out if there isn't one {% endconfiguration %} ``` ### UI Variables - For describing **UI Variables** the `{% configuration_basic %}` section can be used. ### Tables - Be succinct. Minimize the number of columns and keep the amount of text as short as possible: - Tables that are too wide can be difficult to browse on handheld devices - Less content makes tables easier to read - When limiting the amount of text is not possible, consider using other data structures for representing the information. For example, lists or `{% configuration_basic %}` can be used. ## YAML and Templates We have a separate styling guide for YAML and the use of Jinja2 templates inside that YAML. [YAML Style Guide](documenting/yaml-style-guide.md) ## Glossary & Terminology Tooltips The documentation should be written in a way that is understandable for everyone. To help with that, we have a [glossary of terms](https://www.home-assistant.io/docs/glossary/) that are used across Home Assistant, including our documentation. If you use a term that is not in the glossary, feel free to add; or improve the definition of an existing term. Additionally, we have a terminology tooltip available, that can be added and works everywhere in the documentation. This tooltip will show a definition of the term when the user hovers over it with a link for more information. It provides instant context to terminology an user might not be familiar with. The syntax for adding terminology tooltips is: ```liquid {% term [] %} ``` The term referenced must, of course, be listed in our glossary, which is the source for the tooltips. For example, if you write a text about automations, you could add a tooltip like this: ```liquid This is an example text about {% term automations %}, which is used to demonstrate the use of tooltips, in this case, for the term "automations" earlier in this sentence. ``` The `` is optional and can be useful if you want to add a terminology tooltip to a piece of text that differs from the term itself. In the following example the automation term tooltip is added to the "automate everything" text: ```liquid Awesome, because this allowed me to {% term automation "automate everything" %} in my home! I love it! ``` ## Renaming Pages It can happen that an integration or platform is renamed, in this case the documentation needs to be updated as well. If you rename a page, add an entry to the `_redirects` file as shown below. Please consider to add details, like release number or old integration/platform name, to the page in a [note](/documenting/create-page.md/#html). ```text --- ... /getting-started/scripts /docs/scripts --- ``` Adding a redirect also applies if you move content around in the [documentation](https://www.home-assistant.io/docs/).