| # :ledger: Looking for the docs? |
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| You can find Haystack's documentation at https://docs.haystack.deepset.ai/. |
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| # :computer: How to update docs? |
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| ## Overview, Components, Pipeline Nodes, and Guides |
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| You can find these docs on the Haystack Docs page: https://docs.haystack.deepset.ai/docs/get_started. If you want to contribute, and we welcome every contribution, do the following: |
| 1. Make sure you're on the right version (check the version expanding list in the top left corner). |
| 2. Use the "Suggest Edits" link you can find in the top right corner of every page. |
| 3. Suggest a change right in the docs and click **Submit Suggested Edits**. |
| 4. Optionally, leave us a comment and submit your change. |
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| Once we take care of it, you'll get an email telling you the change's been merged, or not. If not, we'll give you the reason why. |
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| Make sure to check our [Contribution Guidelines](https://github.com/deepset-ai/haystack/blob/main/CONTRIBUTING.md). |
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| ## Tutorials |
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| The Tutorials live in a separate repo: https://github.com/deepset-ai/haystack-tutorials. For instructions on how to contribute to tutorials, see [Contributing to Tutorials](https://github.com/deepset-ai/haystack-tutorials/blob/main/Contributing.md#contributing-to-haystack-tutorials). |
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| ## API Reference |
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| We use Pydoc-Markdown to create Markdown files from the docstrings in our code. There is a Github Action that regenerates the API pages with each commit. |
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| If you want to generate a new Markdown file for a new Haystack module, create a `.yml` file in `docs/src/api/api` which configures how Pydoc-Markdown will generate the page and commit it to main. |
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| All the updates to doctrings get pushed to documentation when you commit to the main branch. |
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| ### Configuration |
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| Pydoc will read the configuration from a `.yml` file which is located under `/haystack/docs/_src/api/pydoc`. Our files contain three main sections: |
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| - **loader**: A list of plugins that load API objects from python source files. |
| - **type**: Loader for python source files |
| - **search_path**: Location of source files |
| - **modules**: Module which are used for generating the markdown file |
| - **ignore_when_discovered**: Define which files should be ignored |
| - **processor**: A list of plugins that process API objects to modify their docstrings (e.g. to adapt them from a documentation format to Markdown or to remove items that should not be rendered into the documentation). |
| - **type: filter**: Filter for specific modules |
| - **documented_only**: Only documented API objects |
| - **do_not_filter_modules**: Do not filter module objects |
| - **skip_empty_modules**: Skip modules without content |
| - **renderer**: A plugin that produces the output files. We use a custom ReadmeRenderer based on the Markdown renderer. It makes sure the Markdown files comply with ReadMe requirements. |
| - **type**: Define the renderer which you want to use. We are using the ReadmeRenderer to make sure the files display properly in ReadMe. |
| - **excerpt**: Add a short description of the page. It shows up right below the page title. |
| - **category**: This is the ReadMe category ID to make sure the doc lands in the right section of Haystack docs. |
| - **title**: The title of the doc as it will appear on the website. Make sure you always add "API" at the end. |
| - **slug**: The page slug, each word should be separated with a dash. |
| - **order**: Pages are ordered alphabetically. This defines where in the TOC the page lands. |
| - markdown: |
| - **descriptive_class_title**: Remove the word "Object" from class titles. |
| - **descriptive_module_title**: Adding the word “Module” before the module name. |
| - **add_method_class_prefix**: Add the class name as a prefix to method names. |
| - **add_member_class_prefix**: Add the class name as a prefix to member names. |
| - **filename**: File name of the generated file, use underscores to separate each word. |
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