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diataxis

Structure, classify, and write documentation using the Diátaxis framework. Use when writing docs, README files, guides, tutorials, how-to guides, API references, or organizing documentation architecture. Also use when asked to improve documentation, restructure docs, decide what type of doc to write, or classify existing content. Covers tutorials, how-to guides, reference, and explanation.

cachemoney 1 Updated 3mo ago

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Install

npx skillscat add cachemoney/agent-toolkit/diataxis

Install via the SkillsCat registry.

SKILL.md

Diátaxis Documentation Framework

Apply the Diátaxis systematic framework to structure and write documentation.

The Four Documentation Types

Diátaxis identifies exactly four types, defined by two axes:

Acquisition (study) Application (work)
Action (doing) Tutorial How-to guide
Cognition (thinking) Explanation Reference

1. Tutorials — learning-oriented

Write tutorials as lessons. Take the learner by the hand through a practical experience where they acquire skills by doing.

  • Use first-person plural ("We will...")
  • Show where they're going up front
  • Deliver visible results early and often
  • Ruthlessly minimize explanation — link to it instead
  • Focus on the concrete, ignore options and alternatives
  • Aspire to perfect reliability

Load references/tutorials.md for full guidance.

2. How-to guides — goal-oriented

Write how-to guides as practical directions for an already-competent user to achieve a specific real-world goal.

  • Name clearly: "How to [achieve X]"
  • Use conditional imperatives ("If you want x, do y")
  • Assume competence — don't teach
  • Omit the unnecessary; practical usability > completeness
  • Allow flexibility with alternatives

Load references/how-to-guides.md for full guidance.

3. Reference — information-oriented

Write reference as technical description of the machinery. Keep it austere, authoritative, consulted not read.

  • Describe and only describe — neutral tone
  • Adopt standard, consistent patterns
  • Mirror the structure of the product
  • Provide examples to illustrate, not explain

Load references/reference.md for full guidance.

4. Explanation — understanding-oriented

Write explanation as discursive treatment that deepens understanding. Answer "Can you tell me about...?"

  • Make connections to related topics
  • Provide context: why things are so
  • Talk about the subject (title: "About X")
  • Admit opinion and perspective
  • Keep closely bounded — don't absorb other types

Load references/explanation.md for full guidance.

The Compass — When In Doubt

Ask two questions to classify content:

  1. Action or cognition? Is this about doing, or thinking?
  2. Acquisition or application? Is this for learning, or for working?

The intersection tells you which type you're writing. Load references/compass.md for detailed decision guidance.

How To Apply

  1. Classify the content — use the compass questions above.
  2. Check for type mixing — does this piece try to do two things at once?
  3. Separate mixed content — pull explanation out of tutorials, pull instructions out of reference.
  4. Apply the type's principles — follow the bullet points for that type above.
  5. Link between types — don't embed, cross-reference instead.

Do NOT create empty four-section structures and try to fill them. Let structure emerge from content.

Example

User asks: "Write a getting-started guide for our CLI tool."

  1. Classify: "Getting started" = the user is learning, by doing → Tutorial.
  2. Check: Not a how-to guide — the user isn't solving a specific problem, they're acquiring familiarity.
  3. Apply tutorial principles:
    • Open with what they'll build: "In this tutorial, we will install the CLI and deploy a sample app."
    • Lead through concrete steps with visible results at each stage.
    • Minimize explanation: "We use --verbose for more output" not a paragraph on logging levels.
    • Link to reference for flag details, link to explanation for architecture.
  4. Result: A focused lesson, not a feature tour disguised as a tutorial.

Common Mistakes

Mistake Why it fails Fix
Tutorial that explains everything Explanation breaks the learning flow — learner loses focus Move explanation to a separate doc, link to it
How-to guide that teaches basics Competent users don't need onboarding — it wastes their time Assume competence, or split into tutorial + how-to
Reference with opinions and advice Users consulting reference need facts, not guidance Move advice to explanation
Explanation mixed into reference Dilutes both — reference becomes verbose, explanation can't develop Separate into distinct documents
"Getting started" that's actually a feature tour No learning goal, no coherent journey — user doesn't acquire skill Pick one thing the user will accomplish, build toward it
Creating empty Tutorials/How-to/Reference/Explanation sections Structure without content is useless scaffolding Write content first, let structure emerge

Critical Rules

  • Never mix types. Each type has its own purpose, tone, and form.
  • The user's mode matters. Study vs. work is the fundamental distinction. Tutorials and explanation serve study. How-to guides and reference serve work.
  • Link between types rather than embedding one inside another.

Deep Dives

Load reference files on demand for detailed guidance:

Topic File
Writing tutorials references/tutorials.md
Writing how-to guides references/how-to-guides.md
Writing reference docs references/reference.md
Writing explanation references/explanation.md
The compass decision tool references/compass.md
Tutorials vs how-to distinction references/tutorials-how-to.md
Reference vs explanation distinction references/reference-explanation.md
Workflow methodology references/how-to-use-diataxis.md
Why Diátaxis works (foundations) references/foundations.md
The two-dimensional map references/map.md
Quality in documentation references/quality.md
Complex hierarchies references/complex-hierarchies.md