- Fork this repo and
git clone
it. - In your terminal, navigate to the repo from where it was just cloned. This should be located at the
/docs
directory. - From your command line, run
yarn && yarn dev
- http://localhost:3000/ should open automatically.
We welcome contributions to the documentation site! Here's how to do it:
- Follow our styleguide, especially if writing longer pieces.
- Verify your changes locally.
- Make a PR to our
main
branch- Please include any issues your PR addresses.
- If any files have been deleted with your PR, please indicate that
redirects are needed
in your PR description and/or add theredirects-needed
label.
What's next? After your PR is reviewed and all tests pass, it will be merged and the branch will be deleted.
- main - at parity with our production site docs.amplify.aws
- gh-pages - DO NOT DELETE! Handle redirects from v1 of the documentation site.
Our docs are generated using Next.js. Refer to their docs on how to create pages as a primer.
The pages' source are in src. This folder is the only directory you need touch in order to edit or create pages.
Within this folder exists a pages/index.tsx file. This will be rendered as a page at the route /. Within the pages/lib/q/platform/ folder is a [platform].mdx file, which will be rendered as a page at the route /lib.
In order to have the page render properly and display in the sidebar, please place your page and it's route in src/directory/directory.js
IMPORTANT: every page has to have a title
and description
meta field.
The markdown body is parsed as MDX and can include any valid HTML or JSX.
To inline fragments, and have them conditionally render based off selected platform, we add the condition to the Fragments
tag:
import js from "/src/fragments/lib/datastore/js/conflict.mdx";
<Fragments fragments={{js: js}} />;
This fragment would exist in: pages/src/fragments/lib/datastore/js/conflict.mdx
BlockSwitcher
allows you to organize blocks of content into tabs. This is useful for presenting a reader different instructions based upon framework (e.g. Vue.js vs. React) or language (e.g. Java vs. Kotlin). Here's an example of its usage:
<BlockSwitcher>
<Block name="JavaScript">
```js
const a = "a";
```
</Block>
<Block name="TypeScript">
```ts
const a: "a" = "a";
```
</Block>
<Block name="Rust">
```rust
let mut a = String::from("a");
```
</Block>
</BlockSwitcher>
- Setup the repo and run it with the
dev
script mentioned above in the "Getting Started" section - On your localhost page, go to the page with the React component you want to debug and open up the developer tools.
- To know which source file to breakpoint on, we need to find the name of the component first.
-
Open up the dev tools and use the react dev tools to find the component. Do this by using the "Select an element on the page to inspect it" tool under the "Components" tab.
-
Search for the variable/component name inside the source code to find the file you want to debug.
-
Place the breakpoint inside the file under the "Sources" tab in the browser's dev tools.
- Note that since the Amplify Docs site is built with nextjs, file paths will start with "
webpack://_N_E/./
"
- Note that since the Amplify Docs site is built with nextjs, file paths will start with "
-
- Refresh your localhost site and the breakpoint should hit in the browser's dev tools. You should be able to debug the code.
Another way to find which file you want to debug is to search for strings/paragraphs seen in Amplify docs site. Search for the strings in your code editor and you'll find that they will be in a .mdx
file. You should see the components that are being rendered and be able to find the file name you want to debug.
More info on debugging can be find here: https://nextjs.org/docs/advanced-features/debugging