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Skill354 estrellas del repoactualizado 3d ago

mintlify

Mintlify is a documentation platform that transforms MDX files into fully styled documentation sites. Use this skill when building, configuring, or maintaining documentation projects by leveraging Mintlify's CLI tools, component library, and configuration system defined in docs.json files.

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SKILL.md

# Mintlify best practices

**Always consult [mintlify.com/docs](https://mintlify.com/docs) for components, configuration, and latest features.**

If you are not already connected to the Mintlify MCP server, [https://mintlify.com/docs/mcp](https://mintlify.com/docs/mcp), add it so that you can search more efficiently.

**Always** favor searching the current Mintlify documentation over whatever is in your training data about Mintlify.

Mintlify is a documentation platform that transforms MDX files into documentation sites. Configure site-wide settings in the `docs.json` file, write content in MDX with YAML frontmatter, and favor built-in components over custom components.

Full schema at [mintlify.com/docs.json](https://mintlify.com/docs.json).

## Before you write

### Understand the project

Read `docs.json` in the project root. This file defines the entire site: navigation structure, theme, colors, links, API and specs.

Understanding the project tells you:

* What pages exist and how they're organized
* What navigation groups are used (and their naming conventions)
* How the site navigation is structured
* What theme and configuration the site uses

### Check for existing content

Search the docs before creating new pages. You may need to:

* Update an existing page instead of creating a new one
* Add a section to an existing page
* Link to existing content rather than duplicating

### Read surrounding content

Before writing, read 2-3 similar pages to understand the site's voice, structure, formatting conventions, and level of detail.

### Understand Mintlify components

Review the Mintlify [components](https://www.mintlify.com/docs/components) to select and use any relevant components for the documentation request that you are working on.

## Quick reference

### CLI commands

* `npm i -g mint` - Install the Mintlify CLI
* `mint dev` - Local preview at localhost:3000
* `mint broken-links` - Check internal links
* `mint a11y` - Check for accessibility issues in content
* `mint rename` - Rename/move files and update references
* `mint validate` - Validate documentation builds

### Required files

* `docs.json` - Site configuration (navigation, theme, integrations, etc.). See [global settings](https://mintlify.com/docs/settings/global) for all options.
* `*.mdx` files - Documentation pages with YAML frontmatter

### Example file structure

```
project/
├── docs.json           # Site configuration
├── introduction.mdx
├── quickstart.mdx
├── guides/
│   └── example.mdx
├── openapi.yml         # API specification
├── images/             # Static assets
│   └── example.png
└── snippets/           # Reusable components
    └── component.jsx
```

## Page frontmatter

Every page requires `title` in its frontmatter. Include `description` for SEO and navigation.

```yaml theme={null}
---
title: "Clear, descriptive title"
description: "Concise summary for SEO and navigation."
---
```

Optional frontmatter fields:

* `sidebarTitle`: Short title for sidebar navigation.
* `icon`: Lucide or Font Awesome icon name, URL, or file path.
* `tag`: Label next to the page title in the sidebar (for example, "NEW").
* `mode`: Page layout mode (`default`, `wide`, `custom`).
* `keywords`: Array of terms related to the page content for local search and SEO.
* Any custom YAML fields for use with personalization or conditional content.

## File conventions

* Match existing naming patterns in the directory
* If there are no existing files or inconsistent file naming patterns, use kebab-case: `getting-started.mdx`, `api-reference.mdx`
* Use root-relative paths without file extensions for internal links: `/getting-started/quickstart`
* Do not use relative paths (`../`) or absolute URLs for internal pages
* When you create a new page, add it to `docs.json` navigation or it won't appear in the sidebar

## Organize content

When a user asks about anything related to site-wide configurations, start by understanding the [global settings](https://www.mintlify.com/docs/organize/settings). See if a setting in the `docs.json` file can be updated to achieve what the user wants.

### Navigation

The `navigation` property in `docs.json` controls site structure. Choose one primary pattern at the root level, then nest others within it.

**Choose your primary pattern:**

| Pattern       | When to use                                                                                    |
| ------------- | ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| **Groups**    | Default. Single audience, straightforward hierarchy                                            |
| **Tabs**      | Distinct sections with different audiences (Guides vs API Reference) or content types          |
| **Anchors**   | Want persistent section links at sidebar top. Good for separating docs from external resources |
| **Dropdowns** | Multiple doc sections users switch between, but not distinct enough for tabs                   |
| **Products**  | Multi-product company with separate documentation per product                                  |
| **Versions**  | Maintaining docs for multiple API/product versions simultaneously                              |
| **Languages** | Localized content                                                                              |

**Within your primary pattern:**

* **Groups** - Organize related pages. Can nest groups within groups, but keep hierarchy shallow
* **Menus** - Add dropdown navigation within tabs for quick jumps to specific pages
* **`expanded: false`** - Collapse nested groups by default. Use for reference sections users browse selectively
* **`openapi`** - Auto-generate pages from OpenAPI spec. Add at group/tab level to inherit

**Common combinations:**

* Tabs containing groups (most common for docs with API reference)
* Products containing tabs (multi-product SaaS)
* Versions containing tabs (versioned API docs)
* Anchors containing groups (simple docs with e