We use Next.js and Netlify to build our documentation site.
To build the docs, clone this repo, install the NPM dependencies, and start the development server.
# Some Apple dev tools (developer.apple.com/downloads)
$ xcode-select --install
# Install Homebrew
$ /usr/bin/ruby -e "$(curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Homebrew/install/HEAD/install.sh)"
# Install the Protobuf compiler, graphviz, database, and virtual environment
$ brew install protobuf graphviz gawk mysql mysql-client pkg-config unixodbc postgresql pre-commit
Installing Node JS and yarn
We recommend that you manage your nodejs installation with nvm.
After following the instructions linked above to install nvm
, use the following command to install the latest supported node version
# Install node
nvm install node
Note: Node has added Corepack which is a manager of package managers 😱. It supports yarn! You can enable it by running the following:
corepack enable
You may need to brew install corepack
depending on how you installed node.
ARM based Macs
If you are running a MacOS computer running on the new chipsets (e.g. M1), you may hit some trouble installing pyodbc This can be solved by installing unixodbc
and setting some flags. See this comment for help. We found that it just needs to be set once. Be sure to make sure you have the correct version of unixodbc in the commands.
# Set up the Yarn repo
$ curl -sS https://dl.yarnpkg.com/debian/pubkey.gpg | sudo apt-key add -
$ echo "deb https://dl.yarnpkg.com/debian/ stable main" | sudo tee /etc/apt/sources.list.d/yarn.list
$ sudo apt-get update
# Install Pyenv for testing multiple Python versions
$ sudo apt install -y make build-essential libssl-dev zlib1g-dev libbz2-dev \
libreadline-dev libsqlite3-dev wget curl llvm libncurses5-dev libncursesw5-dev \
xz-utils tk-dev libffi-dev liblzma-dev python-openssl mysql-client libmysqlclient-dev unixodbc-dev
$ curl -L https://github.com/pyenv/pyenv-installer/raw/master/bin/pyenv-installer | bash
# Install some other deps
$ sudo apt install graphviz python3-distutils pre-commit
# Install Yarn, pip, Protobuf, npm
$ sudo apt install yarn npm python-pip protobuf-compiler libgconf-2-4
# (libgconf is for our e2e tests in Cypress)
Probably not needed, but in case you want to update your Node installation:
curl -sL https://deb.nodesource.com/setup_10.x | sudo -E bash -
Streamlit's development setup is pretty Mac- and Linux-centric. If you're doing Streamlit development on Windows, we suggest spinning up a Linux VM (you can do this easily with VirtualBox, which is free); or working in a Linux Docker image.
Alternately, you can try using Microsoft's WSL ("Windows Subsystem for Linux"), which may work fine, or may result in you slowly dying from thousands of tiny papercuts (these steps were last tested on 2019-11-18):
- Install WSL, using the Ubuntu image from the Microsoft Store
- Make sure your WSL supports chmod/chown.
- Make sure you have pre-commit installed and it is available on your path.
- If you have Windows versions of Streamlit build dependencies installed (e.g. Python, nodejs), you may want to consider removing the Windows path from your Linux $PATH, to prevent conflicts.
- See the WSL Release Notes for instructions on editing your wsl.conf file. You'll want to set
appendWindowsPath=false
.
- See the WSL Release Notes for instructions on editing your wsl.conf file. You'll want to set
- Follow the Ubuntu setup instructions above, with the following modifications:
# Install a Python version using pyenv with the `CONFIGURE_OPTS=--enable-shared` flag set:
$ CONFIGURE_OPTS=--enable-shared pyenv install 3.7.5 && pyenv global 3.7.5
$ python -m venv venv
git clone https://github.com/streamlit/docs.git
cd docs/
make
make up
The docs will be viewable at http://localhost:3000. Note that any time you modify the source files in the content/
folder, you'll need to refresh your browser tab to view the changes. You do not need to restart the development server.
This repo follows a typical Next.js project structure. To contribute, you'll only edit Markdown files within the content/
folder.
components/
Contains JS and MDX files.content/
This is where all the Markdown files live. This is the only folder you'll edit.lib/
Contains JS files.pages/
You'll never have to edit this folder. It contains JSX files that handle the complex index page, mapping of URL slugs, and rendering of Markdown pages incontent/
.public/
Contains all the images used in our docs.python/
Contains Python code to generate the docstrings for the API Reference.scripts/
Contains JS files.styles/
Contains CSS files for styling and layout.
To add, edit, or delete content in our documentation, you have to modify Markdown (.md
) files within folders and sub-folders in content/
:
kb/
Contains.md
files that populate the Knowledge Base.library/
Contains.md
files that populate the Streamlit Library section.streamlit-cloud/
Contains.md
files that populate the Streamlit Community Cloud section.gdpr-banner.md
You'll never have to edit this file.index.md
Contains text that populates the index page.menu.md
This is a special file containing only front matter that defines the docs Menu. You will need to add an entry on this file for each new page you create within the docs' site.
The directory structure of content/
does not matter as the files will be recursively read and will ignore the directories. However, we recommend following the directory structure to organize the files, mirroring the structure on the documentation website.
Do you want to add a new page to the docs?
-
First, decide which section the page should live in (Streamlit Library, Streamlit Community Cloud, or Knowledge Base).
-
Next, navigate to the relevant folder and subfolder within
content/
and create a.md
file whose filename mirrors the title of the page. E.g. For a page titled "Create a component", navigate tocontent/develop/concepts/custom-components/
and create a file namedcreate-component.md
.
Now that you've decided where the file should live and have named the file, it's time to add your content!
File format:
Every .md
file has front matter at the very top that defines the page title which appears in the browser tab bar, and the URL slug which appears after the slash in docs.streamlit.io/
and localhost:3000/
.
E.g. For a page titled "Create a component" that should exist at docs.streamlit.io/develop/concepts/custom-components/create
, the front matter at the top of create-component.md
is:
---
title: Create a Component
slug: /develop/concepts/custom-components/create
---
Headings:
Use standard Markdown for headings (#, ##, ###)
Callouts:
To add a callout (Note, Tip, Warning, Important), enter your Markdown text within the appropriate tags (MDX functions), making sure to add a blank line after the opening tag and another before the closing tag. E.g.
<Note>
This is a **note** that links to our [website](https://docs.streamlit.io/).
</Note>
Embed code:
Enclose code within ` ` to embed it inline. E.g.
Create a header with `st.header`.
Embed code blocks like so:
```python
import streamlit as st
st.text("Hello world")
```
We support syntax highlighting for Python, Bash, TOML, SQL, and JSX.
Link to other pages in docs:
Use standard Markdown to link to other pages in the docs. E.g. Add an inline link to the "Create an app" page by including the slug defined in the front matter of the "Create an app" .md
file:
Learn how to [Create an app](/get-started/tutorials/create-an-app).
Add images:
Store images you want to display in /public/images/
. There are two ways to display images.
-
To display a single image, use regular Markdown. Make sure to start the path of your images from
/images/
instead of/public/images/
. E.g.:![Secrets manager screenshot](/images/databases/edit-secrets.png)
-
To display multiple images on the same line, add an
<Image />
tag containing the alt text and path to the image, for each image, and enclose all of them within<Flex>
</Flex>
tags. E.g. To display 3 images stored in/public/images/databases/
:<Flex> <Image alt="Bigquery screenshot 7" src="/images/databases/big-query-7.png" /> <Image alt="Bigquery screenshot 8" src="/images/databases/big-query-8.png" /> <Image alt="Bigquery screenshot 9" src="/images/databases/big-query-9.png" /> </Flex>
Discoverability:
All it takes for a new page to be available at a URL is to create a Markdown file in the format described above, containing the title and slug in the front matter.
However, a user has to know the URL to visit the page. The page is therefore reachable but not discoverable. The next section describes how to add pages to the docs Menu so that users can find your page.
How do you make the page you created appear in the Menu? Edit the special markdown file content/menu.md
. All it has is front matter in YAML.
Suppose you have created an "Quickstart" page that is available at docs.streamlit.io/get-started/installation/quickstart
. You want to it to appear in the Menu within the "Get started" section, nested under the "Installation" page.
To do so, find the lines that define the category
, url
and visible
properties for "Get Started" in menu.md
and add three new lines below it, containing:
- category: Get Started / Installation / Quickstart
url: /get-started/installation/quickstart
visible: true
Important: You always need to add the entry you created in
menu.md
, or otherwise the build will fail. It is important because we use the structure on this page to create the breadcrumbs for each page. If you don't want the page to show up on the menu, you still need to add it, but you can set itsvisible
property tofalse
.
To edit an existing page:
- Locate the
.md
file for the page - Edit the Markdown and save the file
To preview your changes, refresh your browser tab and visit the edited page!
Any time a new version of Streamlit is released, the docstrings stored in python/streamlit.json
have to be updated by running make docstrings
. This will build the necessary Docker image, and update the file with the documentation for the latest release on PyPi.
If you need to regenerate all function signatures, across all versions, delete the content in python/streamlit.json
, leaving the file in place, and run make docstrings
. This will systematically install each version of streamlit, and generate the necessary function signatures in streamlit.json
.
Suppose a new Streamlit release includes a st.my_chart
function that you want to include in the "Chart elements" section of the API Reference:
-
Run
make docstrings
-
Create Markdown file (
my_chart.md
) incontent/develop/api/charts/
-
Add the following to
my_chart.md
:--- title: st.my_chart slug: /develop/api-reference/charts/st.my_chart --- <Autofunction function="streamlit.my_chart" />
-
Add the following under the "Chart elements" heading in
content/develop/api/api-reference.md
:- A RefCard MDX function containing the URL slug defined in
my_chart.md
. This is the card that will appear on the API Reference landing page. - An Image MDX function containing alt text and the location of the image to be displayed on the card.
- A bold heading that will appear on the card (
#### Heading
). It appears below the card image. - A brief description of the
st.my_chart
. It appears below the card heading. - A code block illustrating how to use
st.my_chart
. It appears below the card description and has a Copy icon that when clicked copies the code block to the users' clipboard.
- A RefCard MDX function containing the URL slug defined in
<RefCard href="/develop/api-reference/charts/st.my_chart">
<Image pure alt="Tux, the Linux mascot" src="/img/data-table.png" />
#### My charts
Display a chart using the MyChart library.
```python
st.my_chart(my_data_frame)
```
</RefCard>
-
Add the following 2 new lines to
menu.md
so thatst.my_chart
appears in the Menu:- category: Streamlit Library / API Reference / Chart elements / st.my_chart url: /develop/api-reference/charts/st.my_chart
-
Save your changes and refresh the browser tab. If all went well, you should see a new entry in the Menu, a new card in the API Reference, and a new page for
st.my_chart
.
The Knowledge Base (KB) is divided into five sections:
- Tutorials: Step-by-step examples of building different types of apps in Streamlit
- Using Streamlit: Frequently asked questions about using Streamlit Library
- Deployment Issues: Articles about deploying Streamlit apps
- Streamlit Components: Articles about Streamlit components
- Installing Dependencies: System and Python dependency issues while using or deploying Streamlit apps
If you know the answer to a Streamlit user's pain point and want to add it to the KB:
-
Decide which of the above sections your article belongs to
-
Navigate to the relevant section's folder in
kb/
and -
Create a
.md
file in the above specified format containing your article-
Make sure the title in the front matter and the file header in Markdown are identical. E.g.
--- title: How do I add a Component to the sidebar? slug: /knowledge-base/components/add-component-sidebar --- # How do I add a Component to the sidebar?
-
-
Add a line to the existing
index.md
file in the same folder as your article. It should contain the title and URL slug specified in your article's front matter. This step ensures that users are able to discover your article in the index page of the relevant KB section. E.g.- [How do I add a Component to the sidebar?](/knowledge-base/components/add-component-sidebar)
To publish your changes to the docs site:
- Create a new branch containing your changes.
- Create a Pull Request and mark Snehan as reviewers.
- Once the checks have completed, checkout the Preview build.
- Snehan will review your changes and merge your changes into the
main
branch. - Once merged, your changes will be live at https://docs.streamlit.io/.