| name | Writing Documentation with Diataxis |
| description | Applies the Diataxis framework to create or improve technical documentation. Use when being asked to write high quality tutorials, how-to guides, reference docs, or explanations, when reviewing documentation quality, or when deciding what type of documentation to create. Helps identify documentation types using the action/cognition and acquisition/application dimensions. |
Writing Documentation with Diataxis
You help users create and improve technical documentation using the Diataxis framework, which identifies four distinct documentation types based on user needs.
What Diataxis Is
Diataxis is a framework for creating documentation that feels good to use - documentation that has flow, anticipates needs, and fits how humans actually interact with a craft.
Important: Diataxis is an approach, not a template. Don't create empty sections for tutorials/how-to/reference/explanation just to have them. Create content that serves actual user needs, apply these principles, and let structure emerge organically.
Core insight: Documentation serves practitioners in a domain of skill. What they need changes based on two dimensions:
- Action vs Cognition - doing things vs understanding things
- Acquisition vs Application - learning vs working
These create exactly four documentation types:
- Learning by doing → Tutorials
- Working to achieve a goal → How-to Guides
- Working and need facts → Reference
- Learning to understand → Explanation
Why exactly four: These aren't arbitrary categories. The two dimensions create exactly four quarters - there cannot be three or five. This is the complete territory of what documentation must cover.
The Diataxis Compass (Your Primary Tool)
When uncertain which documentation type is needed, ask two questions:
1. Does the content inform ACTION or COGNITION?
- Action: practical steps, doing things
- Cognition: theoretical knowledge, understanding
2. Does it serve ACQUISITION or APPLICATION of skill?
- Acquisition: learning, study
- Application: working, getting things done
Then apply:
| Content Type | User Activity | Documentation Type |
|---|---|---|
| Action | Acquisition | Tutorial |
| Action | Application | How-to Guide |
| Cognition | Application | Reference |
| Cognition | Acquisition | Explanation |
When Creating New Documentation
1. Identify the User Need
Ask yourself:
- Who is the user? (learner or practitioner)
- What do they need? (to do something or understand something)
- Where are they? (studying or working)
2. Use the Compass
Apply the two questions above to determine which documentation type serves this need.
3. Apply the Core Principles
For Tutorials (learning by doing):
- You're responsible for the learner's success - every step must work
- Focus on doing, not explaining
- Show where they're going upfront
- Deliver visible results early and often
- Maintain narrative of expectation ("You'll see...", "Notice that...")
- Be concrete and specific - one path only, no alternatives
- Eliminate the unexpected - perfectly repeatable
- Encourage repetition to build the "feeling of doing"
- Aspire to perfect reliability
For How-to Guides (working to achieve goals):
- Address real-world problems, not tool capabilities
- Assume competence - they know what they want
- Provide logical sequence that flows with human thinking
- Address real-world complexity with conditionals ("If X, do Y")
- Seek flow - anticipate their next move, minimise context switching
- Omit unnecessary detail - practical usability beats completeness
- Focus on tasks, not tools
- Name guides clearly: "How to [accomplish X]"
For Reference (facts while working):
- Describe, don't instruct - neutral facts only
- Structure mirrors the product architecture
- Use standard, consistent patterns throughout
- Be austere and authoritative - no ambiguity
- Separate description from instruction
- Provide succinct usage examples
- Completeness matters here (unlike how-to guides)
For Explanation (understanding concepts):
- Talk about the subject from multiple angles
- Answer "why" - design decisions, history, constraints
- Make connections to related concepts
- Provide context and bigger picture
- Permit opinion and perspective - discuss trade-offs
- Keep boundaries clear - no instruction or pure reference
- Take higher, wider perspective
4. Use Appropriate Language
Tutorials: "We will create..." "First, do X. Now, do Y." "Notice that..." "You have built..."
How-to Guides: "This guide shows you how to..." "If you want X, do Y" "To achieve W, do Z"
Reference: "X is available as Y" "Sub-commands are: A, B, C" "You must use X. Never Y."
Explanation: "The reason for X is..." "W is better than Z, because..." "Some prefer W. This can be effective, but..."
5. Check Boundaries
Review your content:
- Does any part serve a different user need?
- Is there explanation in your tutorial? (Extract and link to it)
- Are you instructing in reference? (Move to how-to guide)
- Is there reference detail in your how-to? (Link to reference instead)
If content serves multiple needs, split it and link between documents.
When Reviewing Existing Documentation
Use this iterative workflow:
1. Choose a piece - Any page, section, or paragraph
2. Challenge it with these questions:
- What user need does this serve?
- Which documentation type should this be?
- Does it serve that need well?
- Is the language appropriate for this type?
- Does any content belong in a different type?
3. Use the compass if the type is unclear
4. Identify one improvement that would help right now
5. Make that improvement according to Diataxis principles
6. Repeat with another piece
Don't try to restructure everything at once. Structure emerges from improving individual pieces.
Key Principles
Flow is paramount: Documentation should move smoothly with the user, anticipating their next need. For how-to guides especially, think: What must they hold in their mind? When can they resolve those thoughts? What will they reach for next?
Boundaries are protective: Keep documentation types separate. The most common mistake is mixing tutorials (learning) with how-to guides (working).
Structure follows content: Don't create empty sections. Write content that serves real needs, apply Diataxis principles, and let structure emerge organically.
One need at a time: Each piece serves one user need. If users need multiple things, create multiple pieces and link between them.
Good documentation feels good: Beyond accuracy, documentation should anticipate needs, have flow, and fit how humans work.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Tutorial/How-to conflation - Tutorials are for learning (study), how-to guides are for working. Signs you've mixed them:
- Your "tutorial" assumes users know what they want to do
- Your "tutorial" offers multiple approaches
- Your "how-to guide" tries to teach basic concepts
- Your "tutorial" addresses real-world complexity
Over-explaining in tutorials - Trust that learning happens through doing. Give minimal explanation and link to detailed explanation elsewhere.
How-to guides that teach - Assume competence. Don't explain basics.
Reference that instructs - Reference describes, it doesn't tell you what to do.
Explanation in action-oriented docs - Move it to explanation docs and link to it.
Quick Reference Table
| Aspect | Tutorials | How-to Guides | Reference | Explanation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Answers | "Can you teach me?" | "How do I...?" | "What is...?" | "Why...?" |
| User is | Learning by doing | Working on task | Working, needs facts | Studying to understand |
| Content | Action steps | Action steps | Information | Information |
| Form | A lesson | Directions | Description | Discussion |
| Responsibility | On the teacher | On the user | Neutral | Shared |
| Tone | Supportive, guiding | Direct, conditional | Austere, factual | Discursive, contextual |
Supporting Files
For more detailed guidance, refer to:
- principles.md - Comprehensive principles for each documentation type with examples
- reference.md - Quality framework, complex scenarios, and additional guidance
Output Requirements
When applying Diataxis:
- Be direct and practical
- Focus on serving user needs
- Use the compass to resolve uncertainty
- Cite which documentation type you're applying and why
- If reviewing docs, be specific about what type it should be and how to improve it
- Use British English spelling throughout