We rolled our own documentation site

2 days ago (blog.tangled.org)

I love the linux philosophy at work here. Pandoc is an incredible tool that every documentarian knows. Markdown is a great tool that covers 80%+ of docs requirements (admonitions and tabs are not well-defined in vanilla markdown, for instance, but you don't strictly _need_ those).

I've worked on docs at quite a few companies at this point. Almost every company I've ever seen has built a Rube Goldberg machine and totally overengineered their docs for reasons I simply can't understand. It's funniest when the overengineering doesn't even solve problems better than the vanilla solutions out there like AsciiDoctor and Sphinx. So many useless checks. So much unmaintainable javascript and styling. So many botched search and AI chat implementations. And don't even get me started on Vale, which generally just annoys the hell out of contributors instead of helping them.

Great work on the site, Tangled. Your docs site contains useful instructions and a sidebar that clearly communicates an organization structure. It doesn't peg my CPU or RAM. It's amazing how that makes your site better than 90% of docs sites out there.

One tip: could you add a favicon? Bonus points if it's slightly distinct from your main site's favicon so I can distinguish docs tabs at a glance.

I do have to say that all of the doc tools they mention in the beginning are worse than Astro Starlight[1] and Vitepress[2]. Can highly recommend Astro Starlight for documentation sites, used it for multiple projects myself.

[1]: https://starlight.astro.build/

[2]: https://vitepress.dev/

  • Can vouch for Starlight and Astro in general. Don't be fooled by the fact that they are npm packages: Astro is geared for content-heavy websites and produces zero-JS bundles by default (i.e., if you just use markdowns without any script tags or JS frontend libraries, then there will be no JS in the final output at all).

Talking about search on a static docs site, has anyone tried a static pre-generated search like https://lunrjs.com/ ?

> MkDocs: Works great with JS disabled, however the table of contents needs to be maintained via mkdocs.yml, which can be quite tedious.

note that the mkdocs-material folks are now working on https://zensical.org/ which is in rust and _much_ faster. it solves this specific requirement by autogenerating the navigation based on file structure.

it's still early / under active development, but i recently rebuilt our techdocs on top of it. a simple github workflow to aggregate from our two monorepos + some bash-fu to merge them together and voila! no config file headaches

This is great, no javascript. And while I am not a big fan of google search, alternative to open up all docs as single page and use Ctrl+F is neat.

I recently created a static site with technical documentation using Antora. Antora uses asciidoc source that it pulls from git repositories. It has a lunr extension for search. It took some time to get familiar with the setup, but I find it very nice to work with. I use it for the documentation of a set of code libraries, and it is a really good fit for that.

Regarding the "searchability" point: I tried using the Google search field on the left to search for "openbao", which is listed right below as one of the topics. Got 0 results. Second time I tried, I got a reCaptcha from Google itself: a first in years. That's not very reassuring.

Congrats on the launch!

I run a documentation product, ReadMe. There's a lot of reasons to roll your own, but I'd recommend you also look into a third-party tool like us. One of the biggest reasons to use a product is that the building v1 is easy, but keeping it up to date over time is a lot tougher... you're stuck remembering how to deploy, figuring out a workflow, dealing with multiple versions, etc.

You also just don't get a ton of really great features for your developers... fast typeahead search, AI tools (which your developers increasingly really want), navigation, accessibility and more. ReadMe also lets your developers play around with you API locally and get copy-and-paste code snippets.

(If you're deciding between your own and ReadMe, email me! greg@readme.io; would love to talk)

  • All for the low, low price of $350 US per month!

    • There's also a free version, and a $79/mo tier. We're also free for open source projects on our higher tiers.

      If it's not for you, that's okay! But an increasing number of documentation teams are cross-functional (marketing, sales, engineering, product), and not everyone is comfortable editing content directly in Git and dealing with a release.

      Docs are the heart and soul of most devtools, so I think it makes sense a lot of companies want a good product.

Mintlify is really good. If you're a serious developer tool not sure why you wouldn't use it. For example I went into your docs and I don't see AI chat so I can ask quick, natural language questions. No MCP I can install so Cursor can query. Prob no llms.txt. No quick Copy to Markdown. This stuff is table stakes, if you don't have it and a competitor does, I'm not even considering you guys

It's just a worse developer experience. Fine if you aren't a serious business, but yeah I wouldn't play down the value of Mintlify or similar products. It's seriously good and it's why huge companies use it

  • >I don't see AI chat so I can ask quick, natural language questions. No MCP I can install so Cursor can query. Prob no llms.txt. No quick Copy to Markdown.

    It's not the site's job to add those features though. If you want that experience there are ways to get it without adding bloat to every page on the web. Scraping a static site and answering questions/summarizing is a solved problem.

    • It is the sites job to make documentation available to the users, no?

      It’s so odd for a tech focused crowed to be so opposed to newer technology.

      Users are getting used to natural language search, not having it will be perceived as friction.

      Users are increasingly turning to agentic coding tools, those tools do best when documentation is available via an MCP server. Not having one will make it harder for people to use your product.

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    • It's not a business's job to make their documentation accessible to their potential and current customers?

      I would ask if you've started a real business but it's clear you haven't. It is 100% on a developer tool startup to provide documentation that is easily accessible. If they don't, customers will struggle to get value. If you think this isn't true, then you are ignoring the gigantic market of companies purchasing documentation products (look at Mintlify's customer base for reference)

      There is no way I'm asking my customers to scrape my docs and build their own MCP server and AI assistant just to access it easily.

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