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Here you'll find the documentation for the Particle platform, including the Particle Cloud, Photon, and Spark Core.
To view this documentation, visit our website, where the documentation is hosted.
Note: This is a new public repository as of May 18, 2015. All outstanding pull requests from the old docs repository have been closed. Please re-open them in this repo.
To host this documentation locally, you'll need Node.js and npm:
brew install nodejs
Once you have Node.js set up, navigate to this repository's directory on your machine, and then:
npm install
to install any other necessary dependencies.
This documentation uses a fabulous tool from the folks at Segment called Metalsmith. Metalsmith is a static site generator that builds static HTML sites from source material in other formats; in this case, Markdown and Handlebars.
To run a locally hosted version of the documentation, follow the installation instructions above, and then within the 'docs' directory type in your terminal:
npm start
This will set up a server running at http://localhost:8080
. If you make changes to the source content, your browser should automatically refresh using livereload
.
To run the tests locally, run npm test
from the root of the
repository. This will tell you whether the build will pass on Travis or
not.
When updated documentation is pushed to the master branch, it is automatically pushed to Amazon S3 by Travis CI.
TODO: FURTHER INSTRUCTIONS FOR DEPLOYMENT
To see the latest build, visit the Travis CI page.
The majority of the content herein is stored in the src/content/en
directory as a set of Markdown files. Assets such as images and javascript are stored in the src/assets
directory.
Within the en
subdirectory, there are three subfolders: core
,
photon
, and shared
. Files in core
will only be shown in the menu when the user
is viewing Core-specific docs, and photon
files will be visible when
viewing Photon-specific docs. Files in shared
will be nested under both
devices, so put pages here that apply to both the Core and the Photon.
If you create a new file under the shared
, please add shared: true
to the front-matter at the beginning of the MD file so that the link to
edit the file on GitHub will be correct. For instance:
---
word: API
title: Cloud code (API)
order: 4
shared: true
---
The docs dynamically generate a table of contents for navigation purposes based on the headers (i.e. ###
) that you use on each page. It is important to note that order and heirarchy matters when you are designing the organization of content on your page. Your page should include the following:
-
1
h1
at the top of the page that will serve as the title of the page. You can even copy thetitle
directly from the front-matter of the markdown file like this:# {{title}}
-
As many
h2
s (##
) as you'd like to serve as the section headers for the page. -
Underneath every
h2
, if applicable, as manyh3
s (###
) as you'd like to serve as sub-sections within the section. These will appear as nested within the navigation on the left.
Note that there are only 2 levels of navigation that will appear in the table of contents. h4
s and below will not appear in the table of contents.
If you are working on a page that has device-specific content, the first thing you need to do is add the relevant device names to the front-matter of the MD file, like this:
devices: [ photon, electron, core ]
Where Photon, Electron and Core are the relevant devices to this page. Then, in the body of the page, you can specify device-specific content by using a special helper, like this:
{{#if photon}}
PHOTON SPECIFIC STUFFZ
{{/if}}
{{#if core}}
CORE SPECIFIC STUFFZ
{{/if}}
{{#if electron}}
ELECTRON SPECIFIC STUFFZ
{{/if}}
{{#unless core}}
STM32F205 SPECIFIC STUFFZ (Photon, P1, Electron)
{{/unless}}
{{#unless electron}}
Wi-Fi SPECIFIC STUFFZ (Core, Photon, P1)
{{/unless}}
You can also insert the selected device name into text like this:
Without a doubt, the {{device}} rocks!
To run the test scripts, run npm test
.
Some of this documentation is derived from the Arduino documentation, as the Arduino/Wiring language and libraries are used extensively on the Spark Core.
This documentation was originally built using Flatdoc, an awesome tool for building beautiful documentation from simple Markdown files. We have made many modifications since, but the inspiration remains.
This documentation is managed by Particle, but supported by the community. We welcome contributions such as:
- Edits to improve grammar or fix typos
- Edits to improve clarity
- Additional annotated examples for others to follow
- Additional content that would help provide a complete understanding of the Particle platform
- Translations to other languages
Making a contribution is as simple as forking this repository, making edits to your fork, and contributing those edits as a pull request. For more information on how to make a pull request, see Github's documentation.
These files have been made available online through a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 license.
You are welcome to distribute, remix, and use these files for commercial purposes. If you do so, please attribute the original design to Particle both on the website and on the physical packaging of the product or in the instruction manual. All derivative works must be published under the same or a similar license.