Headers

Headers organize your content and create navigation anchors. They appear in the table of contents and help users scan your documentation.

Creating headers

Use # symbols to create headers of different levels:

## Main section header
### Subsection header
#### Sub-subsection header

Use descriptive, keyword-rich headers that clearly indicate the content that follows. This improves both user navigation and search engine optimization.

Text formatting

We support most Markdown formatting for emphasizing and styling text.

Basic formatting

Apply these formatting styles to your text:

StyleSyntaxExampleResult
Bold**text****important note**important note
Italic_text__emphasis_emphasis
Strikethrough~text~~deprecated feature~deprecated feature

Combining formats

You can combine formatting styles:

**_bold and italic_**
**~~bold and strikethrough~~**
*~~italic and strikethrough~~**

bold and italic
bold and strikethrough
italic and strikethrough

Superscript and subscript

For mathematical expressions or footnotes, use HTML tags:

TypeSyntaxExampleResult
Superscript<sup>text</sup>example<sup>2</sup>example2
Subscript<sub>text</sub>example<sub>n</sub>examplen

Links help users navigate between pages and access external resources. Use descriptive link text to improve accessibility and user experience.

Link to other pages in your documentation using root-relative paths:

[Quickstart](/quickstart)
[Steps](/components/steps)

Quickstart
Steps

Avoid relative links like [page](../page) as they load slower and cannot be optimized as effectively as root-relative links.

For external resources, include the full URL:

[Markdown Guide](https://www.markdownguide.org/)

Markdown Guide

You can check for broken links in your documentation using the CLI:

mint broken-links

Blockquotes

Blockquotes highlight important information, quotes, or examples within your content.

Single line blockquotes

Add > before text to create a blockquote:

> This is a quote that stands out from the main content.

This is a quote that stands out from the main content.

Multi-line blockquotes

For longer quotes or multiple paragraphs:

> This is the first paragraph of a multi-line blockquote.
>
> This is the second paragraph, separated by an empty line with `>`.

This is the first paragraph of a multi-line blockquote.

This is the second paragraph, separated by an empty line with >.

Use blockquotes sparingly to maintain their visual impact and meaning. Consider using callouts for notes, warnings, and other information.

Mathematical expressions

We support LaTeX for rendering mathematical expressions and equations.

Inline math

Use single dollar signs, $, for inline mathematical expressions:

The Pythagorean theorem states that $(a^2 + b^2 = c^2)$ in a right triangle.

The Pythagorean theorem states that (a2+b2=c2)(a^2 + b^2 = c^2) in a right triangle.

Block equations

Use double dollar signs, $$, for standalone equations:

$$
E = mc^2
$$
E=mc2E = mc^2

LaTeX support requires proper mathematical syntax. Refer to the LaTeX documentation for comprehensive syntax guidelines.

Line breaks and spacing

Control spacing and line breaks to improve content readability.

Paragraph breaks

Separate paragraphs with blank lines:

This is the first paragraph.

This is the second paragraph, separated by a blank line.

This is the first paragraph.

This is the second paragraph, separated by a blank line.

Manual line breaks

Use HTML <br /> tags for forced line breaks within paragraphs:

This line ends here.<br />
This line starts on a new line.

This line ends here.
This line starts on a new line.

In most cases, paragraph breaks with blank lines provide better readability than manual line breaks.

Best practices

Content organization

  • Use headers to create clear content hierarchy
  • Follow proper header hierarchy (don’t skip from H2 to H4)
  • Write descriptive, keyword-rich header text

Text formatting

  • Use bold for emphasis, not for entire paragraphs
  • Reserve italics for terms, titles, or subtle emphasis
  • Avoid over-formatting that distracts from content
  • Write descriptive link text instead of “click here” or “read more”
  • Use root-relative paths for internal links
  • Test links regularly to prevent broken references