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How to document components |
💡 NOTE: Currently there's an issue when using MDX stories with IE11. This issue does not apply to DocsPage. If you're interested in helping us fix this issue, read our Contribution guidelines and submit a pull request.
When you write component stories during development, you also create basic documentation to revisit later.
Storybook gives you tools to expand this basic documentation with prose and layout that feature your components and stories prominently. That allows you to create UI library usage guidelines, design system sites, and more.
If you're including Storybook in your project for the first time, we provide you with DocsPage, a documentation template that lists all the stories for a component and associated metadata. It infers metadata values based on source code, types and JSDoc comments. If you need, you can customize this page to create your own custom template.
If you're already using Storybook and you're updating to the latest release, we recommend that you install @storybook/addon-essentials, to include this and other great features into your project.
You can also create free-form pages for each component using MDX, a format for simultaneously documenting components and writing stories.
In both cases, you’ll use Doc Blocks as the building blocks to create full featured documentation.
Docs is autoconfigured to work out of the box in most use cases. In some cases you may need or want to tweak the configuration. Read more about it here.