Create beautiful documentation in under 5 minutes, using the Fern Definition format to define your API.
Gett inspired by API documentation built with Fern: Hume | MultiOn | Flagright | Traceloop | ElevenLabs
- Node 18 or higher
- A GitHub account
Tip
Prefer to use OpenAPI? We've got you covered: Fern Docs Quickstart with OpenAPI Specification.
- Click on the Use this template button. You must be logged into GitHub.
- Choose the option to create a new repository. Name it
fern-docs
.
Clone your newly created repository locally and open it in your favorite code editor, such as Visual Studio Code.
The fern/
folder in your repository contains these files and folders:
├─ definition/
├─ api.yml
├─ pet.yml
├─ store.yml
└─ user.yml
├─ docs/
├─ assets/
├─ favicon.png
├─ logo_dark_mode.png
└─ logo_light_mode.png
└─ pages/
├─ sdks.mdx
└─ welcome.mdx
├─ docs.yml
├─ fern.config.json
└─ generators.yml
The definition/
folder contains Fern Definition files for a sample API called Swagger Petstore. Fern uses these files to generate the API Reference section of your docs site.
The files inside the pages/
folder are used to generate other documentation pages, such as a Welcome page. The docs.yml
file sets up site navigation and custom styles.
In the repository that you cloned locally, open the fern.config.json
file, which looks like this:
{
"organization": "Petstore",
"version": "0.x.x"
}
Replace "Petstore"
with your own organization name within the quotes. Spaces are permitted. Leave the version
number unchanged.
Open the docs.yml
file and locate the url
, which looks like this:
instances:
- url: petstore-ferndef.docs.buildwithfern.com
Replace petstore-ferndef
with your own organization's name. Use only alphanumeric characters, hyphens, and underscores. Do not use spaces, and leave the rest of the URL (.docs.buildwithfern.com
) unchanged.
Install the Fern CLI tool globally by running:
npm install -g fern-api
When prompted, log into and connect your GitHub account.
Note
The above CLI command is a global command that you can run from any location. The fern
commands in the following steps must be run from within your repository.
Run the following command:
fern generate --docs
Once the documentation is generated, Fern displays the URL where you can view the published documentation. For example:
┌─
│ ✓ petstore-ferndef.docs.buildwithfern.com
└─
Instead of petstore-ferndef
, you should see the organization name that you added to docs.yml
in Step 3.
You must run fern generate --docs
after any modifications to re-generate and publish your documentation site.
To preview updates to your documentation before publishing changes, run fern generate --docs --preview
.
To modify the API Reference:
- Update or replace the Fern Definition files in the
definition/
folder. See our documentation on how to define your API with Fern Definition.
To modify the other docs pages or add new pages:
- Update the files located in the
docs/pages/
folder, such aswelcome.mdx
. See our documentation on how to write Markdown content.
To configure site navigation, styles, and see other configuration options:
To learn about Fern's built-in component library you can use in Markdown:
- See the Component Library.
If you wish to use a custom subdomain like https://docs.YOUR_ORGANIZATION.com
or a subpath like https://YOUR_ORGANIZATION.com/docs
, you can subscribe to the Starter plan. Once subscribed, update docs.yml
with the custom domain configuration, replacing YOUR_ORGANIZATION with your own.
- url: YOUR_ORGANIZATION.docs.buildwithfern.com
custom-domain: docs.YOUR_ORGANIZATION.com
Good luck creating beautiful and functional documentation! 🌿
Need help? Set up a call with an expert or email us at support@buildwithfern.com.