If you see something off with Mixpanel's docs (typo, broken link, outdated content/screenshot) you can now contribute that fix yourself!
You’ll need a GitHub account. It’s free and takes 1 minute to create. Not sure what to make your handle? We recommend yourfullname-mixpanel
.
Once there, email it.help@mixpanel.com
with your Github handle to give you a Github seat in Okta. You should get automatically added to the "Mixpanel Docs" Github team, which allows you to contribute to this repository.
To make an edit:
- Go to the page in our documentation that you want to edit. On the right side, under the table of contents, you should see an "Edit This Page" link. That will take you to the file in Github that contains the contents of that doc.
- Click the pencil icon to make edits to a file’s markdown. You can swap between code and preview to see what your edits look like.
- When you’re ready, hit “Commit” and follow the instructions to commit the changes to your branch and create a pull request review. Add a description if you like, keeping in mind that this is publicly accessible.
- If you're making multiple related changes, don't create a pull request right away. Continue making changes in the branch until you're ready to post all of the changes together in one PR
- One of the docs maintainers will review that request within 3 days and merge when approved (usually faster if it’s a small change).
- Once merged, changes will go live automatically, typically within 1-2 minutes.
This is a bit more advanced, but makes it much faster to test the impact of your changes (no waiting for the staging deployment):
- Clone the repo
- Install
npm
- Run
npm run-script dev
-- this will start serving the docs at localhost:3000 - Make whatever changes you want locally, this should automatically reflect in your local instance of the docs.
Upload images/GIFs to the public/ directory. You can make sub-directories within public/
to namespace them (eg: /public/tutorials/
for all tutorial-related images).
To reference an image, use a relative link to the image with the public
stripped out. For example, if you have an image public/example.png
, you can reference it as follows: [insert alt text here](/example.png)
.
Images are hard to keep up-to-date, so please use them judiciously.
All pull requests will generate a staging link in Vercel. Here's an example. This lets you preview your changes without changing what's actually live.
The navigation of the docs is defined based on the directory structure in this repo. The top-level structure (getting-started, tracking, analysis, admin, other-bits) should not change very often.
We have fewer, longer docs rather than many micro-docs. This helps keep navigation clean and provides confidence to the reader that everything they need to know about a topic is likely in 1 place.
The exception to this rule is for How To guides (/tracking/how-tos) or Integrations (tracking/integrations). We expect these docs to be read linearly and focused on accomplishing a certain task.
Vijay, Marissa, Mav, Jordan. Eventually we’ll expand this list, but keeping it tight for now.