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About topics

Use topics to make articles searchable.

An article can be defined as being relevant to one or more topics by having those topics listed in the article's frontmatter. For example:

---
title: "Managing branches in your repository"
topics:
  - "GitHub"
  - "Git"
  - "Repositories"
---

For more information on adding topics to an article see, Using YAML frontmatter. For a list of all allowed topics, see allowed-topics.

Topics for all content types

  • Use nouns as topics
  • Topics help people meaningfully group content
    • When possible, use more specific topics that are relevant and not just broad topics. For example, REST or GraphQL rather than just API
    • Ensure that topics on similar articles are consistent so that people who filter by a topic get all of the relevant articles. For example, all articles about CI should have the CI topic plus more specific topics
    • Avoid ambiguous topics. For example, Actions may not be a useful topic within the Actions product since it could refer to the product GitHub Actions or the product element called an action
  • Topics add value beyond and do not replicate the article’s title, type, or category
    • For example, within the Actions product, Actions does not add value since someone in this section of the docs would already know that they are looking at Actions docs
  • Use Fundamentals for articles related to the core concepts of a product area.
    • Use: Fundamentals in an article like “Introduction to GitHub Actions”
    • Avoid: Actions in an article like "Introduction to GitHub Actions"
  • Commonly-recognized abbreviations can be used, but obscure or ambiguous abbreviations should be avoided
    • Use: CI instead of Continuous integration
    • Avoid: AS instead of Advanced Security
  • Use the short forms of GitHub product names
    • Use: Actions instead of GitHub Actions

Checklist for choosing topics

Consider these questions to help choose topics for an article. Not every article will have a topic for each item in the checklist.

  • What is the feature or product area?
    • Example: Enterprise Is the article about a sub-feature (unless the product name matches the feature name)?
    • Example: Dependabot
  • Is the feature part of a restricted program?
    • Example: Advanced Security
  • What element of the feature or product is the article?
    • Example: Organizations
  • What is the broad purpose of the article?
    • Example: Permissions
  • What programming languages, package managers, or ecosystems does the article explicitly address? Only include these topics if it adds value to someone filtering the docs, not just if an article lists supported languages, package managers, or ecosystems.
    • Example: Ruby