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Jamdesk Docs

by Geoffrey Bourne · GitHub ↗ · v1.0.1 · MIT-0
cross-platform ✓ Security Clean
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Install in OpenClaw
/install update-jamdesk
Description
Use when user-facing code changes need documentation — after implementing APIs, CLI commands, UI components, or config options. Triggers on 'update docs', 'd...
README (SKILL.md)

Update Jamdesk

Updates customer-facing documentation in external repositories (not CLAUDE.md). Locates docs via .jamdesk-docs-path, asks clarifying questions, writes documentation, and verifies with the jamdesk CLI. Learn more about Jamdesk on the Jamdesk homepage.

Announce: "I'm using the update-jamdesk skill to update your documentation."

Use when: User-facing changes to APIs, CLI commands, UI, config options, component behavior, or docs.json schema/features.

Skip when: Internal refactors, test-only changes, build/CI config, performance work without behavior change.

Right-size it: Not every change deserves a new page — a renamed config key is one edited line in an existing page, not a new doc.

Common mistake: Changes to docs.json format or config handling are user-facing. Even if the change was made inside the docs repo itself, ask: "Does this introduce or change a config pattern that customers use?" If yes, document it.

Critical Rules

Always Never
Include frontmatter (title ≤ 60 chars, description 120-160 chars) Create stub pages with "TODO"
Use built-in components first Use mint.json (use docs.json)
Ask clarifying questions before writing Skip verification
State prerequisites up front Include secrets, tokens, or real customer data
Use active voice and action-oriented headings Promise guarantees ("always works", "instant")
Include explicit warnings for destructive steps Use "click here" link text

Flags

Flag Behavior
(none) Full workflow: locate → clarify → analyze → write → verify → commit
--preview Phases 1-3 only, describe changes without making them. Skip first-time config creation (report what you would create) and the branch-strategy question

Phase 1: Locate Documentation

Find .jamdesk-docs-path by walking up from current directory to git root. It is a YAML file that lives at the git root of the code repo:

docs_path: ../customer-docs    # Required - relative or absolute path
docs_branch: main              # Optional - base branch for new feature branches, default: main

First-time setup: If config doesn't exist, ask user for their docs repo path and create the file at the git root. This only happens once per project. Point users to https://jamdesk.com/docs for help getting started with Jamdesk.

Preflight checks — resolve each failure before writing anything:

Check On failure
docs_path exists Re-ask the user for the path, update the config
Contains docs.json If only mint.json exists, stop — tell the user to migrate to docs.json first
which jamdesk CLI missing — continue, but use the manual verification checklist in Phase 5
Docs working tree is clean Stop and ask: stash, commit existing work, or proceed anyway. Never proceed silently onto a dirty tree

Same-repo docs: If the docs live in the same git repo as the code, skip separate git operations entirely — stay on the current branch, include doc changes alongside the code change, and skip the branch-strategy question (Phase 2) and the commit menu (Phase 6).

Phase 2: Clarify Scope

Review conversation to identify what changed, then ask:

  1. Branch strategy (external docs repo only — skip if same-repo): Feature branch created from docs_branch (recommended), main, or current branch? If an unmerged docs branch from a previous run exists, surface it instead of silently creating a second one.
  2. Scope confirmation: "I plan to [create/update] these pages: ... Any changes?"
  3. Additional context (if needed): Terminology, related features, edge cases

Principle: Ask first, write later. 30-second clarification prevents 10-minute rework.

Phase 3: Analyze Existing Docs

Search docs repo for existing coverage of the feature. Present findings:

Existing: getting-started.mdx mentions feature briefly
Missing: No dedicated page

Recommended:
1. Create: features/new-feature.mdx
2. Update: getting-started.mdx (add link)

Decision matrix:

Scenario Action
New feature Create new page
Behavior change Update existing page describing that behavior
Small addition Add section to existing page
Major capability New standalone page
Deprecation/removal Update existing + add migration notes
Advanced usage Add \x3CAccordion> to existing page (keeps the page scannable for beginners)
New docs.json config/pattern Update docs.json reference and/or navigation docs

Phase 4: Write Documentation

The rules below are the load-bearing standards — fetch https://jamdesk.com/docs only if you need something not covered here.

Content quality:

  • Explain why, not just what
  • Show the simplest working example first
  • Use concrete, realistic values in examples, not placeholders (readers learn faster from examples they can copy-paste) — but anything secret-shaped (API keys, tokens, passwords) must be obviously fake, e.g. sk_test_xxxx
  • Show expected output after commands so readers can confirm they're on track
  • One concept per section, 3-7 subsections per page
  • Define terms once and reuse consistently

Writing quality:

  • Active voice, direct instructions
  • Short sentences, avoid idioms (global audiences)
  • Action-oriented headings ("Configure X", "Verify Y", "Troubleshoot Z")
  • Descriptive link text (never "click here")
  • Include \x3CWarning> for destructive/irreversible steps
  • No description echo: The opening paragraph MUST say something different from the frontmatter description. The description is for SEO meta tags; the opening paragraph should complement it with context, prerequisites, or what the reader will accomplish -- not repeat it.

Page structure:

  1. Opening paragraph (what + why + target audience)
  2. Prerequisites (tools, access, versions)
  3. Quick Start (simplest example)
  4. Configuration/Details
  5. Examples (basic → advanced)
  6. Troubleshooting (optional — common errors and fixes; errors hit while building the feature are good candidates)
  7. What's Next (2-4 related links)

Page types:

  • Task pages: Step-by-step procedure with numbered steps
  • Reference pages: Minimal example first, then expand with details
  • Concept pages: Explain how something works and why (architecture, mental models) — link to task pages for the steps

Heading structure: Single H1 (page title in frontmatter), body sections start at H2.

Minimal template:

---
title: Feature Name
description: SEO description (120-160 chars, unique per page)
lastUpdated: YYYY-MM-DD  # Optional, for frequently-changing features - replace with today's actual date
---

What this does and why it's useful. Target audience: developers who need X.

## Prerequisites

- Node.js 18+
- API key from [Settings](/settings)

## Quick Start

\`\`\`bash
command --example
\`\`\`

## What's Next?

\x3CColumns cols={2}>
  \x3CCard title="Related Feature" href="/related">
    Continue with this
  \x3C/Card>
  \x3CCard title="API Reference" href="/api">
    Full API details
  \x3C/Card>
\x3C/Columns>

Components: \x3CTabs>, \x3CSteps>, \x3CAccordion>, \x3CColumns>, \x3CCard>, \x3CNote>/\x3CWarning>/\x3CTip>, \x3CCodeGroup>. There is no \x3CCards> component -- use \x3CColumns cols={2}> with \x3CCard> children. If you need a component not listed here, check https://jamdesk.com/docs/components

Images: Add screenshots when they aid understanding (UI walkthroughs, visual states) — skip them when text or code alone is clear. Store in /images/\x3Cfeature>/, use absolute paths, always include alt text, avoid color-only cues.

Links: Relative paths, no .mdx extension, avoid orphan pages, link to source of truth (API spec, release notes).

API docs: Prefer OpenAPI auto-generation when available.

Navigation: Add new pages to docs.json navigation in alphabetical order unless the user has specified a different ordering or the existing structure suggests intentional grouping.

Maintenance: Use lastUpdated frontmatter for frequently-changing features. Mark or remove deprecated guidance promptly.

Phase 5: Verify

With CLI (recommended):

jamdesk validate     # Check docs.json schema
jamdesk broken-links # Find broken links

jamdesk dev starts a long-running local preview server — never run it in the foreground yourself. Offer it to the user for a visual check, or run it as a background command.

Without CLI (detected in Phase 1 preflight): Verify manually - code examples have language tags, frontmatter has title/description, links use correct paths (no .mdx), new pages added to docs.json.

Test code examples: Run commands and snippets where feasible before publishing — broken copy-paste examples are the most common docs complaint.

Fix errors before proceeding. If the user dislikes the changes, revert only the files this skill touched: git checkout -- \x3Cfiles you wrote>. Never suggest git checkout . — it discards all uncommitted work, including changes the user had in progress.

Phase 6: Commit

Same-repo docs: Skip this menu — the doc changes ride along with the code change's normal commit flow.

External docs repo: Present summary of changes, then ask user preference:

  1. Commit to feature branch
  2. Show diff first
  3. Make additional changes

After commit, offer to push and create PR.

Commit format: docs: [action] [what] (e.g., docs: add webhook configuration guide)

Quick Reference

Situation Action
No config file Ask user, create .jamdesk-docs-path
External repo Feature branch, separate git ops
Same-repo docs No separate git ops needed
--preview flag Analyze only, no changes
CLI unavailable Manual verification checklist

Example

User: Document the new webhook feature

Claude: I'm using the update-jamdesk skill...

Found docs at ../customer-docs

Branch strategy?
1. Feature branch (recommended)
2. Main
3. Current

User: 1

Claude: I'll create docs/webhooks. Scope look right?

User: Yes, also update API reference

[Writes docs, runs verification]

✓ validate passed
✓ broken-links passed

Files: webhooks/overview.mdx (new), api/reference.mdx (updated), docs.json (updated)

1. Commit to feature branch
2. Show diff first
3. Make additional changes

User: 1

Claude: Committed. Push and create PR?

Red Flags

Stop if you catch yourself:

  • Skipping clarifying questions
  • Creating pages without updating docs.json
  • Using full URLs for internal links
  • Adding images without alt text
  • Making changes with --preview flag
  • Including secrets, tokens, or real customer data
  • Using "click here" or vague link text
  • Missing \x3CWarning> on destructive steps
  • Leaving deprecated content without marking it
  • Copying the frontmatter description as the opening paragraph (description echo)
Usage Guidance
Before installing, understand that this skill can guide an agent to edit documentation files, create a project docs-path config file, run Jamdesk validation commands, and prepare commits. Review the docs path, proposed page scope, diffs, branch choice, and any push or PR action before approving them.
Capability Tags
requires-sensitive-credentials
Capability Assessment
Purpose & Capability
The skill’s capabilities fit its stated purpose: it locates a configured Jamdesk docs repository, updates customer-facing docs, verifies with the Jamdesk CLI or a manual checklist, and may commit documentation changes.
Instruction Scope
The activation text is broad and includes proactive suggestion after user-facing feature work, but the runtime workflow requires announcing the skill, asking clarifying questions, confirming scope, checking dirty worktrees, and getting user direction before external-branch or commit steps.
Install Mechanism
The artifact contains only a markdown SKILL.md with no executable scripts, install hooks, package code, or hidden runtime components.
Credentials
Reading and modifying a configured docs repository and running validation commands are proportionate for documentation maintenance; the skill also tells the agent to avoid secrets, tokens, and real customer data.
Persistence & Privilege
It may create a .jamdesk-docs-path config file after asking and may commit docs changes with user direction, but there is no evidence of unbounded persistence, credential harvesting, destructive automation, or background workers beyond an optional preview server offered to the user.
How to Use
  1. Make sure OpenClaw is installed (local or Docker)
  2. Run the install command in chat: /install update-jamdesk
  3. After installation, invoke the skill by name or use /update-jamdesk
  4. Provide required inputs per the skill's parameter spec and get structured output
Version History
v1.0.1
**update-jamdesk 1.0.1 – Improved accuracy and workflow for documentation updates:** - Adds explicit handling for same-repo docs: skips branch strategy questions and separate git operations when docs live in the code repo. - Enforces preflight checks for docs path, docs.json presence, CLI availability, and clean working tree before making changes. - Clarifies `--preview` flag behavior: does not create config files or ask branch-strategy questions, only describes intended changes. - Improves standards for example content: requires concrete values, fake secrets, and expected output in code snippets. - Expands guidance on troubleshooting sections, decision flow, and right-sizing doc updates (not every change needs a new page). - Multiple small clarifications and formatting improvements throughout to reinforce Jamdesk documentation standards.
v1.0.0
Initial release - Jamdesk documentation update automation skill. - Provides guided workflow for updating user-facing docs after changes to APIs, CLI, UI, config, or docs.json - Locates documentation repo via `.jamdesk-docs-path` and validates presence and state - Asks scope and context questions before writing, and analyzes existing docs to recommend update strategy - Writes high-quality, standards-compliant Jamdesk documentation using built-in components and clear structure - Verifies updates using the Jamdesk CLI or manual checklist to ensure accuracy - Handles branching, commit, and PR workflow with clear user prompts and commit conventions
Metadata
Slug update-jamdesk
Version 1.0.1
License MIT-0
All-time Installs 0
Active Installs 0
Total Versions 2
Frequently Asked Questions

What is Jamdesk Docs?

Use when user-facing code changes need documentation — after implementing APIs, CLI commands, UI components, or config options. Triggers on 'update docs', 'd... It is an AI Agent Skill for Claude Code / OpenClaw, with 45 downloads so far.

How do I install Jamdesk Docs?

Run "/install update-jamdesk" in the OpenClaw or Claude Code chat to install it in one step — no extra setup required.

Is Jamdesk Docs free?

Yes, Jamdesk Docs is completely free, licensed under MIT-0. You can download, install and use it at no cost.

Which platforms does Jamdesk Docs support?

Jamdesk Docs is cross-platform and runs anywhere OpenClaw / Claude Code is available (cross-platform).

Who created Jamdesk Docs?

It is built and maintained by Geoffrey Bourne (@gbourne1); the current version is v1.0.1.

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