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README Checklist

See README.md to learn how to use this checklist.

Help the reader identify the project

  • Name the file:

    • READMEs without markup: Name the file README or README.txt.

    • READMEs with markup: Name the file README.extension, where extension is a file extension that corresponds to your markup language (such as md for Markdown or rst for reStructuredText).

  • At the top of the file, make sure the project's name is the first heading or plain text.

  • Under the project name or linked from it, add a URL for the project (such as repository or homepage URL).

  • Under the project name, clearly identify the owner or author of the project (e.g., "By Author McAuthorface" or "Copyright Owner Name 2018").

Help the reader evaluate the project

  • Describe the project in terms of what the project does or achieves, not what it's made out of. Focus on why not what.

    This is the hardest part of writing a README. Try some of these Mad Libs to get started:

    • With <PROJECT NAME> you can <VERB> <PLURAL NOUN>…
    • <PROJECT NAME> helps you _____…
    • If you use <PROJECT NAME> then you _____…
    • You'll like <PROJECT NAME> because you can _____…
    • <PROJECT NAME> is better than <ALTERNATIVE PROJECT> because you can _____…
    • <PROJECT NAME> is related to <OTHER PROJECT> because _____…

    If the project is new or doesn't have an intended use, tell an origin story instead:

    One day I was _____. I tried to _____ but _____. Instead, I made <PROJECT NAME> to _____.

    Or you can try inverting the description, describing what your project is not good for.

    Other tips:

    • Write to your reader in the second person (you)
    • Use action verbs and avoid the passive voice (e.g., write <PROJECT NAME> creates files instead of Files are created by <PROJECT NAME>)
    • Avoid the verbs to be, to have, and (sometimes) to get
    • Avoid acronyms and initialisms

    Warning: You may be tempted to describe how the project is made—what languages, technologies, and tools—instead of what the project does. That's sometimes useful information, but save it until after you've described how the project is supposed to help the reader.

  • Describe who may use the project and under what terms.

    • Open-source projects:

      Describe then name the license. For example:

      You are free to copy, modify, and distribute <PROJECT NAME> with attribution under the terms of the MIT license. See the LICENSE file for details.

      For inspiration for talking about licenses, see the Creative Commons human-readable license summaries, such as CC BY-SA 4.0.

    • Closed-source projects:

      Describe who may use and distribute the project. For publicly available projects, you may reference an EULA or other licensing document.

      For private or internal projects, you may want to explicitly allow or deny public disclosure of the project. For example:

      You may only use <PROJECT NAME> for internal BigCorp projects.

Help the reader use the project

  • If applicable, list the project's prerequisites.

    Your project may require things that are out of the scope of ordinary installation or usage instructions. List these requirements before or at the beginning of such instructions. For example, you may require a version of Python, but you don't need to include instructions for how to install it.

    For example:

    Before installing <PROJECT NAME> you need:

    • Git
    • Python 2.7 or later

    If you're feeling especially generous, link to those projects' setup instructions or websites.

  • List the steps to install and use the project one time.

    Help the reader go from having your project's files to using the project for the first time. For a programming language, this might be installation followed by running a "hello world" program. For a documentation project this might be building the site and opening the homepage in a web browser. For a README-only project, this might be a preface or introduction.

    No matter how your project runs, however, stop once the project works once. Extended usage instructions belong in dedicated documentation files, not your README.

  • Test your install and setup steps.

    There's nothing to write down for this, but be sure what you've already written actually works.

Help the reader engage with the project

  • Tell your audience where to go for more project documentation.

    Describe any additional documentation and where to find it.

    This may include your project's:

    • Website
    • Documentation files
    • Man page
    • Help command(s)
    • Top-level README companion files, such as LICENSE, CONTRIBUTING, CODE_OF_CONDUCT, AUTHORS, CHANGELOG, and BUGS

    It's not enough to link to documents; briefly describe them too.

  • Tell your audience where to go for help.

    This may include descriptions and links to mailing lists, issue trackers, forums, email addresses, or other support avenues (like Stack Overflow tags).

    If the project is unsupported or support is only available for a fee, now would be a good time to mention that.

  • Tell your audience how to help.

    • Open-source projects: link to and summarize the project's contributor's guide, if one exists, or describe how and where you want contributors to add to your project (e.g., via GitHub pull requests or patches mailed to a specific address).

      See also: nayafia/contributing-template

    • Closed-source projects: describe how and where bugs should be reported.

Final checks

  • If your README is long, add a table of contents after your project description.

    If your README is more than three or four screens long, make it easier to skim by adding a table of contents. A list of section headings is enough.

  • If your README is very long, move content to other documents.

    If your README is more than ten or twelve screens long, move stuff into separate documents. Keep your README file short, or readers may become overwhelmed. A comprehensive README is a bad README.

    Topics not covered by this checklist are likely candidates for becoming separate documents. For example, version histories can be moved to a CHANGELOG or RELEASES file and replaced with a link to the new file.

  • Set a reminder to review your README and this checklist in a few weeks.

  • Tell ddbeck that you used this checklist. You can tweet at him or open an issue on ddbeck/readme-checklist.