You can add a bit of JavaScript to automatically activate the relevant tab based on the reader's operating system, so they see the relevant info sooner.
📗 The dated Lucida Grande was the Mac system font a decade ago and used for the docs on Mac (and only Mac). We now use the system font stack, to get a similar result to Linux, Windows, Android and iOS. https://systemfontstack.com
@hugovk Nice work. I'd say the increased line spacing on the new version (that's what I'm seeing on my Android phone anyway) is also a nice readability improvement.
To make them more visible, we've added coloured sidebars and text to the "New in version x.y" / "Changed in version x.y" / " Deprecated since version x.y" directives.
Some excellent #docs at https://bpmn.io/toolkit/bpmn-js/walkthrough/#bpmn-js-internals by @bpmn_io. I know NOTHING about any of the technologies, and yet that diagram makes it looks like something understandable. Simple clear sentences like 'We use diagram-js to draw shapes and connections' help too.
Thanks to #mdbook, I'm well on my way to finally completing my private #wiki / #docs for all things #tech: home network, desktop, mobile, code snippets and so on, guides I'm sure I'll be glad I can easily reference again someday.
Boost to save a writer's life: you can block that fucking @ popup on GoogleDoc newlines (they added it super recently) by hacking your adblocker. Basically add "docs.google.com###docs-instant-bubble" as a new line in your My Filters list on uBlock or similar.