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Admonition tag

The admonition tag calls your users' attention to a specific piece of information by placing it inside a pre-styled banner, separate from the main content.

Use admonitions to add clarity to your content or communicate important information.

Syntax and usage

Use the admonition tag to wrap content. Choose between the pre-built styles using type. Optionally add a header with name.

Important warning

Stop! Read me before moving on.

{% admonition type="warning" name="Important warning" %}
  Stop! **Read me** before moving on.
{% /admonition %}

Attributes

AttributeTypeDescription
typestringRequired. Sets the type of admonition to info, warning, success, or danger.
namestringAdds a header to the admonition. Transforms to ALL CAPS.

Admonition types

Type info creates an Info admonition.

Type warning creates a Warning admonition.

Type success creates a Success admonition.

Type danger creates a Danger admonition.

Examples

Add relevant information

Admonitions can be distracting. Consider how they help users before adding them.

  {% admonition type="info" %}
    Admonitions can be _distracting_. Consider how they **help users** before adding them.
  {% /admonition %}

Highlight something important

Read this!

Users read admonitions before content. They can communicate essential information.

  {% admonition type="warning" name="Read this!" %}
    Users read admonitions _before_ content. They can communicate essential information.
  {% /admonition %}

Communicate urgency

Careful

Don't abuse admonitions or readers may ignore them. You might need them to communicate something before a user makes an irreversible decision.

  {% admonition type="danger" name="Careful" %}
    Don't abuse admonitions or readers may ignore them.
    You might need them to communicate something before a user makes an irreversible decision.
  {% /admonition %}

Celebrate wins

Success

You made it to the last admonition example. Hooray 🥳!

  {% admonition type="success" name="Success" %}
    You made it to the **last admonition example**. Hooray 🥳!
  {% /admonition %}

Best practices

Use in moderation

Overuse of admonitions reduces their effectiveness and users learn to ignore them.

Don't use for page content

Carefully consider the information you put in your admonitions. If the information in admonitions doesn't add value and clarity or communicate something important, then they won't draw the reader's attention effectively.

Use clear headers

Use short, impactful headers that reflect the content to set the tone and encourage users to pay attention to the message.

Choose the right type

Select the admonition type that aligns with the nature of the content. This alignment helps users understand intent and recognize the level of urgency. For example, use warning for cautionary information and success for confirmation or positive feedback.

Admonitions after content

Avoid using admonitions as the first element below headers or section headers. Giving readers information to consider before content adds to their cognitive load and reduces comprehension.