| name | docs-code-samples |
| description | Use this skill when migrating inline code samples from LangChain docs (MDX files) into external, testable code files that are extracted by this repo’s snippet scripts and used as Mintlify snippets. Applies when extracting code blocks from documentation, creating runnable code samples, using snippet delineators, or wiring snippet output into MDX includes. |
| license | MIT |
| compatibility | LangChain docs monorepo with Mintlify. Requires Python and Make (Node.js is also required for TypeScript samples). |
| metadata | {"author":"langchain","version":"1.0"} |
docs-code-samples
Overview
This skill documents the workflow for moving inline code samples from LangChain documentation into standalone, testable files that this repo extracts into snippets for use in MDX using Mintlify.
When to use
- Migrating inline Python, TypeScript/JavaScript, or Java code blocks from MDX to external files
- Creating runnable, testable code samples for documentation
- Setting up snippet extraction and Mintlify snippet includes
Directory structure
Code samples live under src/code-samples/ in folders that match the product:
langchain/ — LangChain docs
langgraph/ — LangGraph docs
deepagents/ — Deep Agents docs
langsmith/ — LangSmith docs
Example:
src/
├── code-samples/ # Source: testable code with snippet tags
│ ├── langchain/
│ │ ├── return-a-string.py
│ │ └── return-a-string.ts
│ ├── langgraph/
│ │ ├── langgraph-sql-agent.py
│ │ └── langgraph-sql-agent.ts
│ ├── deepagents/
│ │ └── example-skill.py
│ └── langsmith/
│ ├── trace-example.py
│ └── trace-example.java
├── code-samples-generated/ # Snippet output (gitignored)
│ ├── return-a-string.snippet.tool-return-values.py
│ ├── return-a-string.snippet.tool-return-values.ts
│ └── ...
└── snippets/
└── code-samples/ # MDX snippets for docs (all products)
├── tool-return-values-py.mdx
├── tool-return-values-js.mdx
└── ...
Prefer one file per doc page or topic: Collocate related snippets in a single code sample file whenever they belong to the same MDX page, tutorial flow, or feature (for example, setup plus invocation, or a do/don't pair). Use multiple :snippet-start: / :snippet-end: pairs in that file rather than splitting into several .py or .ts files. Reserve separate files for unrelated samples or when a page genuinely needs independent test entry points.
More than one snippet in one file: A single code sample file can contain more than one named snippet using different :snippet-start: snippet-name and :snippet-end: pairs. Each snippet must have a unique name. Shared imports, helpers, and :remove-start: test harness code live once in the file; only the fenced regions between snippet tags appear in the generated MDX snippets.
When to split TypeScript samples into separate files: Python samples can usually keep multiple snippets in one file because later definitions overwrite earlier ones at module scope. TypeScript and JavaScript cannot: make test-code-samples runs the entire .ts file, and every snippet's code executes in the same module scope. Split into separate .ts files when snippets would collide, for example:
- Duplicate
import bindings (for example two snippets both import { interrupt } from "@langchain/langgraph")
- Duplicate
const / let / class / function declarations with the same name (for example two snippets both declare const State = ...)
- Two self-contained snippets that each need their own imports and top-level setup
Keep related snippets in one Python file when possible. For TypeScript, use one file per independently runnable snippet when imports or top-level bindings would conflict. Name sibling files clearly, for example langgraph-interrupts-validate-conditional-edge-pattern.ts and langgraph-interrupts-validate-conditional-edge.ts. Put shared test-only setup in :remove-start: blocks inside each file rather than importing between sample files.
Within a single TypeScript file, :remove-start: blocks and snippet regions share the same module scope when make test-code-samples runs the file. Do not import the same binding in both places. Keep imports that appear in the docs snippet inside the snippet; limit :remove-start: imports to symbols used only by the test harness (for example Command, MemorySaver) that the snippet does not import.
Step-by-step instructions
1. Create the code sample file
Place the file under src/code-samples/ in the folder for the product: langchain/, langgraph/, deepagents/, or langsmith/ (for example, src/code-samples/langgraph/langgraph-sql-agent.py for LangGraph docs).
Use a descriptive filename, for example, return-a-string.py, return-a-string.ts, or traceable-pipeline.java. When a doc page needs several code blocks for the same feature, add them as multiple snippets in one Python file (for example, rubric-configure.py with rubric-configure-py and rubric-invoke-py) instead of creating rubric-configure.py and rubric-invoke.py. For TypeScript, use one file per snippet when module-scope imports or bindings would conflict (see When to split TypeScript samples into separate files above).
2. Add snippet delineators
Wrap the code that should appear in the docs with snippet tags:
Python:
from langchain.tools import tool
@tool
def get_weather(city: str) -> str:
"""Get weather for a city."""
return f"It is currently sunny in {city}."
TypeScript/JavaScript:
import { tool } from "langchain";
Java:
public class Example {
public static void main(String[] args) {
System.out.println("hello");
}
}
Go:
package main
import "fmt"
func main() {
fmt.Println("hello")
}
Bash (cURL):
curl "https://api.smith.langchain.com/api/v1/runs" \
-H "x-api-key: $LANGSMITH_API_KEY"
Choose a unique snippet-name in kebab-case. All snippet names must include a language suffix: -py for Python files, -js for TypeScript/JavaScript files, -java for Java files, -kt for Kotlin files, -go for Go files, and -sh for bash/cURL files (for example, tool-return-values-py, tool-return-values-js, traceable-pipeline-java, traceable-pipeline-kt, traceable-pipeline-go, traceable-pipeline-sh). This becomes the base of the output filename.
3. Add runnable test code in remove blocks
Wrap any code that makes the sample executable but should not appear in docs.
Run snippet code before exiting. make test-code-samples must execute the snippet body, not skip it. Do not put raise SystemExit(0), process.exit(0), or exit 0 at the top of a file (or before :snippet-start:) so the test passes without running imports, constructors, or API calls. That only checks that the file parses; it does not validate function signatures, option shapes, or import paths.
Place :remove-start: blocks after the snippet when you can, so the harness runs assertions on values the snippet created:
Python (preferred):
from deepagents import create_deep_agent
agent = create_deep_agent(model="google_genai:gemini-3.5-flash")
assert agent is not None
print("✓ example validated")
TypeScript (preferred):
import { DeepAgentsServer } from "deepagents-acp";
const server = new DeepAgentsServer({
agents: { name: "careful-agent", interruptOn: { write_file: true } },
});
if (!server) throw new Error("server not created");
console.log("✓ example validated");
For samples whose docs show a blocking tail (for example await server.start(), asyncio.run(main()), or agent.invoke() with a live model), keep setup and construction in the snippet so types and signatures are checked, then move only the blocking call into a trailing :remove-start: block—or omit it when construction alone is enough:
server = AgentServerACP(agent)
assert server is not None
print("✓ server-example validated")
Do not short-circuit before the snippet:
raise SystemExit(0)
...
The examples below show harness code that invokes behavior when the snippet defines callable helpers:
Python:
if __name__ == "__main__":
result = get_weather.invoke({"city": "San Francisco"})
assert result == "It is currently sunny in San Francisco."
print("✓ Tool works as expected")
TypeScript:
async function main() {
const result = await getWeather.invoke({ city: "San Francisco" });
if (result !== "It is currently sunny in San Francisco.") {
throw new Error(`Expected "...", got "${result}"`);
}
console.log("✓ Tool works as expected");
}
main();
The extraction script strips :remove-start: / :remove-end: content when extracting snippets.
4. Test the code sample
Before extracting snippets, verify the code sample runs correctly:
make test-code-samples FILES="src/code-samples/langchain/return-a-string.py"
make test-code-samples
For multiple files: FILES="path1 path2". Fix any failures before proceeding—do not extract snippets until the samples pass.
Java files (.java) under src/code-samples/ are run using jbang. To keep CI green, Java samples must:
- Print at least one line of output so it's obvious the sample ran
- Exit successfully (code 0) when optional API keys are not set, for example:
OPENAI_API_KEY for LLM calls
- Fail fast (non-zero exit) when a key is required for the sample to run, for example
manage-prompts-0-push.java without LANGSMITH_API_KEY
make test-code-samples runs every .java file under src/code-samples/ in lexical path order (after all Python and TypeScript samples). That order is unrelated to section order in the docs. If one sample must run before another (for example creating a hub prompt before pulling it), name the source files so they sort correctly. For example, manage-prompts-pull.java runs before manage-prompts-push.java because pull sorts before push; use prefixes such as manage-prompts-0-push.java and manage-prompts-1-pull.java when you need push to run first.
Go files (.go) under src/code-samples/ are run with go run from src/code-samples/, which shares a single go.mod/go.sum at that directory (add new dependencies there with go get, then go mod tidy, similar to how .ts samples share src/code-samples/package.json). go run <file>.go only compiles that one file, not its sibling files in the same directory, so — like Kotlin — put each snippet variant in its own file (topic-before.go, topic-after.go) rather than multiple snippets sharing one file: two files in the same package cannot both declare func main(). Go samples do not guard on missing keys — let the SDK call fail fast (matching Python's behavior) rather than skipping with a printed message. make test-code-samples runs .go files last, after Kotlin, in lexical path order.
Bash/cURL files (.sh) under src/code-samples/ are run with bash <file>.sh from src/code-samples/. Like Go, put each snippet variant in its own file (topic-before.sh, topic-after.sh) rather than sharing one file. Hide test-only setup (#!/usr/bin/env bash, set -euo pipefail, resolving a real ID/value for a <placeholder> shown in the docs) in # :remove-start:/# :remove-end: blocks so the visible snippet is exactly the illustrative curl command a reader would copy — including no shebang or set -e line. curl does not exit non-zero on an HTTP error status by itself, so when a script pipes a response into jq to extract a value used by a later request (for example resolving a project ID), add a hidden check that the resolved value is non-empty and not the literal string null before continuing, so a bad API response fails the test loudly instead of silently propagating into later requests. make test-code-samples runs .sh files last, after Go, in lexical path order.
Check formatting with:
make lint
Fix any ruff or mypy issues before proceeding. Run make format to auto-fix formatting.
5. Run snippet extraction
From the repo root:
make code-snippets
For LangSmith JVM samples only (faster; updates stems listed in CODE_SNIPPET_LANGSMITH_SOURCES in the Makefile):
make code-snippets-langsmith
This command:
- Runs
python scripts/extract_code_snippets.py (line-based, Bluehawk-compatible; handles /** in TS strings). Optional env CODE_SNIPPET_SOURCES limits extraction to specific paths under src/code-samples/ (make code-snippets-langsmith sets this).
- Runs
scripts/generate_code_snippet_mdx.py to produce MDX snippets in src/snippets/code-samples/ (always regenerates MDX from everything under src/code-samples-generated/)
Output files:
return-a-string.snippet.tool-return-values.py → tool-return-values-py.mdx
return-a-string.snippet.tool-return-values.ts → tool-return-values-js.mdx
6. Update the MDX file to use the snippet
Add an import at the top of the MDX file (after frontmatter):
import ToolReturnValuesPy from '/snippets/code-samples/tool-return-values-py.mdx';
import ToolReturnValuesJs from '/snippets/code-samples/tool-return-values-js.mdx';
Replace the inline code blocks with the snippet components:
:::python
<ToolReturnValuesPy />
:::
:::js
<ToolReturnValuesJs />
:::
Naming conventions
| Element | Convention | Example |
|---|
| Code file | Descriptive, kebab-case | return-a-string.py, return-a-string.ts, traceable-pipeline.java, traceable-pipeline.kt, traceable-pipeline.go, traceable-pipeline.sh |
| Snippet name | Kebab-case with language suffix: -py for Python, -js for JS/TS, -java for Java, -kt for Kotlin, -go for Go, -sh for bash/cURL | tool-return-values-py, tool-return-values-js, traceable-pipeline-java, traceable-pipeline-kt, traceable-pipeline-go, traceable-pipeline-sh |
| MDX snippet (Python) | {snippet-name}.mdx (snippet name ends in -py) | tool-return-values-py.mdx |
| MDX snippet (JS) | {snippet-name}.mdx (snippet name ends in -js) | tool-return-values-js.mdx |
| Component name | PascalCase | ToolReturnValuesPy, ToolReturnValuesJs |
Script behavior
scripts/generate_code_snippet_mdx.py:
- Reads
*.snippet.*.py and *.snippet.*.ts from src/code-samples-generated/
- Wraps content in fenced code blocks (
```python or ```ts)
- Writes to
src/snippets/code-samples/{snippet-name}-py.mdx or -js.mdx
To support additional languages, add config entries in that script.
Guidelines
- Run snippet code in tests —
:remove-start: harnesses must not exit before the snippet runs. Let imports, constructors, and configuration execute so make test-code-samples catches wrong signatures, renamed options, and broken import paths. Put SystemExit / process.exit only after the snippet (or use them to skip a trailing blocking call such as server.start(), not the whole sample).
- Collocate related snippets in one code sample file per doc page or feature when possible (Python and Java). Import each generated MDX snippet separately in the MDX file (for example,
<RubricConfigurePy /> then <RubricInvokePy /> from the same source file). For TypeScript, split into separate .ts files when snippets duplicate imports or top-level bindings; still import each generated MDX snippet in the MDX file the same way.
- Do not mock LangChain internals (for example
unittest.mock.patch on init_chat_model helpers) so that imports resolve real chat model instances. Do not use fake chat models in docs code samples (for example GenericFakeChatModel, FakeListChatModel, or other langchain_core testing fakes). Wire a real chat model (for example ChatOpenAI) so snippets match what readers run; make test-code-samples requires a valid API key when the sample calls the model.
- Do not change
pyproject.toml when making code sample changes.
- Always run
make test-code-samples FILES="path/to/your/file.py" before make code-snippets to ensure new samples pass.
- Run
make lint once the code sample is written; fix any issues (or run make format to auto-fix).
- Do not add code samples to linting ignore rules when making lint-related changes—fix the code instead.
src/code-samples-generated/ is gitignored; regenerate with make code-snippets or make code-snippets-langsmith when iterating on LangSmith JVM files only.
- Reference
CLAUDE.md and AGENTS.md for docs style and rules.
- Use
:::python and :::js fences for language-specific content; the build produces separate Python and JavaScript doc versions.
- For python tests, try to correct the type rather than adding
# type: ignore[arg-type]