Format placeholders

This page explains how to format placeholders in commands, code samples, and text strings. For more information about formatting code, command-line syntax, and code samples, see the following links:

Placeholders in sample code and commands represent values that the reader must replace when they use the sample input. Placeholders in example output can also represent other values that vary. In general, a placeholder has a descriptive name as a default value.

For example, the placeholder PROJECT_ID represents a project ID in sample code, commands, and example output.

In example output, the placeholder HTTP_RESPONSE_CODE represents an HTTP response code; the reader isn't expected to set this to a specific value.

Placeholders

When you create placeholders follow this general guidance around using the letter x:

  • In general, don't use a single x or a series of x's as placeholders; use a more informative placeholder.
  • In some contexts (such as HTTP status codes), a series of x's is the standard, so it's OK to use (for example) xx in those cases.

There are several ways to format placeholders, depending on whether you're working in HTML or Markdown, or whether the placeholder is inline, in a code block, or in a paragraph. For details, see the following sections.

Placeholders in inline text

If your sample code and command placeholders occur in a sentence, use the following formatting:

  • In HTML, wrap variable placeholders by using the var element, like this:

    <code><var>PLACEHOLDER_NAME</var></code>
  • In Markdown, wrap inline placeholders in backticks (`), and use an asterisk (*) before the first backtick and after the second one (*`PLACEHOLDER_NAME`*).

If your placeholder does not represent a code sample or command, use the following formatting:

  • In HTML, wrap placeholders by using the var element, like this:

    <var>PLACEHOLDER_NAME</var>

Placeholders in code blocks

If your placeholders are in a block of code, use the following formatting:

  • In HTML, wrap the code block in a pre element, and tag placeholders with var elements, like this:

    <pre class="devsite-click-to-copy">
    gcloud compute forwarding-rules create <var>FORWARDING_RULE_NAME</var> \
        --global | --region=<var>REGION</var> \
        --load-balancing-scheme=<var>LOAD_BALANCING_SCHEME</var> \
        --network=<var>NETWORK</var> \
        ...
    </pre>
  • In Markdown, wrap the code block in a code fence (```). Inside a code fence, you can't apply formatting like bold or italic.
    ```
    PLACEHOLDER_NAME
    ```

Placeholder text

Use uppercase characters with underscore delimiters.

For example, in HTML:

Recommended:

  • .../<var>API_NAME</var>
  • .../<var>METHOD_NAME</var>

Not recommended:

  • .../<var>API-name</var>
  • .../<var>API_name</var>
  • .../<var>API name</var>
  • .../<var>api_name</var>
  • .../<var>api-name</var>
  • .../<var>apiName</var>

In Markdown:

Recommended:

  • .../*API_NAME*
  • .../*METHOD_NAME*

If the context in which your placeholders appear makes using uppercase characters with underscore delimiters a bad idea, use something else that makes sense to you, but be internally consistent.

Don't include possessive adjectives in placeholders.

Not recommended:

  • .../<var>MY_API_NAME</var>
  • .../<var>YOUR_API_NAME</var>

Explain placeholders

When you use a placeholder in text or code, explain the placeholder the first time you use it. It's not necessary to repeat the explanation in the document unless doing so might benefit the reader—for example, in circumstances such as the following:

  • Your document is lengthy.
  • You've introduced several other placeholders in a long procedure.
  • Your document isn't intended to be read from beginning to end.

The following is an example of a command that uses a placeholder with an explanation of that placeholder:

<pre class="devsite-click-to-copy">
gcloud compute instances create <var>INSTANCE_NAME</var> \
    --metadata enable-guest-attributes=TRUE
</pre>

<p>Replace <code><var>INSTANCE_NAME</var></code> with the name that
you want your new VM instance to have.</p>

Single placeholder

Use the following format for a single placeholder:

  • Replace PLACEHOLDER with a description of what the placeholder represents.

Recommended:

  1. Stream the build logs to the Google Cloud console:

    gcloud builds log --stream=BUILD_ID

    Replace BUILD_ID with the ID of the WORKING build that you copied in the preceding step.

Two or more placeholders

Use the following format for two or more placeholders:

  • Follow the command line with a descriptive list of the placeholders used in the command line. Explain what each placeholder represents even if the placeholder value is intuitive to you.
  • Introduce this list with Replace the following:
  • List the placeholders in the order in which they appear in the command line.
  • Tag each placeholder in a code sample or command with code and var elements, followed by a colon and a description that starts with a lowercase letter. For non-code samples, remove the code elements—for example:

    <li><code><var>INSTANCE_NAME</var></code>: description</li>
  • If the description contains an example, introduce it with an em dash or such as—for example:
    <li><code><var>INSTANCE_NAME</var></code>: description&mdash;for example,...</li>
    <li><code><var>INSTANCE_NAME</var></code>: description, such as...</li>
  • Each item in the list follows our list style.

Recommended:

  1. Set the maximum concurrency target for a new reservation:

        bq mk \
            --project_id=ADMIN_PROJECT_ID \
            --location=LOCATION \
            --target_job_concurrency=CONCURRENCY \
            --reservation \
            RESERVATION_NAME

    Replace the following:

    • ADMIN_PROJECT_ID: the project that owns the reservation
    • LOCATION: the location of the reservation
    • CONCURRENCY: the maximum concurrency target
    • RESERVATION_NAME: the name of the reservation

Recommended:

  1. In Cloud Shell, set the environment variables:

    export ONPREM_PROJECT=ON_PREM_PROJECT_NAME \
        export ONPREM_ZONE=ZONE

    Replace the following:

    • ON_PREM_PROJECT_NAME: the Google Cloud project name for your on-premises project. You can find your project number on the Dashboard page of the Google Cloud console.
    • ZONE: a Google Cloud zone that's close to your location—for example, us-east1.

Placeholders in output

If you provide a code output example, explain any placeholders that appear in sample output:

  • Use var elements to identify the placeholder text in the output.
  • Follow the example output with a list of the placeholders used in the example.
  • Introduce the list of placeholders with This output includes the following values:
  • List the placeholders in the order in which they appear in the example.
  • Tag each placeholder with a var element, followed by a colon and a description that starts with a lowercase letter—for example:

    <li><code><var>INSTANCE_NAME</var></code>: description</li>
  • If the description contains an example, introduce it with an em dash or such as—for example:
    <li><code><var>INSTANCE_NAME</var></code>: description&mdash;for example,...</li>
    <li><code><var>INSTANCE_NAME</var></code>: description, such as...</li>

For more information, see Output from commands.

Recommended:

Response

The output is similar to the following:

{
 "name": "operations/build/PROJECT_ID/OPERATION_ID",
 "metadata": {
  "@type": "type.googleapis.com/google.devtools.cloudbuild.v1.BuildOperationMetadata",
  "build": {
   "id": "BUILD_ID",
   "status": "QUEUED",
   "createTime": "2019-09-20T15:55:29.353258929Z",
   "steps": [
    {
     "name": "gcr.io/compute-image-tools/gce_vm_image_import:release",
     "env": [
      "BUILD_ID=BUILD_ID"
     ],
     "args": [
      "-timeout=7056s",
      "-image_name=IMAGE_NAME",
      "-client_id=api",
      "-data-disk",
      "-source_file=SOURCE_FILE"
     ]
    }
   ],
   "timeout": "7200s",
   "projectId": "PROJECT_ID",
   "logsBucket": "gs://PROJECT_NUMBER.cloudbuild-logs.googleusercontent.com",
   "options": {
    "logging": "LEGACY"
   },
   "logUrl": "https://console.cloud.google.com/gcr/builds/BUILD_ID?project=PROJECT_NUMBER"
  }
 }
}

This output includes the following values:

  • PROJECT_ID: the project ID for the project that the image was imported into
  • OPERATION_ID: the ID of the import operation
  • BUILD_ID: the ID of the build for the import operation
  • IMAGE_NAME: the name of the image to be imported
  • SOURCE_FILE: the URI for the image in Cloud Storage—for example, gs://my-bucket/my-image.vmdk
  • PROJECT_NUMBER: the number for the import project