Anatomy of a topic
Topics are made up of several sections, most of them optional:
- Title & Versions
- Examples
- Syntax (Optional)
- Parameters (Optional)
- Remarks (Optional)
Each topic also includes a [discussion tab][1] that represent the history of all activity and commentary on the topic.

Title describes what the focus of the topic is. Good topic titles tend to be broader than good question titles, but still need to be descriptive. If a tag has versions, the versions that apply to the entire topic are listed next to its title. Versions that apply to subsets of the topic will be listed inline. Learn more about versions.

Examples illustrate how to accomplish a task. Every topic must have at least one example. A good example is self-contained and succinct. Examples cover the commonplace problems or use cases, but they aren’t meant to be exhaustive - for narrow problems readers can always ask a question. Each topic may optionally have a pinned example, which always appears first in the list of examples. Learn more about examples.

The syntax section lists common signatures, grammar, or similar things which would otherwise need to be repeatedly explained within multiple examples. The point of syntax is reduce unneeded repetition in examples, thereby making them more succinct. Syntax is an optional section, and should be omitted on topics that would not benefit from it.

The parameters section lists common parameters and their details which would otherwise need to be repeatedly explained within multiple examples or the syntax section of a topic. Like with syntax, the point of parameters to reduce unneeded repetition. Parameters is an optional section, and should be omitted on topics that would not benefit from it.

The remarks section is for any prose that would need to be duplicated in any of the other sections. This section is optional like syntax and parameters, but is meant to be used more often. If there are concepts that need to be explained to understand the finer points of multiple examples, they belong in remarks.