name: docs-fetch description: >- Retrieves up-to-date library docs and API references online. Prefer this skill over web search when you need documentation of a specific framework, a tool, external package or APIs.
Documentation Fetch
Retrieve current documentation and code examples for any library using the Context7 CLI.
Workflow
Two-step process: resolve the library name to an ID, then query docs with that ID.
# Step 1: Resolve library ID
ctx7 library <name> <query>
# Step 2: Query documentation
ctx7 docs <libraryId> <query>
You MUST call ctx7 library first to obtain a valid library ID UNLESS the user explicitly provides a library ID in the format /org/project or /org/project/version.
If you cannot find what you need after 3 attempts, use the best result you have.
Step 1: Resolve a Library
Resolves a package/product name to a Context7-compatible library ID and returns matching libraries.
ctx7 library react "How to clean up useEffect with async operations"
ctx7 library nextjs "How to set up app router with middleware"
Always pass a query argument — it is required and directly affects result ranking. Use the user's intent to form the query, which helps disambiguate when multiple libraries share a similar name. Do not include any sensitive information.
Result fields
Each result includes:
- Library ID — Context7-compatible identifier (format:
/org/project) - Name — Library or package name
- Description — Short summary
- Code Snippets — Number of available code examples
- Source Reputation — Authority indicator (High, Medium, Low, or Unknown)
- Benchmark Score — Quality indicator (100 is the highest score)
- Versions — List of versions if available. Use one of those versions if the user provides a version in their query. The format is
/org/project/version.
Selection process
- Analyze the query to understand what library/package the user is looking for
- Select the most relevant match based on:
- Name similarity to the query (exact matches prioritized)
- Description relevance to the query's intent
- Documentation coverage (prioritize libraries with higher Code Snippet counts)
- Source reputation (consider libraries with High or Medium reputation more authoritative)
- Benchmark score (higher is better, 100 is the maximum)
- If multiple good matches exist, acknowledge this but proceed with the most relevant one
- If no good matches exist, clearly state this and suggest query refinements
- For ambiguous queries, request clarification before proceeding with a best-guess match
Step 2: Query Documentation
Retrieves up-to-date documentation and code examples for the resolved library.
ctx7 docs /facebook/react "How to clean up useEffect with async operations"
ctx7 docs /vercel/next.js "How to add authentication middleware to app router"
Writing good queries
The query directly affects the quality of results. Be specific and include relevant details. Do not include any sensitive or confidential information such as API keys, passwords, credentials, personal data, or proprietary code in your query.
| Quality | Example |
|---|---|
| Good | "How to set up authentication with JWT in Express.js" |
| Good | "React useEffect cleanup function with async operations" |
| Bad | "auth" |
| Bad | "hooks" |
Use the user's full question as the query when possible, vague one-word queries return generic results.
The output contains two types of content: code snippets (titled, with language-tagged blocks) and info snippets (prose explanations with breadcrumb context).
Error Handling
If a command fails with a quota error ("Monthly quota reached" or "quota exceeded"):
- Inform the user their Context7 quota is exhausted
- Suggest they authenticate for higher limits:
ctx7 login
Common Mistakes
- Library IDs require a
/prefix —/facebook/reactnotfacebook/react - Always run
ctx7 libraryfirst —ctx7 docs react "hooks"will fail without a valid ID - Use descriptive queries, not single words —
"React useEffect cleanup function"not"hooks"