Bonnie configuration files are self-documenting, which means you don't have to delve into the weeds of the actual `bonnie.toml` to use someone else's config (or your own after six months). You can see this documentation for your config file by running `bonnie help` (`help` is a reserved command). You can also add the name of a command after `help` to get information about just that command (and any of its subcommands). If you want generic help about Bonnie itself, run `bonnie -h`/`bonnie --help` instead. Commands will automatically be documented relatively intuitively in the following format: ``` command_name ``` For commands that support ordered subcommands, `(ordered)` will be added at the end as well. However, this doesn't provide much useful information about what commands actually *do*, which is up to you to provide through the `.desc` property, which sits next to `.cmd`. For example: ``` test.cmd = "echo Test" test.desc = "some documentation" ``` Your documentation will be printed next to a command specification as above, so it should probably start in lower case. Beyond that, write whatever's useful to you and anyone else using the configuration!