We built this platform so that we could give developers better documentation than what's currently out there. As I wrote when we initially announced our integration plans:
Some things have obsessively-curated and up-to-date documentation with plenty of practical examples that illustrate real-world use cases. So, we're going to focus on the other 97% of documentation.
The impetus for creating and committing to a topic should be the realization that something better could be made, along with some inspiration on how that might happen.
Back when I was picking up jQuery (like all the other cool kids), I tended to get my start from their official documentation which had plenty of examples, but often referred back to my own implementations for reference because my use cases were so much closer to whatever I might be currently doing than their very basic examples. Better examples from real-world code is probably a good way to approach it.
Other things you can do is include illustrations of very common pitfalls when it comes to approach, and let people know why something that seems like it should work and seems much more convenient is actually a pretty bad idea.
Not everything out there can really be improved upon. But, that's a very small fraction of what's currently available. Still, when contemplating the addition of a topic, it's very good to know in advance how you plan to make it different from what exists, and set the initial tone of the topic to that idea.
In most cases, that's not going to be very hard :) But some, like you pointed to - there's not a whole lot of low-hanging fruit in the basics, perhaps you could try tackling step-by-step narrated examples of the harder stuff? It's hard to really give a blanket answer to that.
Spending some time in the existing docs should give you some inspiration, but it's totally okay if it doesn't, too - it just means that developers are already being pretty well served by what exists in that topic.