Here are my observations of how authors (more commonly known as "web developers") perceive existing sources:
- W3Schools: either you're blissfully ignorant, or it's the worst place on the Internet and how dare you cite it in any reasonable technical article, presentation, discussion, or Q&A.
- MSDN: no one really refers to this except for features specific to Windows Store apps, Internet Explorer, or Microsoft Edge. Note that I'm talking about features; bugs are better documented elsewhere.
- MDN: the (current) holy grail of web platform docs.
- WebPlatform.org: most authors have probably never even heard of this. Even I don't know if it's really taken off. Has it?
- W3C: too technical, dry and verbose, often hard to understand. Which is fine, because the official specifications were never intended for authors to begin with. They were intended for vendors looking to implement standards. That's why sites like MDN exist, to provide reference lists similar to the specifications except in a way that is accessible to authors.
So what does Stack Overflow Documentation intend to achieve? The Documentation tour makes it a point to emphasize its example-centric nature:
It's all about examples.
Examples illustrate common tasks or solutions to common problems - remember "Show, Don't Tell". A good example is self-contained and succinct, and more often than not contains code. It is more important that code in examples be illustrative and focused than that it be copy/paste-able; leave out boilerplate when it distracts from the concept the example is meant to illustrate.
Because our goal is to ensure developers always have great examples, topics can't be created without at least one example.
In addition to examples, a topic has some optional sections. These serve to make examples more succinct, by allowing for documentation of common parameters, syntax, and other remarks that would otherwise need to be duplicated between examples.
Notice that the third paragraph makes a clear distinction between examples and sections. Obviously since HTML and CSS aren't "programming languages" in the traditional sense of the word, the Parameters section doesn't really make sense. But I think the Syntax and Remarks sections are actually the best place for reference-like examples to go. For instance, the Syntax section can list the grammar and possible values of each property in a specific CSS module, or single-line examples of how to write each selector.
Now look at Documentation for CSS. Look at the topics. Open a topic and look at the examples. Are those real-world examples showing you how to design and implement a specific pattern, widget or module in HTML and CSS, or are those discrete sections each describing a CSS property or selector?
Also notice how examples are sorted. They're not sorted in any meaningful order except for votes. So, in a topic for the background
family of properties, an example for a specific background property gets voted above another example for another specific background property. You would think that the higher property is thematically the "first" property, but no, it's higher simply because more users upvoted it. That doesn't make any sense. You don't see a W3C CSS spec where the propdefs are sorted by how many users liked this property more than that other property. You don't even see an MDN document where properties are sorted that way. Because it simply doesn't make sense to sort sections of properties this way.
Real-world, self-contained, complete code examples are different. They can be sorted by popularity, because you want to see what the more popular patterns and techniques are. That's where sorting by votes makes sense. And that, based on my understanding, is what Documentation is trying to be.
Not just Yet Another Reference Guide to CSS, or just another MDN clone. We have enough of that already. MDN isn't perfect, but it's as good as it gets. Even so, it doesn't have to be perfect; there already exists an authoritative source in the form of W3C CSS specifications, maintained by the working group themselves.1
What Documentation is trying to achieve, is making use of the technical details from MDN and the official specifications, to build real-world code examples that authors can put into practice.
1 This is why I almost never use any other source as a reference except the spec itself when answering questions (and why I will continue to do so), despite the fact that it was never intended for authors. But I do so because I'm capable of applying what's covered in the spec to my answer or to the subject matter of the question I'm answering in a way that is meaningful to readers.