My idea is that, if reputation points should be given at all for Documentation editors (and I'm personally in favor of this), they should be proportional to the actual benefit that the edit provides to the Documentation at the time of the upvote (so the benefit provided to the upvoter from the Documentation).
I agree with @TobyAllen that it doesn't make sense to get reputation points (and many of them) for an edit that might be completely reversed afterward.
At the contrary, if a meaningful edit has been added that will remain for a long time in the Documentation to enrich it, this should be rewarded.
I would suggest that if in a certain time a specific piece of Documentation is upvoted, that only the creator of it and the editors who contributed to what is currently visible in the doc should receive reputation points.
Just to make it more practical:
Time 0 - User1 creates a new example for a certain topic.
Here is the content of the example:
xxxxx
zzzzz
Time 10 - User2 edits the example, so now it looks like this:
wwwww
xxxxx
zzzzz
Time 20 - User3 edits now the example, removing the edit from User2, so now it looks like this:
xxxxx
yyyyy
zzzzz
So if the example receives an upvote at Time 6, only User1 would receive reputation points.
If the example receives an upvote at Time 14, both User1 and User2 would receive reputation points (best if proportionally to the content provided and currently visible).
BUT, if the example receives an upvote at Time 21, only User1 and User3 will receive reputation points, since the content added by User2 is no longer visible and provides no longer benefit to the users looking at the example.
In order to achieve this, an algorithm somewhat as the following one would do the work:
upvote_reputation = ((creator)?creator_extra_points:0) + (upvote_points * percentage_of_visible_doc_provided)
So, going back to the examples, this would be:
Time 6
user1_rep_points += creator_extra_points + upvote_points
Time 14
user1_rep_points += creator_extra_points + round(upvote_points*0.67)
user2_rep_points += round(upvote_points*0.33)
Time 21
user1_rep_points += creator_extra_points + round(upvote_points*0.67)
user2_rep_points += round(upvote_points*0) = 0
user3_rep_points += round(upvote_points*0.33)
This algorithm could definitely be improved, but could be of inspiration for a better way of giving reputation points for Documentation contributors.