I think I can speak for many users to state that the current system of reputation gain from Documentation is implemented such that users can take advantage of it for easy reputation gain. I've seen many users make very minor edits, some do not help improve the quality, on many of the popular examples. As such some users have been gaining 200 reputation a day for doing practically nothing.
While there are several users who do improve the quality of examples and make important and helpful changes. I've seen many edits that where made "Just to edit", meaning it was clear that user made a meaningless edit purely for the sake to gain reputation from that example. In fact I've seen this happen so much on popular examples that the quality of the example has been decreasing.
I don't think it's possible to separate "bad" edits from "good" edits. I do believe if this where to go on longer without any changes it will completely remove the meaning that reputation has on Stack Overflow.
Since Documentation was released to public beta recently, the current damages are not too drastic. But I don't know how will it be two weeks or a month from now. I do think something needs to change and done so quickly. Some of the ideas for changes include:
Completely remove reputation gain from Documentation but add badges.
Separate reputation gain from the main site, having specific Documentation reputation.
Remove up-vote reputation gain, but keep reputation gain from edits.
Limit the amount of reputation gain a edit/user can get from up-votes for a specific example.
Provide a Reputation cap for Documentation. (ex: A user over 2,000 reputation will not gain reputation from Documentation). Similar to how edits work on the main Q&A site.
Only allow substantive edits (not minor ones) to benefit from up-vote reputation (Although I can see users getting around this).
I feel that the current system encourages "Just to edit" behavior in order to get reputation, rather than edits to improve the quality of documentation.