I have gone through some posts about Stack Overflow Documentation (1, 2, 3), and I haven't found a clear, simple answer to the question: do we really need it?
As I see it, there are currently (at least) three levels of information that you can use for improving your knowledge of a given programming language:
- Official documentation. Most programming languages come with pretty good official documentation. I include here well-known books on the subject.
- Canonical questions and answers in Stack Overflow. These questions deal with general topics that pop up often, and typically appear in the "frequent" tab.
- Specific questions and answers in Stack Overflow. These are the most common ones: someone asks, people answer, and others will use that knowledge in the future.
Doesn't Stack Overflow Documentation significantly overlap with items 1 and 2? Having official documentation for a language, do we really need Stack Overflow Documentation for that language?
Some potential answers are:
- Stack Overflow Documentation is indeed much like 1, but the purpose is to make documentation easier to digest. Perhaps official documentation tends to be harsh or hard to follow? In my experience it's exactly the opposite, but my experience is quite limited.
- Maybe my premise 1 is wrong, and some languages lack documentation, or have very bad documentation. Again, that's not the case in my experience, but then I only know a few languages.
- Perhaps Stack Overflow Documentation does fill a hole that is not covered by 1, 2 or 3 above, and I simply fail to see that hole?