Documentation prioritizes examples1. The official Jsoup cookbook already has the examples/recipes a user needs to use Jsoup effectively; there's no point in replicating them in Documentation.
Instead, the part of the Jsoup Documentation that I most want users to read -- the part that will save us the most poor Stack Overflow questions -- is this remarks section about JavaScript support. Stack Overflow works on the principle that useful content gets upvoted and displayed at the top. Yet the most valuable part of the Jsoup Documentation is buried at the bottom of a page and I can't upvote it.
I suppose I could create a new topic titled "JavaScript support", and add a pinned "example" that's just that prose text. And maybe that's the right thing to do, in terms of making the current design useful, but a prose-only example also seems to deliberately be working against the design. (Creating another example in that topic wouldn't make sense, for example.)
I think remarks should be votable and sorted along with the examples according to their score. If the votes indicate the remarks are the most valuable thing on the page, they should be at the top (or maybe under the pinned example).
Either the remarks are a place for valuable content (and SO measures value in votes and rep and reflects it in sorting), or it's a place for not-valuable content, and why do we want to accumulate not-valuable content?
1 (This is an aside. I'll move it into a new discussion question if it's a distraction.) Less charitably, it's "give me teh codez" given form. That may work out, because Documentation was deliberately designed that way.
It doesn't seem useful for Jsoup, because the official cookbook already fills that role. The Java Language topic seems like an incomplete, poorly-organized version of the official Java Tutorial topic -- and there are many more official tutorials overall. Of course the topic will fill out in public beta, but I can't see it ever being better. cppreference.com seems to cover a lot of what the C++ Documentation is aiming at -- compare the just-created Value categories (Documentation) with Value categories (cppreference.com)].
I can see Documentation being useful for languages/libraries that don't have any official documentation, but so far we seem most excited about duplicating things that exist, either because there are more people who can contribute, or because they're likely to give the most rep.
And when we do add something actually useful, it ends up being not very prominent. That's frustrating.