TensorFlow sounds cool. And I'm an experienced programmer with a highly relevant background, so I'm working through the "Quick Start" guides. But I'm going very slowly, because I'm finding the documentation to be patchy—abbreviations and terms not defined, guidance to finding code for examples not provided, "obvious" things left unexplained. Essentially it feels like death via a thousand paper cuts, none of which is a particularly big deal in and of itself.
I want to suggest improvements to the documentation—highlight what's not clear. There's no obvious way to do it. Instead, for support, TensorFlow suggests two options: try the GitHub issue tracker (whose "New Issue" button tells me to go to Stack OverFlow) or come to Stack Overflow directly. I can't imagine how a thousand small questions in a hundred different voices are going to help TensorFlow improve its documentation. Chances are it will pollute Stack Overflow with low quality questions instead.
Should the likes of TensorFlow be encouraged to set up their own Q&A/feedback forums rather than relying on Stack Overflow?
Or perhaps better: could someone come up with a way to highlight web content online, and provide an option to state "this was not clear to me" and provide constructive feedback precisely where it would help?