I'm excited people are interested in Documentation. It has the potential to make Stack Overflow even more useful for even more people. That said, it's a lot more complicated than anyone thought. Not only do you need to create a system that's easy to read and understand, you need to create a system that people will be excited about contributing to.
Have you ever had a Wiki at work that people are supposed to edit? In my experience they either get like three contributions and never get used again or someone uses it for their personal scratchpad and nobody else looks at it. (I may or may not have been that guy.) Wikipedia makes this look easy, but I assure you it isn't. Getting the right system in place requires the right people leading the effort. People who care deeply about the end result before worrying about how they will personally benefit.
I've come to believe that Stack Overflow is good enough documentation. When other sources (especially the official documentation) are unclear, incomplete or wrong, someone will ask a question on Stack Overflow that someone else can answer. And when yet another person has that same question, there's a chance they will find their answer on Stack Overflow via Google. If you are the sit-in-a-comfy-chair-with-a-beverage-reading-the-manual type of person, that might not be very satisfying. But for the average person, it works.
Therefore, the bar to clear is slightly higher: can Stack Overflow Documentation exceed the usefulness of Stack Overflow Q&A? If I had to guess, the way such a feature could be developed would be if there was a demand for it from Enterprise and Teams customers. That would also be a decent laboratory for such an experiment.