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You're reading from  Technical Writing for Software Developers

Product typeBook
Published inMar 2024
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781835080405
Edition1st Edition
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Author (1)
Chris Chinchilla
Chris Chinchilla
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Chris Chinchilla

Chris Chinchilla spent years as a developer before switching to helping people understand code better instead of writing it. He has worked crafting documentation for many developer-focused projects, from small open-source projects to large and well-known tools and products, tackling everything from tooling to videos. He is known for bringing developers and writers closer with editor and automation-based tools. Outside of tech writing, he publishes fiction, YouTube videos, podcasts, and music. In short, he loves to communicate and find the best medium for the message.
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Summary

This chapter covered a lot. In some respects, it could have been an entire book itself, but I hope it provided you with enough topics for further research.

The chapter began with some history and context, dug into tools and services you can pay for, and explained how you might build everything yourself. Throughout the chapter, I also tried to represent the caveats and problems of this growing space. I am not an AI skeptic. I am an AI pragmatist. I think it’s a fascinating space, but it’s currently so full of hype and nonsense, overwhelming terminology and complexity, that it’s important to understand what you’re getting into.

That aside, if the recent wave of AI tools is here to stay, they offer documentarians completely new ways to work and provide information to our users. It’s easy to fear change, but if your true and prime reason for documenting and reading this book is to help people understand how to use something, and change is...

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Technical Writing for Software Developers
Published in: Mar 2024Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781835080405

Author (1)

author image
Chris Chinchilla

Chris Chinchilla spent years as a developer before switching to helping people understand code better instead of writing it. He has worked crafting documentation for many developer-focused projects, from small open-source projects to large and well-known tools and products, tackling everything from tooling to videos. He is known for bringing developers and writers closer with editor and automation-based tools. Outside of tech writing, he publishes fiction, YouTube videos, podcasts, and music. In short, he loves to communicate and find the best medium for the message.
Read more about Chris Chinchilla