*From https://twitter.com/dan_abramov/status/1280949739534630919* > The docs are pretty comprehensive and well structured with topics ranging from quick starter guide to in-depth concepts explanation (my fav section). https://cloud.google.com/docs > The search feature is super fast and amazing > Every single API and feature of the database is well documented with examples and sometimes diagrams https://docs.mongodb.com > Nextjs learn explains basics + docs in a perfect way. Everything you need to get started for a production app https://nextjs.org/learn/basics/create-nextjs-app ** > Playground and the beginner to advanced level examples with precise explanation in code comments. Allowing to do more, fail early and learn faster. > It's important to get hands dirty while learning and these docs get straight to the point https://typescriptlang.org/docs ** > good documentation and both step by step guide and api doc > Simple and elegant > tons of examples https://firebase.google.com/docs ** > Great guidance and it even has a little playground included https://svelte.dev/tutorial/basics > The entry point document is accessible. The language used doesn’t assume that you know a lot of stuff to start learning. How subjects are separated into sections that are easy to navigate makes me flutter.dev/docs > Awesome one, very intuitive, has everything you need and nothing more. My lovely form of exploring the API docs is jumping over classes via links. All needed examples provided, a could develop without trial and error from first minutes. https://discord.js.org > Django docs are the best I've seen. All documentation is tutorial style, but well-structured so that one xany quickly to jump into it and find what they are looking for. https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/3.0/ > PWA and REPL. > and because they work offline and are simple. http://svelte.dev > 1. left sidenav doesn't change scroll position when route changes > 2. overall pleasing, easy-on-the-eyes design > 3. great search functionality > 4. organization is top-notch and doesn't make search the docs itself a chore > Tailwind.css really well organised and easy to use. > Concise ,pretty and has a search bar that actually works. The examples and documentation itself is well thought out and contains exactly what you need. https://tailwindcss.com/docs/ ** > Imagine if the npm site was this comprehensive https://package.elm-lang.org/ > I like the quality and organization https://laravel.com/docs/7.x > Generally structured information with the ability to quickly navigate(sidebar as table of contents), link to headings, API references with examples--super quick to get started with examples. In other words build and learn as you go--imo https://coda.io/welcome > Lots of runnable examples (on codesandbox) and guides. https://typehero.org/type-route > Cool stuff. Really well done. Comprehensive. Touristic. https://www.prisma.io/docs/ > Are the best I've ever seen. There are dozen abstractions and but still very easy to find details. Though there are 2 things. It's been a while since I've used it last time & it's applicable only for getting API details, not for learning https://docs.sencha.com/extjs/7.2.0/classic/Ext.grid.Panel.html > really easy to read and thorough! http://Codefresh.io/docs > The function explanations are succinct and easy to understand, great examples, love the simple UI. http://ramdajs.com/docs/ > They're not just detailed, they also have an epub option! https://hexdocs.pm/phoenix/Phoenix.html > t got nearly everything at one place and can be made available offline (which is a great help at times) http://devdocs.io > Perfect balance of detail, recipes, and links to deeper dives. https://www.apollographql.com/docs/react/ > For the awesome design, comprehensive reference coverage, and incredibly useful inline IDE/demo environment with live runnable examples hologram.io/docs > 1. Simple, to the point that you can finish it > 2. Interactive, in the sense that you can open console and start hacking away > 3. Pointers to *officially* supported addons for making a rich front-end experience > 4. Recipes for some common problems https://vuejs.org/v2/guide/ > Tried to do my best to write a modular tutorial, where you can choose which path to follow, depending on your needs. Has its rough edges, but I'm proud of it mswjs.io/docs/ >I like how each method has a link to its source (I don't like that it links to a file with 17k lines, making the navigation pretty slow) > Simplicity > Clear examples > Everything in one place (left navigation) > I can open chrome inspector console and play with examples https://lodash.com/docs/ > Kubernetes and their interactive tutorials. https://kubernetes.io/docs/tutorials/kubernetes-basics/create-cluster/cluster-interactive/ > simple, elegant, clear with beautiful and readable code snippets https://stripe.com/docs/api > Beautiful design > Code/performance comparison with alternatives > Visual form builder with live updating code example > Many other small details that are wow https://react-hook-form.com/ > straightforward if you know what you're doing, and thorough if you're a new developer. Docs with UX imo. I'm trying to make my work as accessible as a result. https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=sdras.night-owl https://javascript.info/ ## [`aaa`](https://javascript.info/)