AI-powered multi-agent system that automatically analyzes codebases and generates comprehensive documentation. Features GitLab integration, concurrent processing, and multiple LLM support for better code understanding and developer onboarding.
This document provides a developer guide for the Tiny Code Reader from Useful Sensors, a small, low-cost hardware module that reads QR codes. It covers connecting, mounting, powering up, reading data, configuration, sensor characteristics, example code, privacy considerations, and an appendix with data formats and CAD files.
This page showcases a demo of kapa.ai, an AI assistant that turns knowledge bases into reliable and production-ready AI solutions. It highlights features like an answer engine, data source integrations, deployment options, analytics, and security features.
A practical guide to Architecture Decision Records (ADRs) covering what they are, why they're important, how to use them, tools for managing them, writing good ones, when to use them, and organizing them.
An article detailing the top API documentation tools of 2025, featuring comprehensive reviews with examples, protocol support, pricing, and strengths and weaknesses.
This article explores automating the process of converting scientific code into LaTeX documents using GPT models and Python, aiming to streamline documentation workflows in scientific projects.
The importance of project documentation is emphasized through a personal anecdote, and an introduction to using MkDocs for creating beautiful documentation pages using Markdown.
Mermaid is a JavaScript-based diagramming and charting tool that renders Markdown-inspired text definitions to create and modify complex diagrams. It enables users to create easily modifiable diagrams and integrates with various applications.
Unblocked can not only ingest your code repositories, but also related material — your website, your product documentation, your conversations in GitHub issues and Slack — in order to provide a service that I call context assembly. I picked up that term from Jack Ozzie, back when he was working with his brother Ray on Groove, a peer-to-peer successor to Ray’s greatest hit, Lotus Notes, which pioneered what became known as knowledge management. Like Notes, Groove brought information work into shared spaces where you could search your mail, calendars, documents, and data all at once.