technical-writer
About
The technical-writer skill generates comprehensive technical documentation like user guides, API docs, and tutorials for both technical and non-technical audiences. It automatically identifies the documentation type and tailors content for the intended user role and expertise level. Use this skill when you need to create structured documentation, onboarding materials, or knowledge base articles.
Documentation
Technical Writer
Create clear, comprehensive technical documentation for any audience.
Instructions
When a user needs technical documentation:
-
Identify Documentation Type:
- User guide / end-user documentation
- Developer documentation / API docs
- System architecture documentation
- Tutorial / how-to guide
- Troubleshooting guide
- README file
- Release notes / changelog
- Onboarding documentation
- Knowledge base article
- Standard Operating Procedure (SOP)
-
Determine Audience:
- Technical level (beginner, intermediate, expert)
- Role (end user, developer, admin, stakeholder)
- Prior knowledge assumptions
- Context (internal team, external customers, open source community)
-
Structure Documentation:
User Guide Format:
# [Product/Feature Name] ## Overview [What it is, what it does, why use it - 2-3 sentences] ## Prerequisites - [Required knowledge] - [Required tools/access] - [System requirements] ## Getting Started [Quick start guide with minimal steps to first success] ### Step 1: [Action] [Detailed instructions with screenshots/code] ### Step 2: [Action] [Detailed instructions] ## Key Concepts ### [Concept 1] [Explanation with examples] ## Common Tasks ### How to [Task] 1. [Step] 2. [Step] 3. [Expected result] ## Advanced Features [Optional advanced functionality] ## Troubleshooting ### Problem: [Common issue] **Symptoms**: [What users see] **Solution**: [How to fix] ## FAQ **Q: [Question]** A: [Answer] ## Additional Resources - [Link to related docs] - [Support channels]Tutorial Format:
# How to [Accomplish Goal] **Time required**: [X minutes] **Difficulty**: [Beginner/Intermediate/Advanced] ## What You'll Learn - [Learning objective 1] - [Learning objective 2] ## Prerequisites - [Required knowledge] - [Tools needed] ## Step-by-Step Instructions ### 1. [First Major Step] [Explanation of why this step matters] ```[language] [Code example]Expected output:
[What users should see]2. [Next Major Step]
[Continue pattern]
Verification
[How to confirm it worked]
Next Steps
[What to learn next]
Troubleshooting
[Common issues]
**Architecture Documentation Format**: ```markdown # [System Name] Architecture ## Overview [High-level description, purpose, key characteristics] ## Architecture Diagram [ASCII diagram or description for diagram] ## Components ### [Component 1] **Purpose**: [What it does] **Technology**: [Stack/framework] **Responsibilities**: - [Responsibility 1] - [Responsibility 2] **Interfaces**: - Input: [Data/requests it receives] - Output: [Data/responses it produces] ## Data Flow 1. [Step-by-step flow through system] ## Technology Stack - **Frontend**: [Technologies] - **Backend**: [Technologies] - **Database**: [Technologies] - **Infrastructure**: [Technologies] ## Design Decisions ### Why [Technology/Pattern]? [Rationale, alternatives considered, trade-offs] ## Scalability Considerations [How system scales, bottlenecks, mitigation strategies] ## Security [Authentication, authorization, data protection] ## Monitoring & Observability [Logging, metrics, alerting] -
Apply Technical Writing Best Practices:
Clarity:
- Use short sentences (aim for 15-20 words)
- Avoid jargon or define it when first used
- Use active voice ("Click the button" not "The button should be clicked")
- Be specific ("Set timeout to 30 seconds" not "Set a reasonable timeout")
Structure:
- Use descriptive headings
- Break content into scannable sections
- Use numbered lists for sequences
- Use bullet points for unordered items
- Add table of contents for long docs
Visuals:
- Include screenshots with annotations
- Add code examples with syntax highlighting
- Use diagrams for complex concepts
- Show expected outputs
- Add tables for comparison or reference
Code Examples:
- Include language identifier
- Show both good and bad examples
- Add comments explaining complex parts
- Use realistic, runnable examples
- Include error handling
User-Focused:
- Start with most common use case
- Include "why" not just "how"
- Anticipate user questions
- Address common pitfalls
- Provide troubleshooting
-
Format Complete Output:
π TECHNICAL DOCUMENTATION Type: [User Guide/Tutorial/Architecture/etc.] Audience: [Target audience] Level: [Beginner/Intermediate/Advanced] ββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββ [Full markdown documentation] ββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββ π DOCUMENTATION CHECKLIST ββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββ β Clear overview and purpose β Prerequisites listed β Step-by-step instructions β Code examples included β Expected outputs shown β Troubleshooting section β Links to related docs β Scannable structure β Appropriate for audience level π‘ MAINTENANCE NOTES ββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββ Review Triggers: β’ [When to update this doc] β’ [Dependencies that might change] Related Documentation: β’ [Link to related docs] -
Special Documentation Types:
README.md:
- Project name and description
- Installation instructions
- Quick start example
- Features list
- Documentation links
- Contributing guidelines
- License
Release Notes:
- Version number and date
- New features
- Improvements
- Bug fixes
- Breaking changes
- Migration guide
- Deprecation notices
Troubleshooting Guide:
- Symptom-based organization
- Root cause analysis
- Step-by-step resolution
- Prevention tips
- When to escalate
Example Triggers
- "Write user documentation for my feature"
- "Create a tutorial for setting up the development environment"
- "Document this system architecture"
- "Write a troubleshooting guide"
- "Create onboarding documentation for new developers"
- "Write a README for this project"
Output Quality
Ensure documentation:
- Has clear, descriptive title
- Starts with overview/context
- Lists prerequisites upfront
- Uses consistent formatting
- Includes code examples where appropriate
- Shows expected outputs
- Has troubleshooting section
- Uses appropriate technical level for audience
- Is structured logically (simple to complex)
- Includes visual aids (diagrams, screenshots)
- Has table of contents for long docs
- Links to related documentation
- Is easy to scan
- Uses active voice
- Avoids ambiguity
- Includes examples from user perspective
Generate professional, comprehensive technical documentation that enables users to succeed.
Quick Install
/plugin add https://github.com/OneWave-AI/claude-skills/tree/main/technical-writerCopy and paste this command in Claude Code to install this skill
GitHub δ»εΊ
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