Enrich a Documentation Section

VerifiedSafe

Transform thin documentation sections by adding motivation, use-cases and alternatives to help readers understand when and why to use an API.

Sby Skills Guide Bot
DocumentationIntermediate
206/2/2026
Claude Code
#documentation#api-docs#enrichment#motivation#use-cases

Recommended for

Our review

Transforms a thin documentation section into enriched content with motivation, use-cases, contrast with alternatives, and a realistic example.

Strengths

  • Clear, reproducible five-part structure
  • Includes preliminary source code research steps
  • Emphasizes real-world scenarios
  • Helps readers choose the right API by explaining alternatives

Limitations

  • Requires access to the API source code
  • May be overkill if documentation is already comprehensive
  • Can be time-consuming to apply properly
When to use it

When a documentation section only shows a signature and a trivial example, without explaining why or when to use the API.

When not to use it

When the section already includes motivation, contrast with alternatives, and a realistic example.

Security analysis

Safe
Quality score94/100

The skill provides instructional guidance on improving documentation and does not instruct any destructive, exfiltrating, or obfuscated actions. The only command mentioned is a safe build-tool verification step.

No concerns found

Examples

Enrich a method's documentation
The documentation for the `toSchema` method is too thin. It only shows the signature and a trivial example. Enrich it with motivation, contrast with `rebind`, and a realistic use-case where a DynamicSchema is received over the wire.
Improve a thin section in API docs
I have a documentation section that just lists a function signature and a one-line example. Expand it to include why someone would use this function over the alternative, when to prefer it, and a realistic scenario that demonstrates its value.

name: docs-enrich-section description: Use when a documentation section exists but lacks motivation or use-cases — thin sections that show a signature and a toy example but never explain why a reader would choose this API over alternatives.

Enrich a Documentation Section with Motivation and Use-Cases

Overview

A thin section answers what but not why. Readers landing on such a section cannot judge when to use the API or how it fits into the larger picture. This skill turns a thin section into one that answers: what does this return, why does it exist, when is it the right choice, and what does a realistic use look like.

Signals That a Section Needs Enriching

  • Shows only a signature + a trivial example (toy type, no realistic scenario)
  • No mention of alternatives or when not to use this API
  • A reader could not decide between this and the nearest related operation from the section alone
  • Opening sentence restates the method name without adding context

Source Research (Do This First)

Before writing a word of prose, read the implementation:

  1. Read the source — understand what the method actually does, not just its signature
  2. Find the contrast — locate the nearest alternative (e.g. rebind vs toSchema) and understand the exact difference in return type, requirements, and guarantees
  3. Find real usage — search the docs and example files for existing uses of this API to anchor your realistic example
  4. Identify the gap — ask: "In what situation would a reader need this but not the alternative?" That gap is the motivation.

The Five-Part Expansion Pattern

Replace the thin section with these five parts, in order:

1. Opening sentence

State what the method returns and the one-line rule for when to use it. Lead with the return type and the key constraint that distinguishes it from alternatives.

DynamicSchema#toSchema returns a Schema[DynamicValue] — it stays fully in the dynamic world and requires no bindings. Use it when you have received a DynamicSchema over the wire and need a codec-compatible schema that enforces structural conformance without binding any Scala types.

2. Motivation paragraph

Explain the gap the method fills. Name the scenario where the alternative fails or is impractical. Name the concrete contexts (middleware, gateways, converters, validators) where this method is the right tool.

3. Contrast sentence or table

State explicitly: "Use X when … Use Y instead when …". One sentence is enough if the distinction is clear; a two-row table if the dimensions are multiple.

| Situation | Right choice | |---|---| | No Scala types available; need structural validation only | toSchema | | Have a BindingResolver; need a fully operational Schema[A] | rebind[A] |

4. Signature block

Keep the existing signature block unchanged. Precede it with a bridging sentence ending in :.

5. Realistic example

Replace any toy example (single-field type, no context) with a scenario that could exist in a real application. The scenario should exercise the method's distinguishing behavior — the part that makes it different from the alternative.

Checklist for the example:

  • [ ] Models a plausible real scenario (gateway, registry, pipeline, validator)
  • [ ] Uses mdoc:compile-only
  • [ ] Imports everything it needs
  • [ ] No hardcoded output comments (// None, // "hello", etc.)
  • [ ] Preceded by a prose sentence ending in :

Common Mistakes

| Mistake | Fix | |---|---| | Motivation paragraph is abstract ("useful in many cases") | Name one concrete scenario. Abstract motivation helps nobody. | | Contrast buried at the end | Put it before the signature block, after motivation | | Example uses the same toy type as before | Create a new type that reflects the motivated use-case | | Prose sentence before code does not end with : | Every sentence immediately before a code fence must end with : | | Added output comments to show what expressions return | Delete them — mdoc evaluates and renders output automatically |

Verification

After enriching the section, run the mdoc compilation check to ensure all code examples are syntactically correct and type-check:

sbt docs/mdoc

Success criterion: The output contains zero [error] lines. Warnings are acceptable.

If mdoc reports errors: Fix them immediately before marking the enrichment as complete. Do not commit or claim the work is done until all errors are resolved.

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