rubys/docs-1 — explained in plain English
Analysis updated 2026-07-17 · repo last pushed 2023-01-26
Fix a typo or broken link you found while reading Docker's documentation.
Update an outdated code example in a Docker tutorial.
Suggest a new step or clarification to make a guide easier to follow.
| rubys/docs-1 | 0verflowme/alarm-clock | 0xhassaan/nn-from-scratch | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Stars | — | — | 0 |
| Language | — | CSS | Python |
| Last pushed | 2023-01-26 | 2022-10-03 | — |
| Maintenance | Dormant | Dormant | — |
| Setup difficulty | easy | easy | moderate |
| Complexity | 1/5 | 2/5 | 4/5 |
| Audience | general | vibe coder | developer |
Figures from each repo's GitHub metadata at analysis time.
No setup needed, you can suggest edits directly through GitHub or the Request docs changes button on any docs page.
This repository holds the source content for Docker's official documentation website at docs.docker.com. Every guide, reference page, and tutorial you see on that site lives here as text files. When someone updates these files, the changes eventually appear on the public site. The project is open source, meaning anyone can read the raw content or suggest improvements. At a practical level, the repo works like a shared document that the community can edit. If you spot a typo, find a broken link, or think a guide is missing an important step, you can file an issue describing the problem. You can also go further and submit a pull request, which is essentially a proposed edit that the Docker team reviews before merging. There's even a "Request docs changes" button on every page of the live site that points back here, so you don't need to hunt for the right place. The main audience is anyone who uses Docker and wants to help make its documentation better. That includes developers who noticed an outdated code example, technical writers who want to fix clarity issues, or curious users who spotted an error while following a tutorial. If you have a question about how Docker works, the README points you to community Slack rather than this repo, since this is specifically for fixing and improving the written docs, not for general support questions. One notable thing is how the project blurs the line between documentation and product. The README treats the docs as a living, community-shaped resource rather than something static owned only by the company. They actively encourage fixes from anyone, and the license is Apache 2.0, so the content is free to use and modify.
The source content for Docker's official documentation website. Anyone can read, suggest fixes, or propose edits to guides, tutorials, and reference pages that appear on docs.docker.com.
Dormant — no commits in 2+ years (last push 2023-01-26).
Use freely for any purpose, including commercial use, as long as you keep the copyright notice and state your changes.
Setup difficulty is rated easy, with roughly 5min to a first successful run.
Mainly general.
This repo across BitVibe Labs
Don't trust strangers blindly. Verify against the repo.