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Doczilla's answer:
At Doczilla, we embarked on a mission driven by necessity. Faced with the challenge of converting HTML into polished documents and images, we scoured the landscape for a solution that aligned perfectly with our needs. Surprisingly, we found none that matched our specific use case.
Our platform is our response to this gap. We've designed a fully managed API dedicated to simplifying the creation of PDFs and screenshots.
Well written docs, easy to use.
Based on our record, Documentation Agency seems to be more popular. It has been mentiond 1 time since March 2021. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
This is too biased for me IMHO. I do agree with some points, documentation IS amazing, and you are very likely under-documenting things. But documentation is not cheap to create, and specially it's not cheap to maintain. I've worked in multiple companies where the problem was too much documentation, and of course everyone was afraid to update or ghasps remove any piece of old documentation in case it... - Source: Hacker News / 11 months ago
Docusaurus - Easy to maintain open source documentation websites
PDFShift - Convert any HTML documents to high-fidelity PDF using a single POST request
Devhints - TL;DR for developer documentation
pdflayer - Free, powerful HTML to PDF API supporting both URL and raw HTML conversion. Unlimited document size, lightning-fast and compatible PHP, Python, Ruby, etc.
Stack Overflow Documentation - A crowdsourced developer documentation
DocRaptor - As the only API powered by the Prince HTML-to-PDF engine, DocRaptor provides the best support for complex PDFs with powerful support for headers, page breaks, page numbers, flexbox, watermarks, accessible PDFs, and much more