SourceForge
GitHub
GitLab
BitBucket
openDesktop.org
Gitea
Launchpad.net
OSOR
Docsmith
Postman
ReadMe
DocoAPI
GitBook
StopLight
Apidog
Mintlify Writer
Docsmith turns your OpenAPI / Swagger specification into complete, branded API documentation in 60 seconds โ no manual writing required.
Built and operated by an indie founder in Pune, India.
SourceForge
DocsmithNo Docsmith videos yet. You could help us improve this page by suggesting one.
Docsmith's answer:
Docsmith is the only OpenAPI documentation tool that writes the prose for you. Competing tools (ReadMe, Stoplight, Apidog) give you a polished editor, but you still hand-write every endpoint description, every parameter explanation, every error-code reference. Docsmith reads your OpenAPI 2.0 / 3.0 spec and AI-generates the full content in under 60 seconds โ endpoint descriptions, parameter tables, working curl examples, and an error-code reference โ then exports clean static HTML or Markdown you self-host. No CMS to maintain, no team subscription, no vendor lock-in.
Docsmith's answer:
Three reasons.
Best fit when you want documentation-as-a-deliverable rather than documentation-as-a-CMS.
Docsmith's answer:
Indie API builders and small API teams that ship endpoints faster than they document them. Typical users:
The common pattern: a working OpenAPI spec already exists, the team cares about good docs, but writing prose for every endpoint is a tax they don't want to pay.
Docsmith's answer:
Docsmith started after the founder spent two full days writing endpoint descriptions for a 40-route OpenAPI spec โ work that an LLM can do in 90 seconds with better consistency.
The first version was a personal CLI script. After a few API teams asked for it, it became a hosted product with email-only auth, two pricing tiers (Free + Pro), and a 60-second turnaround promise.
Built and operated solo by Bikram from Pune, India. Launched April 2026.
Docsmith's answer:
The stack is intentionally boring โ the value is in the prompt engineering and the spec parser, not the framework choices.
Docsmith's answer:
GitHub - Originally founded as a project to simplify sharing code, GitHub has grown into an application used by over a million people to store over two million code repositories, making GitHub the largest code host in the world.
Postman - The Collaboration Platform for API Development
GitLab - Create, review and deploy code together with GitLab open source git repo management software | GitLab
ReadMe - A collaborative developer hub for your API or code.
BitBucket - Bitbucket is a free code hosting site for Mercurial and Git. Manage your development with a hosted wiki, issue tracker and source code.
DocoAPI - Beautiful API docs portal that auto-syncs with your OpenAPI spec. AI semantic search included. No manual uploads. No drift.