https://www.folklore.org/0-index.html?author=Caroline+Rose
and esp.:
(Kids these days with StackExchange and Copilot have no idea.... now get off my lawn!)
("But couldn't you just jump to the definition in your IDE?" Oh, you sweet summer child. First of all, most IDEs didn't have that functionality. Second, the header files didn't contain documentation. If you were lucky, they might have the argument names.)
This alone is enough to justify hiring great technical writers (and technical writers with programming experience.)
For folks who aren't familiar w/ it, it was contracted for by Apple as a hedge against MacWrite not making it and as an "advanced MacWrite" --- ~100,000 lines of assembly language, it was blazingly fast, yet still had quite nice features and was _very_ capable (my wife wrote her Master's Thesis in it) which I then had to coax out of HP LaserJet (IV I think --- the first 600 dpi one).
It's amazing that she wrote the Mac documentation without actually having access to a working development system.
I also like the idea that writers should be embedded in the software group.
The "joy and excitement" and camaraderie of the Mac group is interesting as well, as a key to its success.
Interesting that the Mac group worked in one room.
Surprising that (pre-ADA) she could legally be fired from NeXT for having an RSI disability.
And that Jobs fired her again (as part of shutting down Apple's technical journal, presumably to cut costs) after he returned to Apple.
"You were there for us when we needed you, we'll be there for you, now that you need us", said Steve Jobs, before NeXT fired Caroline Rose, when her RSI became debilitating. After talking to a labor lawyer, she went back to NeXT and got her NeXT shares vested - which turned into AAPL shares when Apple bought NeXT.
Title at develop magazine was "editor in cheek"