…
and headings like…
. Probably required. Thus content must be plain HTML paragraphs and headings with those comments. We must not include any thinking process. Just output. We need to count words. Let’s craft ~470 words. We’ll need to count words manually. Let’s draft. Title line: Title: Taming Version Drift: Automating Documentation Updates from API Changes with AI and ai Make sure includes “AI” and “ai”. Title includes both. Now HTML content. We’ll start with maybe an intro paragraph. We need headings for sections: maybe h2 for “Why Automation Matters”, h3 for “Actionable Workflow”, etc. We’ll embed the facts. Let’s draft content then count. I’ll write in a text editor mentally. Draft:Freelance technical writers face constant pressure to keep API documentation in sync with rapid code releases. Manual updates lead to version drift, confusing users and eroding trust. By weaving AI into your documentation pipeline, you can turn every repo push into an opportunity for accurate, up‑to‑date guides.
Now heading:Actionable Workflow for API Change Detection
Paragraph:Start by setting up a GitHub Action that triggers on a new release tag in the client’s API repository. The workflow fetches the latest release notes and a diff of changed files, then feeds that diff into an AI agent with a clear prompt.
Now subheading:Concrete Process Steps
List? We need paragraphs only, but we can still usewith line breaks. However WordPress blocks allow lists but they might be considered not paragraph. Safer to use paragraphs with numbered steps in text. Paragraph:
Step 1: The action runs on push of a new tag, checks out the API repo, and runs git diff between the previous and current tag to capture added, removed, or modified endpoints.
Step 2: The diff output (a concise list of changes) is passed to an AI model via a small API call to OpenAI or Claude.
Paragraph:Step 3: Use the following example prompt for a deprecated parameter: “Summarize the following API change in plain English, note any deprecated fields, and suggest the exact wording to update in the reference guide.”
Paragraph:Step 4: The AI returns a summarized change list, which the workflow posts as a new issue in your documentation repository titled “API Change Detected: [Date]”. The issue body includes the AI summary and a checklist of files likely affected, such as api_reference.md and getting_started.md.
Automating Code Snippet Updates
Paragraph:When the AI detects a modified endpoint, it can also generate the corresponding code snippet. Provide the AI with the updated OpenAPI schema fragment and ask: “Generate a ready‑to‑copy curl example and a Python requests snippet that reflects the new parameter defaults.” The resulting snippets are inserted directly into the flagged documentation files via a script that creates a pull request.
Heading for drafting textual content with context:Drafting Textual Content with Context
Paragraph: Actually need proper comment. Let’s write:Beyond snippets, the same AI agent can rewrite explanatory paragraphs. Feed it the AI‑summarized change and the existing section text, then prompt: “Rewrite this paragraph to incorporate the new endpoint while preserving the original tone and length.” The output replaces the stale text, ensuring consistency across guides.
Now heading for how to start simple (freelancer-friendly):How to Start Simple (Freelancer‑Friendly Version)
We need phases. Paragraph for Phase 1:Phase 1 – Foundation: Create a private GitHub repo for your documentation, enable GitHub Actions, and store API keys for OpenAI/Claude as repository secrets.
Paragraph for Phase 2:Phase 2 – Detection Automation: Add the workflow described above that runs on release tags, creates an issue, and posts the AI summary.
Paragraph for Phase 3:Phase 3 – Update Assistance: Extend the workflow to call a second AI prompt that generates code snippets and suggests textual edits, then opens a pull request with those changes.
Paragraph for Phase 4:Phase 4 – Process Integration: Schedule a weekly review of the generated issues and PRs, merge approved updates, and refine your prompts based on writer feedback to continuously improve accuracy.
Now concluding paragraph promoting e-book: We need exactly the paragraph as given.For a comprehensive guide with detailed workflows, templates, and additional strategies, see my e-book: AI for Freelance Technical Writers (API/SaaS): How to Automate Code Snippet Generation and Documentation Updates.
Now we need to count words. Let’s combine everything and count. I’ll copy the text and count manually. Title line: “Title: Taming Version Drift: Automating Documentation Updates from API Changes with AI and ai” We need to count words in the article content only? Probably total words including title? Usually they’d count the article content. Safer to count everything after title line? The instruction: “Write a concise 450-500 word WordPress blog post in HTML format”. Likely the body content (excluding title line). But we can include title line in count? Safer to keep body 450-500 words. We’ll aim for ~470 words in body. Let’s count body words. I’ll write the body without title line, then count. Body start after title line newline. I’ll write each paragraph with its HTML comments but we need to count only the words inside the paragraphs and headings? Usually word count includes visible text, not HTML tags or comments. We’ll count visible words. Let’s extract visible text: Paragraph 1: “Freelance technical writers face constant pressure to keep API documentation in sync with rapid code releases. Manual updates lead to version drift, confusing users and eroding trust. By weaving AI into your documentation pipeline, you can turn every repo push into an opportunity for accurate, up‑to‑date guides.” Heading 2: “Actionable Workflow for API Change Detection” Paragraph 2: “Start by setting up a GitHub Action that triggers on a new release tag in the client’s API repository. The workflow fetches the latest release notes and a diff of changed files, then feeds that diff into an AI agent with a clear prompt.” Heading 3: “Concrete Process Steps” Paragraph 3 (Step1): “Step 1: The action runs on push of a new tag, checks out the API repo, and runs git diff between the previous and current tag to capture added, removed, or modified endpoints.” Paragraph 4 (Step2): “Step 2: The diff output (a concise list of changes) is passed to an AI model via a small API call to OpenAI or Claude.” Paragraph 5 (Step3): “Step 3: Use the following example prompt for a deprecated parameter: “Summarize the following API change in plain English, note any deprecated fields, and suggest the exact wording to update in the reference guide.”” Paragraph 6 (Step4): “Step 4: The AI returns a summarized change list, which the workflow posts as a new issue in your documentation repository titled “API Change Detected: [Date]”. The issue body includes the AI summary and a checklist of files likely affected, such as api_reference.md and getting_started.md.” Heading 2 (Automating Code Snippet Updates): “Automating Code Snippet Updates” Paragraph 7: “When the AI detects a modified endpoint, it can also generate the corresponding code snippet. Provide the AI with the updated OpenAPI schema fragment and ask: “Generate a ready‑to‑copy curl example and a Python requests snippet that reflects the new parameter defaults.” The resulting snippets are inserted directly into the flagged documentation files via a script that creates a pull request.” Heading 2 (Drafting Textual Content with Context): “Drafting Textual Content with Context” Paragraph 8: “Beyond snippets, the same AI agent can rewrite explanatory paragraphs. Feed it the AI‑summarized change and the existing section text, then prompt: “Rewrite this paragraph to incorporate the new endpoint while preserving the original tone and length.” The output replaces the stale text, ensuring consistency across guides.” Heading 2 (How to Start Simple (Freelancer‑Friendly Version)): “How to Start Simple (Freelancer‑Friendly Version)” Paragraph 9 (Phase1): “Phase 1 – Foundation: Create a private GitHub repo for your documentation, enable GitHub Actions, and store API keys for OpenAI/Claude as repository secrets.” Paragraph 10 (Phase2): “Phase 2 – Detection Automation: Add the workflow described above that runs on release tags, creates an issue, and posts the AI summary.” Paragraph 11 (Phase3): “Phase 3 – Update Assistance: Extend the workflow to call a second AI prompt that generates code snippets and suggests textual edits, then opens a pull request with those changes.” Paragraph 12 (Phase4): “Phase 4 – Process Integration: Schedule a weekly review of the generated issues and PRs, merge approved updates, and refine your prompts based on writer feedback to continuously improve accuracy.” Paragraph 13 (promo): “For a comprehensive guide with detailed workflows, templates, and additional strategies, see my e-book: AI for Freelance Technical Writers (API/SaaS): How to Automate Code Snippet Generation and Documentation Updates.” Now count words. I’ll count each paragraph. I’ll write each sentence and count. Paragraph1: “Freelance(1) technical2 writers3 face4 constant5 pressure6 to7 keep8 API9 documentation10 in11 sync12 with13 rapid14 code15 releases.16 Manual17 updates18 lead19 to20 version21 drift,22 confusing23 users24 and25 eroding26 trust.27 By28 weaving29 AI30 into31 your32 documentation33 pipeline,34 you35 can36 turn37 every38 repo39 push40 into41 an42 opportunity43 for44 accurate,45 up‑to‑date46 guides47.” => 47 words. Heading2: “Actionable Workflow for API Change Detection” Words: Actionable1 Workflow2 for3 API4 Change5 Detection6 => 6 Paragraph2: “Start1 by2 setting3 up4 a5 GitHub6 Action7 that8 triggers9 on10 a11