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Gitbook

Document Everything! For you, your users and your team
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What is Gitbook?

It is a modern documentation platform where teams can document everything from products, to APIs and internal knowledge-bases. It is a place to think and track ideas for you & your team.
Gitbook is a tool in the Documentation as a Service & Tools category of a tech stack.

Who uses Gitbook?

Companies
49 companies reportedly use Gitbook in their tech stacks, including Shelf, GitBook, and Mews.

Developers
161 developers on StackShare have stated that they use Gitbook.

Gitbook Integrations

Pros of Gitbook
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Prueba
4
Integrated high-quality editor

Gitbook Alternatives & Comparisons

What are some alternatives to Gitbook?
Sphinx
It lets you either batch index and search data stored in an SQL database, NoSQL storage, or just files quickly and easily — or index and search data on the fly, working with it pretty much as with a database server.
Confluence
Capture the knowledge that's too often lost in email inboxes and shared network drives in Confluence instead – where it's easy to find, use, and update.
Jekyll
Think of Jekyll as a file-based CMS, without all the complexity. Jekyll takes your content, renders Markdown and Liquid templates, and spits out a complete, static website ready to be served by Apache, Nginx or another web server. Jekyll is the engine behind GitHub Pages, which you can use to host sites right from your GitHub repositories.
Google Docs
It is a word processor included as part of a free, web-based software office suite offered by Google. It brings your documents to life with smart editing and styling tools to help you easily format text and paragraphs.
GitHub Pages
Public webpages hosted directly from your GitHub repository. Just edit, push, and your changes are live.
See all alternatives

Gitbook's Followers
344 developers follow Gitbook to keep up with related blogs and decisions.