Imagine a developer stepping into a project after several months of inactivity: they find code that works but comes with no explanation. Business rules are implicit, some critical scripts remain silent, and the architecture is documented nowhere. When the next hire or contractor needs to dive in, it’s a leap into the unknown. This lack of technical and functional context delays onboarding, complicates maintenance, and places every update at risk because no one truly understands why certain decisions were made.
Defining Code Documentation and Its Forms
Code documentation encompasses far more than inline comments and README files. It includes all resources that explain the context, decisions, and usage of a software product.
Comments and Docstrings
Inline comments clarify logic that isn’t immediately readable from the code itself. They shouldn’t repeat what the code expresses but explain why a particular choice was made or the reason for a constraint.
Docstrings, on the other hand, embed documentation in modules, functions, or classes. They describe expected parameters, return types, possible exceptions, and sometimes the impact on global state.
Too many comments can also harm clarity: when code is well-structured and aptly named, it becomes self-documenting. The goal is to comment where code alone isn’t enough—particularly for business trade-offs or historical workarounds.
This distinction prevents unnecessary clutter while ensuring technical decisions remain traceable, even after multiple rewrites or updates.
Example: An e-commerce business cut its integration time by 30% by documenting its critical modules.
README and Project Guides
The README is the first gateway to understanding a project. It describes the software’s purpose, installation, configuration, and basic usage.
An installation guide details prerequisites (language versions, system dependencies, environment variables) and deployment steps. It may include sample commands and explain build or test scripts.
When a CI/CD pipeline is in place, the guide also lists commands to run unit tests, trigger integration checks, or deploy to staging. This significantly reduces time wasted hunting for the right command.
A well-crafted README follows standard conventions (clear headings, concrete examples, up-to-date sections) and avoids last-minute omissions when handing over a project between teams or contractors.
Architecture and API Documentation
Architecture documentation outlines the overall structure: modules, microservices or monolithic layers, data flows, component interactions, databases, and external integrations. It highlights the patterns in use and points of fragility.
API documentation lists endpoints, HTTP methods, parameters, request and response schemas. It also covers error codes and security constraints (authentication, permissions).
Example: A Swiss logistics SME ran a tracking service without any API specification. Each external integration required repeated exchanges and ad hoc testing, delaying new partner onboarding by several weeks. This case shows how undocumented APIs can become strategic bottlenecks.
Tools like OpenAPI/Swagger or Postman make it easy to auto-generate documentation and ensure consistency between code and description.
Why Documentation Is Strategic for the Business
Documentation isn’t just a burden for developers; it’s a lever for the entire organization. It streamlines maintenance, onboarding, quality management, and decision-making by reducing risks.
Reducing Dependency and Accelerating Onboarding
Comprehensive documentation mitigates the risk tied to knowledge held by a single individual. If someone leaves, procedures and trade-offs remain accessible.
Bringing a new team member—internal or contractor—up to speed becomes faster: guides and diagrams explain key concepts and historical context without requiring days of pair programming.
This contextualization speeds integration into sprints, improves estimation accuracy, and reduces blockers during the first tasks.
Ultimately, the company gains agility: it can scale its workforce according to needs without fearing a knowledge gap.
Maintenance, QA, and Error Reduction
When a bug ticket is opened, documentation guides the diagnosis: understanding expected behavior, spotting dependencies, and identifying test areas.
QA teams rely on documented use cases to develop functional, regression, and integration tests. This cuts down the back-and-forth cycles with developers.
Project managers can estimate changes more accurately by visualizing potential impacts across the ecosystem. This limits budgetary and scheduling surprises.
Clear documentation also prevents the accumulation of costly mistakes, as each modification is accompanied by a documentation update.
Technical Debt and Hidden Costs
Undocumented code fuels technical debt: each new change requires extra time for understanding and manual testing.
Organizations often see a rising total cost of ownership because teams spend more time analyzing than developing.
Without documentation, upskilling on the system is slower and riskier—especially during audits or partial rewrites.
This stalls projects, creates a compounding effect, and can demotivate teams faced with code perceived as unstable.
{CTA_BANNER_BLOG_POST}
Documenting Like Code and Leveraging AI
Treating documentation like code and leveraging AI deliver efficiency gains. Best practices and vigilance remain essential to ensure reliability.
Docs-as-Code Approach and CI/CD Integration
The “documentation as code” philosophy means versioning documentation in the same repository as the code. Every update goes through a pull request and review, just like a feature.
CI/CD can automatically generate static documentation (website, PDF) on each commit. This approach integrates into the software project lifecycle. It prevents isolated docs from becoming outdated and ensures ongoing consistency.
Teams define naming conventions, Markdown templates, and validation pipelines to check for essential sections (installation, API, architecture).
By handling documentation with the same rigor as code, you minimize omissions and maintain traceability of technical and functional decisions.
AI-Assisted Documentation and Its Limits
Tools like GitHub Copilot, ChatGPT, or Claude Code can suggest comments, summarize code, or generate initial READMEs.
They speed up writing but may misinterpret business rules or fabricate technical justifications. Human review remains indispensable.
On legacy systems, AI can reproduce incorrect explanations or omit critical dependencies. Strict control is required before publication.
AI is useful for first drafts but should not replace domain expertise or expert validation.
Preparing Documentation for AI Agents and Best Practices
Technical AI agents read READMEs, Markdown files, or API docs to generate code or automated tests. Documentation must therefore be machine-readable.
It should include query examples, explicit statuses (beta, stable, deprecated), and a structured format so assistants can understand and reuse it.
Best practices include normalizing llms.txt files, using open standard formats (OpenAPI), and dividing content into clear chapters without vague or ambiguous material.
By anticipating AI agents’ needs, the organization ensures better automated support and smoother integration with development tools.
Swiss Case Study and Edana’s Positioning
For Swiss companies, robust documentation is insurance against dependency and a longevity asset. A contextualized approach maximizes software value over the long term.
Protection Against Vendor Lock-In and Software Control
Comprehensive documentation allows switching vendors or technologies without starting from scratch. Architectural decisions and business workflows are recorded.
In one case, a Swiss mid-sized enterprise migrated from a proprietary platform to an open source solution using architecture maps and migration guides. This project proved that investing in documentation drastically reduces risks during transition.
Traceability of technical choices is a negotiation lever with vendors and ensures long-term independence.
Mastery of code and dependencies becomes a strategic asset, not a potential vulnerability.
Governance Advantage and Sustainability for SMEs
For a Swiss SME, documentation is a governance tool: during an audit, regulatory and cybersecurity requirements are clearly documented and easy to verify.
It also supports technical debt planning and risk assessment by providing a reliable reference for executive committees.
Well-documented business software boosts investor and partner confidence by demonstrating that the system is controlled and scalable.
The company can confidently plan its future developments and ensure operational continuity.
Edana’s Support in Strategic Documentation
Edana integrates documentation as a project deliverable—whether READMEs, architecture diagrams, API documentation, or deployment guides.
Our contextualized approach emphasizes open source, modular architecture, and traceability of technical decisions.
We tailor each format to internal audiences and AI systems, ensuring smooth use and continuous updates via CI/CD pipelines.
This method delivers not just code, but a controllable, maintainable, and scalable asset aligned with business objectives and long-term strategy.
Make Documentation a Lever for Sustainable Growth
Code documentation isn’t administrative overhead—it’s a sustainability enabler. It reduces risks, accelerates changes, and limits dependency on a single expert.
By structuring comments, docstrings, READMEs, architecture, and API docs—and adopting a docs-as-code approach—organizations optimize maintainability and prepare their systems for AI challenges.
Our experts are available to enrich your documentation, set up review processes, and deploy a strategy tailored to your context. We support you from defining standards to training your teams.
















