Developer documentation for IBM's cognitive collaboration platform Watson Work Services and the Workspace app. Tutorials, guides, API references and more!
This is the repository for the Watson Work Services developer experience. It holds all the API references, development guides and examples for building on the Watson Work Services platform.
This site https://developer.watsonwork.ibm.com is the developer experience for Watson Work Services, and we build it by using this repository as source for all of the content. Changes here get reflected in that experience.
We put our content into this repository so that you could have access to what we’re working on and to give you a way to give us feedback, fix problems and create issues to connect with us on what you’re seeing here.
In addition to seeing all the content that forms the developer experience, you will see additional things. We will include topics that we call future and experimental, these items will not surface in the developer experience. We include them here so that you can see into what we’re thinking about and working on, so that you can give us your thoughts and feedback while we’re in the process of designing and building it. We want your input to make this platform really great.
Using github we hope you will connect with us by creating issues and commenting on issues for any topic here. As part of this, please make use of labels so we know the context of your input. Our labels are;
feedback - use this to give us feedback on specific content or in general, telling us what works or what doesn’t, what’s not clear, etc.
request - if there’s something that you think we’re missing, please use this label to let us know that you want or need to have this’
defect - and if there’s errors in wording, spelling, code examples or functionality that just doesn’t cut it, please use this label to call our attention to bugs
If you’ve got some changes, updates, feedback or bugs you are itching to provide a fix for yourself, please make a Pull Request so our team can review and merge.
We use the fork-and-pull GitHub flow. You should fork this repository, configure a remote for your fork, and keep your fork in sync. This is all documented in the Working with forks GitHub documentation.
Once your fork is configured and synced with the latest, you should make your changes on a topic branch, commit those changes, and push the branch to make a Pull Request.