Docs developers actually love.
Deliver a world-class developer experience that accelerates adoption, reduces frustration, and turns your docs into a competitive advantage.
Introduction
Use the Leed REST API to trigger deployments, embed an AI assistant, export analytics data, and manage documentation programmatically.
The Leed REST (Representational State Transfer) API enables you to programmatically interact with your documentation, trigger updates, embed AI-powered chat experiences, and export analytics data.
Endpoints
- Trigger update : Trigger an update of your site when desired.
- Get update status : Get the status of an update and other details about your docs.
- Trigger preview deployment : Create or update a preview deployment for a specific branch.
- Create agent job : Create an agent job to automatically edit your documentation.
- Get agent job : Retrieve the details and status of a specific agent job.
- Send follow-up message : Send a follow-up message to an existing agent job.
Long before anyone evaluates your API, they form an opinion of your product from your documentation. A world-class developer experience is one of the most durable advantages you can build — and one of the easiest to quietly neglect.
From a docs site to a developer experience.
Developers judge you by your docs first
The first real interaction most developers have with your product is your documentation. If it’s slow to search, thin on examples, or subtly out of date, that impression sticks — long before they reach an endpoint.
Fast answers, hands-on examples
Semantic search returns answers with code, not a list of blue links. Interactive consoles and generated SDKs let developers go from reading to running without leaving the page or context-switching to a sandbox.
- Semantic, natural-language search
- Try-it console + generated SDKs
- Copy-paste-ready examples
Let the docs tell you where they fail
Failed searches and drop-off points are a precise map of everything your docs don’t yet answer. Surface those gaps automatically and close them — often starting from an AI-drafted first pass instead of a blank page.