Docs have moved! If you just want to view TensorFlow documentation, go to: https://www.tensorflow.org/ Documentation (on Github, tensorflow.org, and anywhere else we decide to serve it from) is now generated from the files in tensorflow/docs_src/ (for tutorials and other guides) and TensorFlow source code (for the API reference pages). If you see a problem with API reference, edit the code comments in the appropriate language. If you see a problem with our other docs, edit the files in docs_src. To preview the results of your changes, or generate an offline copy of the docs, run: bazel run -- tensorflow/tools/docs:generate \ --src_dir=/path/to/tensorflow/docs_src/ \ --output_dir=/tmp/tfdocs/ `src_dir` must be absolute path to documentation source. When authoring docs, note that we have some new syntax for references -- at least for docs coming from Python docstrings or tensorflow/docs_src/. Use: * `tf.symbol` to make a link to the reference page for a Python symbol. Note that class members don't get their own page, but the syntax still works, since `tf.MyClass.method` links to the right part of the tf.MyClass page. * `tensorflow::symbol` to make a link to the reference page for a C++ symbol. (This only works for a few symbols but will work for more soon.) * @{$doc_page} to make a link to another (not an API reference) doc page. To link to - red/green/blue/index.md use @{$blue} or @{$green/blue}, - foo/bar/baz.md use @{$baz} or @{$bar/baz}. The shorter one is preferred, so we can move pages around without breaking these references. The main exception is that the Python API guides should probably be referred to using @{$python/} to avoid ambiguity. To link to an anchor in that doc and use different link text (by default it uses the title of the target page) use: @{$doc_page#anchor-tag$link-text} (You can skip #anchor-tag if you just want to override the link text). Thanks!