I realised I'm a bit confused about something. I have found three separate wikis hosted at ubuntu.com
, and I'd like to know their respective purposes and relationships. I have some guesses (see below) but I'd prefer some clear/official/de facto descriptions or links.
Official Documentation (https://help.ubuntu.com) My guess: the official wiki page for running X on Ubuntu, where X is an officially supported package.
Community Help Wiki (https://help.ubuntu.com/community) My guess: the public wiki page for running X on Ubuntu, where X is any old thing.
Ubuntu Wiki (https://wiki.ubuntu.com) My guess: contributor-supported documentation for how to make contributions to the Ubuntu platform itself (not development for Ubuntu).
My primary interest here is in understand what they are so I can a) use them for my own reference, b) contribute to them if possible and c) link to them from AU (where relevant)
From https://wiki.ubuntu.com/DocumentationTeam/SystemDocumentation
From https://wiki.ubuntu.com/DocumentationTeam/Wiki
also from here https://help.ubuntu.com/community/WikiGuide
So yes, https://help.ubuntu.com is the official documentation but it is possible to contribute to it also. https://help.ubuntu.com/community and https://wiki.ubuntu.com are the same (if we are talking about the documentation of Ubuntu), they are the community maintained documentation. To see that the latter two are the same:
https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Installation
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Installation
or
https://help.ubuntu.com/community/BinaryDriverHowto/Nvidia
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/BinaryDriverHowto/Nvidia
But https://wiki.ubuntu.com is not just about documentation as Braiam correctly pointed out in his above answer.
All pages has their descriptions except the wiki.ubuntu due it's broader scope. The help.ubuntu title reads:
help.ubuntu.com/community/ says:
There's no limit to what source of information people should read. Some feels better reading the Wiki, some the official documentation, some the manual, some comes here. Is just matter of what people feels good about. They follow different ideologies and precept but they are not intended for a sole audience. What you want to do with the information given is up to you solely.