technical writing
English
Noun
technical writing (countable and uncountable, plural technical writings)
- (uncountable) The act of, or profession pertaining to, the creation of factual and instructional texts, written using clear and precise wording, intended for the communication of information to a specific audience.
- The furniture manufacturer's technical writing department is responsible for creating the assembly manuals for their flatpack furniture.
- 2005, Vicki Spanel, The 9 rights of every writer: a guide for teachers, page 128:
- Only one sort of writing can afford to go voiceless, and that is the sort in which a technical writer speaks to a technical reader — as in a medical treatise on the inherent risks of performing appendectomies. In such writing, the writer deliberately, carefully removes him- or herself, getting out of the way so the message can have center stage and consume the reader’s full attention. Writing that plays to our emotions is out of place in such a context; we need to get on with the operation. Good technical writing is sleek as polished steel. It is the essence of message, from which all fingerprints have been wiped clean.
- (countable, uncountable) Works created by technical writing.
- User manuals, training manuals, textbooks, signs, and cooking instructions on food packaging are all examples of technical writing.