Recently, a person registered for one year, submitted his thirteenth question. This question featured a piece of code which:
Is badly indented (which makes it quite misleading sometimes),
Has no consistency whatsoever (sometimes there is a space, and three lines later, there is no space in a similar context, etc.),
Has poor naming conventions,
Is overly complicated, especially since it contains useless code (like an empty
foreach
loop),Mixes HTML with PHP.
While not providing any answer, I downvoted the question, and since it may not be obvious to the author why he received the downvote, I explained it through the comment:
-1 for unmaintainable code with ugly formatting and poor naming conventions. Why not doing a basic cleanup before posting your source code publicly?
The author seemed particularly unhappy with my comment:
-1 for posting a code im having trouble with, that i didnt write myself .. thanks dude .. if you are not going to help then please dont post, telling me my code is "unmaintainable" or ugly is not a big help, and even so you didnt even focus at the question, but more at the code formatting.. im not good at php and still learning, so please be nice or i will find another community to ask...
For me:
The "it's not my code" argument is irrelevant. He's working on this piece of code, so it's his professional obligation to start by re-factoring it and cleaning it up. Even if he's explicitly asked to keep the code unmaintainable, he could have cleaned it up before posting it on Stack Overflow, where the code will be read by dozens or hundreds of programmers.
The "I'm not good at PHP" argument is irrelevant as well. Even a beginner should be able to fix indentation. The fact that he's posting the code as-is is more a sign of laziness than lack of language skills.
So:
Am I an unlikely person (well, I know the answer to this one) and my comment was both unkind and useless?
More importantly, should I have formulated my comment differently? How?
How to help users like the original poster to improve their questions (on 13 questions, only one is upvoted, four being downvoted), without offending them?
you didnt even focus at the question, but more at the code formatting
- users don't recognise the importance of being able to see "the problem" without all the mess. It's like visiting your slob friend's house who doesn't understand why you don't want to stay sitting on the pizza-stained sofa to watch a movie on his new TV. I think the wording of your message could have been less personal "the code is hard to read like that" v "Why not doing a basic cleanup...?" (focus on question/content not the person) but is appropriate.