I also use online compilers, or "fiddles", or whatever the new jargon is for them. I almost always post my answer with one of these because it is instantly verifiable.
There are certainly numerous ones available. However, each one is backed by a group of developers and none are language agnostic. This means for the Stack Exchange to actually implement this it would need to make compilers for languages which are off the beaten path.
Stack Exchange would not do that, and I understand that isn't the exact request but I wanted to address that at first. My point is that it is beyond the scope of the team to create that type of feature.
In order to integrate third-party compilers, it would require the whitelisting of third-party elements to embed. While this would allow online compilers to be embedded, it would also introduce security concerns. Each online compiler would need be trusted not to introduce any security holes. This is a rather large concern in my opinion.
Another lesser concern is, as stated earlier, the availability of these compilers. I can think of a handful of them, but do not believe that there are enough to trust all of them for the languages which may be more obscure.
Aside from these concerns, is the actual issue being addressed a problem which needs to be solved? Linking to these online compilers is very common. In my opinion users are used to clicking through to these demos, and given that the demos create their own environment it can actually be beneficial to the user to play around with the code there. I do not believe that clicking through is a problem to most users.
tldr; Third part compilers introduce security concerns and are not readily available for enough languages. Clicking through to the demo does not detract from user experience.