Code formatting shouldn't be used for emphasis on regular words. As for what it should be used for, I don't know if it's possible to make a definitive list, nor to get the community to agree on every item in the list.
Some places where I think inline code formatting is useful:
Code block formatting is useful for:
- Errors and logs, especially when
They're meant to be in a monospaced font
01-25 22:13:18.594: DEBUG/skia(4204): xxxxxxxxxxx jpeg error 20 Improper call to JPEG library in state %d
01-25 22:13:18.604: INFO/System.out(4204): resolveUri failed on bad bitmap uri:
01-25 22:13:18.694: ERROR/dalvikvm-heap(4204): 6291456-byte external allocation too large for this process.
01-25 22:13:18.694: ERROR/(4204): VM won't let us allocate 6291456 bytes
01-25 22:13:18.694: DEBUG/skia(4204): xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx allocPixelRef failed
They contain spacing that is lost if it isn't pre-formatted
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "x.py", line 6, in <module>
f(a=1, b=1)
File "x.py", line 4, in f
return 1 / (a+1) + 1 / (b-1)
~~^~~~~~~
ZeroDivisionError: division by zero
Just make sure to disable syntax highlighting:
```none
your logs/errors here
```
Beyond these examples, use other, more suitable formatting.
Some cases we see often are: