Some links will be automatically inlined if posted on a single line by themselves, such as:

We call this "oneboxing". For example, entering the following in chat on a line by itself …

Source: http://chat.stackexchange.com/faq#formatting

However, this is not accurate. People can press shift+Enter to add a newline into the chat and submit a multi-line message. (If you plan to block that, don't! There are other ways of inserting newlines, like copy-paste)

Then, I tried sending a multi-line message with a link in a single line by itself, which fits the requirements described at the chat. It didn't work,

Oneboxing only works if the link is in single message by itself. Thus, the FAQ text should be reworded.

(I'm tagging this as bug because it is a bug in the documentation)

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1 Answer

This is certainly ambiguous, and may be misleading on a quick read, but could also be read in such a way that it's correct. What is the phrase "by itself" modifying in "in chat on a line by itself"? It could be referring to "a line." If the line is the thing that is by itself, then sending a multi-line message inherently does not fit the requirements. Since the exact text for the line is provided, there's no way to claim that other stuff could go on the line and break the oneboxing.

Of course, "misleading" is only marginally less bad than "wrong," so I'd be happy to see improved wording. The hard part is finding a good wording. Your own suggestion, "Oneboxing only works if the link is in single message by itself," in addition to being grammatically incorrect, has the opposite problem: "by itself" could be modifying "message," so people might expect the single message "Everyone look at [URL]" to be oneboxed.

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"a single link posted in its own message"? – Benjol Nov 18 '10 at 14:43
or just "a single link posted on its own"? – Benjol Nov 18 '10 at 14:51
I'll leave suggestions for native English speakers. They certainly know grammar better than me. :) – Denilson Sá Nov 18 '10 at 15:20

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