This might seem silly, but maybe I'm not the only one. So hear me out.
Lightness Races in Orbit just edited an answer of mine, and commented:
Please don't use code tags for emphasis or quotation; code tags are for code (or other verbatim technical stuff).
But then I thought about why I used the inline-code syntax at all. And I realized that I used it as an alternative to the normal quoting, because it (a) allows you to put the quote inline with the rest of the text and (b) looks the same (there's no syntax highlighting in inline-code. I knew that beforehand).
And that still makes a lot of sense to me. inline code is usually technical jargon or very short pieces of code you want to emphesize. If I want to use inline-quotes, it's usually the same situation (or I don't want to put it right before a code block so it won't be confusing).
It's a style-decision more than anything, but I think it deserves some attention (seeing as how SO moderators will spend their time fixing it). So can we decide to allow that? What do you guys think? Am I the only one who ever used it like that or what?
No! this isn't a duplicate! I'm not asking why are we not using the code block to emphasis any text. It obviously shouldn't be abused like that, and I'm not talking about that. I'm talking specifically about using quotes, like citing documentation about functions, methods or whathaveyou that it just makes sense to keep inline for whatever reason.
<q>
tag for inline quotes? So we don't need to rely on hacksComments
in strange ways!!