To be honest it is very difficult for me to wrap my head around the issues that you were having.
The thing is:
Not all of us are superusers familiar with Markdown and Markdown editors
It is not clear to me why one needs to be familiar with Markdown to use the editor, as the editor uses a small set of extremely standard icons, provides the expected functionality that most WYSIWYG editors have, and has the usual behavior of applying changes to highlighted text (if text is highlighted). So given that an understanding of Markdown is not required to use the rather run-of-the-mill editor, the premise here seems a bit odd to me.
The editor itself:
- Uses standard, recognizable icons for all actions (big quotes for quotes, bulleted and numbered list icons for lists, formatting icons, chain link for links, brackets for code, etc.)
- Supports the rather standard flow of applying the tool button you press to the text you have highlighted (or setting you up to type if you have no text highlighted).
- Provides tooltips on every icon if you do not know what they mean.
- Provides pretty much the same basic functionality that every other WYSIWYG editor provides.
- Has a help button on it.
- Is based on Markdown which you may not be familiar with, this I could understand, although all the documentation for it is there, and it is fairly straightforward in that raw Markdown is still readily readable as text - IMHO Markdown is a very intuitive choice as it mostly mirrors what you'd type anyways in a plain-text environment. And, like I mentioned above, it should be moot: You don't actually need to know Markdown to use the editor.
- Has a live preview directly underneath it, so if you're more into experimenting, you can get feedback on your results immediately.
- Also, as a side note: Syntax highlighting will be done automatically based on the language tag you choose. There is generally no need to specify a language manually or take any other action here.
- Additionally, the editor even supports some basic HTML, if you're more familiar with that.
I wanted to make a little GIF showing the tooltips but, sadly, the tooltips aren't captured by my screen recording tool, so just pretend they're there in the beginning. The help is also there:
I am having a hard time imagining what you found on Google that wasn't already directly linked to from the editor with the exception of How do I format my code blocks?, which I don't believe has a direct path.
I'm not saying that you're "wrong" in finding it nonintuitive, but I (and I presume many others here) am having trouble understanding why, as there is nothing particularly out of the ordinary or quirky about this editor compared to every other editor, and all of the help is there on the editor. I can't actually think of any way this could be more streamlined.
So perhaps you could come up with a more specific list of exactly what problems you had and form those into feature requests, noting that many feature requests already exist and so you should do a bit of searching first.
In any case if you're troubled by the editor just give it your best shot. You might get a slight scoff in comments but for the most part it'll be fine, and it won't be long before you pick it up.
By the way, in the spirit of animated GIFs, here is how the current editor works, which seems to address all of the issues...
- Highlight code and press appropriate button - Traditional interface, consistent with text editors in general, requires no markdown knowledge.
- Code highlighting is determined automatically (by tag, but you don't need to think about it at all; write code, tag like you'd tag anyways, observe resulting magic).
- Live preview shows what is happening.
- Other questions searched as you type, so you don't have to spend additional time searching.
I am not sure how it could be made more smooth, although based on your comments below perhaps the help button could be animated the first time you use the editor to draw attention to it, if you need it. This could be a good candidate for a feature request should you choose to write a clear one (search first, it may exist).
This must be an issue in itself.
sort of, but in a very broad, general way that's not really going to change anything. I could write a letter to Microsoft telling them "I found Windows not very intuitive" and it would to be thrown into a bin right away because there's nothing in it that they could even forward to anyone who collects user feedback. To convert this into something productive, it would be helpful if you could actually describe what exactly didn't work for you.help
button and didn't click onLearn more...
where he could have find all the information needed. But he tries! When was the last time you saw 1rep user making readable post?Help
thenLearn More
Scroll to :Syntax highlighting for code . Copy past<!-- language: lang-js -->
into your code. And if you are looking for a specific language. You have to travel back to help page. and click thewill be inferred from the question's tags.
link. To find the correct language. That's a lot.