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No:

Sometimes, the exact reason a user asks a question is his bad formatting.

Case in pointCase in point:

A question about the difference between:

for(var i = 0; i <= num; i++) {
array.push(i);
return array;
}

And

for(var i = 0; i <= num; i++)
array.push(i);
return array;

Properly indenting that code may make it unclear why exactly that question is a question in the first place.

Besides, this encourages lazy edits where users only hit the "tidy up" button, and save, without paying attention to what's actually changed.

No:

Sometimes, the exact reason a user asks a question is his bad formatting.

Case in point:

A question about the difference between:

for(var i = 0; i <= num; i++) {
array.push(i);
return array;
}

And

for(var i = 0; i <= num; i++)
array.push(i);
return array;

Properly indenting that code may make it unclear why exactly that question is a question in the first place.

Besides, this encourages lazy edits where users only hit the "tidy up" button, and save, without paying attention to what's actually changed.

No:

Sometimes, the exact reason a user asks a question is his bad formatting.

Case in point:

A question about the difference between:

for(var i = 0; i <= num; i++) {
array.push(i);
return array;
}

And

for(var i = 0; i <= num; i++)
array.push(i);
return array;

Properly indenting that code may make it unclear why exactly that question is a question in the first place.

Besides, this encourages lazy edits where users only hit the "tidy up" button, and save, without paying attention to what's actually changed.

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Cerbrus
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No:

Sometimes, the exact reason a user asks a question is his bad formatting.

Case in point:

TheA question about the difference between:

for(var i = 0; i <= num; i++) {
array.push(i);
return array;
}

And

for(var i = 0; i <= num; i++)
array.push(i);
return array;

Properly indenting that code may make it unclear why exactly that question is a question in the first place.

Besides, this encourages lazy edits where users only hit the "tidy up" button, and save, without paying attention to what's actually changed.

No:

Sometimes, the exact reason a user asks a question is his bad formatting.

Case in point:

The difference between:

for(var i = 0; i <= num; i++) {
array.push(i);
return array;
}

And

for(var i = 0; i <= num; i++)
array.push(i);
return array;

Properly indenting that code may make it unclear why exactly that question is a question in the first place.

Besides, this encourages lazy edits where users only hit the "tidy up" button, and save, without paying attention to what's actually changed.

No:

Sometimes, the exact reason a user asks a question is his bad formatting.

Case in point:

A question about the difference between:

for(var i = 0; i <= num; i++) {
array.push(i);
return array;
}

And

for(var i = 0; i <= num; i++)
array.push(i);
return array;

Properly indenting that code may make it unclear why exactly that question is a question in the first place.

Besides, this encourages lazy edits where users only hit the "tidy up" button, and save, without paying attention to what's actually changed.

Source Link
Cerbrus
  • 72.6k
  • 65
  • 370
  • 513

No:

Sometimes, the exact reason a user asks a question is his bad formatting.

Case in point:

The difference between:

for(var i = 0; i <= num; i++) {
array.push(i);
return array;
}

And

for(var i = 0; i <= num; i++)
array.push(i);
return array;

Properly indenting that code may make it unclear why exactly that question is a question in the first place.

Besides, this encourages lazy edits where users only hit the "tidy up" button, and save, without paying attention to what's actually changed.