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RubberDuck
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I routinely reformat code to make it more readable. Often times, a question is unintelligible due to poor formatting. For example:

For i = 0 To 100
' lots of code here
For j = 0 To 100
'lots more code here, still at the same level of indentation
Next
Next

Now, pretend for a second that this example is 100 lines long and contains another nested loop or two, all at the same level of indentation. Go ahead and and format the code properly. It makes for a better question. In situations like this, you likely made an unanswerable question answerable, because, with proper formatting, it's almost obvious where OP went wrong.

As for your specific examples though, I consider them to be almost too minor, but that reject reason has gone away for good reason. It has been replaced with "No improvement whatsoever." By that standard, all we need to ask ourselves is, "Does this edit improve the quality of the question?" I think clearly the answer is "Yes". Quality has been improved. It's a good edit.

To be clear about this, as there seems to be some confusion, I am not proposing style changes for the sake of style changes. I am in support of style changes that objectively make the code in question more readable/understandable. On its own, without any other changes, I would reject the assignment example you posted. Any improvement is subjective and some would say it actively harms the post. I would, however, approve the improved comment, as it objectively improves the question. In either case, I would approve the edit so long as they were accompanied by other improvements.

We should not try to impose our own style on code when the OP has one already (whether we like it or not is a subjective matter). We should go ahead and clean up code where there is no discernible style though.

I routinely reformat code to make it more readable. Often times, a question is unintelligible due to poor formatting. For example:

For i = 0 To 100
' lots of code here
For j = 0 To 100
'lots more code here, still at the same level of indentation
Next
Next

Now, pretend for a second that this example is 100 lines long and contains another nested loop or two, all at the same level of indentation. Go ahead and and format the code properly. It makes for a better question. In situations like this, you likely made an unanswerable question answerable, because, with proper formatting, it's almost obvious where OP went wrong.

As for your specific examples though, I consider them to be almost too minor, but that reject reason has gone away for good reason. It has been replaced with "No improvement whatsoever." By that standard, all we need to ask ourselves is, "Does this edit improve the quality of the question?" I think clearly the answer is "Yes". Quality has been improved. It's a good edit.

I routinely reformat code to make it more readable. Often times, a question is unintelligible due to poor formatting. For example:

For i = 0 To 100
' lots of code here
For j = 0 To 100
'lots more code here, still at the same level of indentation
Next
Next

Now, pretend for a second that this example is 100 lines long and contains another nested loop or two, all at the same level of indentation. Go ahead and and format the code properly. It makes for a better question. In situations like this, you likely made an unanswerable question answerable, because, with proper formatting, it's almost obvious where OP went wrong.

As for your specific examples though, I consider them to be almost too minor, but that reject reason has gone away for good reason. It has been replaced with "No improvement whatsoever." By that standard, all we need to ask ourselves is, "Does this edit improve the quality of the question?" I think clearly the answer is "Yes". Quality has been improved. It's a good edit.

To be clear about this, as there seems to be some confusion, I am not proposing style changes for the sake of style changes. I am in support of style changes that objectively make the code in question more readable/understandable. On its own, without any other changes, I would reject the assignment example you posted. Any improvement is subjective and some would say it actively harms the post. I would, however, approve the improved comment, as it objectively improves the question. In either case, I would approve the edit so long as they were accompanied by other improvements.

We should not try to impose our own style on code when the OP has one already (whether we like it or not is a subjective matter). We should go ahead and clean up code where there is no discernible style though.

Source Link
RubberDuck
  • 12.7k
  • 18
  • 30

I routinely reformat code to make it more readable. Often times, a question is unintelligible due to poor formatting. For example:

For i = 0 To 100
' lots of code here
For j = 0 To 100
'lots more code here, still at the same level of indentation
Next
Next

Now, pretend for a second that this example is 100 lines long and contains another nested loop or two, all at the same level of indentation. Go ahead and and format the code properly. It makes for a better question. In situations like this, you likely made an unanswerable question answerable, because, with proper formatting, it's almost obvious where OP went wrong.

As for your specific examples though, I consider them to be almost too minor, but that reject reason has gone away for good reason. It has been replaced with "No improvement whatsoever." By that standard, all we need to ask ourselves is, "Does this edit improve the quality of the question?" I think clearly the answer is "Yes". Quality has been improved. It's a good edit.