Oh Yes You Can Use Regexes to Parse HTML!
This answerThis answer by tchristtchrist surprised and delighted me. It's detailed, it's long, it's mildly self deprecating, and it's got plenty of links to a whole lot more reading. It also got me into reading a whole book on programming again; one by Tom Christiansen. And after doing so I decided I should never have stopped reading good programming books, so I put together a list of what I'd been meaning to read and a schedule to read it. It's been a real joy.
But the story is also about how I got to even read this pretty great answer and thus add to my reading list.
I've loved using SO from the beta days, even before comments etc. But for even longer, I've kind of loved Perl (and scheme, but Perl does more... so), and when I get a little tired of C, C++, C# and Java leading me to so many incremental changes on projects rather than new different projects, I tend to pull out a little bit a Perl (also lately Python and Go, thanks SO) to play with because it's so welcoming to just trying something right this minute. That's why on SO I watch the Perl tag.
Quite recently I got a little tired of that tag's frequent "fix my regular expression" questions that seemed to drown out the Q&A that I better learned from. Thinking on it, I thought that maybe I had a suggestion that could help people self-help a little better in regards to regex being more of a different dsl inside your normal day-to-day language (though my view of Perl is that this dsl is the first part you should learn thoroughly...). I asked on meta if there was an solution to this, thinking I could then propose mine if there wasn't (and I hadn't noticed till then that the meta about stack overflow had broken off from the original meta site). Basically instantly Robert Harvey pointed out how this was already solved, and it was almost identical to what I thought could help. I'd just never seen it because I rarely ask these kinds of questions myself, and I often write "regular expression" or "regexp" instead of instead of "regex".
That interaction is what lead me to this great example of building up a regex in to a whole parser based on regexes; and led to my renewed joy at reading about software and languages. Thanks everyone.
Oh and, I recall feeling a little special when I got a sarcastic chide from Jon Skeet on a meta post:
Please provide more detail next time. These quick, throwaway answers aren't terribly useful.