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The big, big advantage of this particular service is that it contains all of the data necessary to work in the URL (compressed and encoded). I can't overstate how great that is: an awful lot of similar sites store the code in a database somewhere, indexed by a short string in the URL, meaning the link becomes useless if the database is lost or the service decides to age out entries.

This, coupled with the fact that Matt made this all open source, means that links to http://gcc.godbolt.org/ could easily remain useful even if that site drops off the face of the 'Net forever! All the information necessary to make this happen is contained in the posts that link to the site, in the links, rather than the site being linked to. This is the same philosophy that drove the creation of Stack Snippets.

...And using URL shorteners completely destroys this advantage. Now you're back to depending on an opaque key into some 3rd-party's database; if they ever drop the associated entry, you're screwed.

Please, just put the full URLs in the posts you're writing. Sure, they look huge, but they're not really all that long; for any non-trivial amount of code, the URL will be shorter than posting the code itself. And ten years from now, someone reading your Stack Overflow posts from a data-dump via a holographic display while on Mars could still make those links work if need-be...

##See also: stats on the use of shorteners in comments

See also: stats on the use of shorteners in comments

The big, big advantage of this particular service is that it contains all of the data necessary to work in the URL (compressed and encoded). I can't overstate how great that is: an awful lot of similar sites store the code in a database somewhere, indexed by a short string in the URL, meaning the link becomes useless if the database is lost or the service decides to age out entries.

This, coupled with the fact that Matt made this all open source, means that links to http://gcc.godbolt.org/ could easily remain useful even if that site drops off the face of the 'Net forever! All the information necessary to make this happen is contained in the posts that link to the site, in the links, rather than the site being linked to. This is the same philosophy that drove the creation of Stack Snippets.

...And using URL shorteners completely destroys this advantage. Now you're back to depending on an opaque key into some 3rd-party's database; if they ever drop the associated entry, you're screwed.

Please, just put the full URLs in the posts you're writing. Sure, they look huge, but they're not really all that long; for any non-trivial amount of code, the URL will be shorter than posting the code itself. And ten years from now, someone reading your Stack Overflow posts from a data-dump via a holographic display while on Mars could still make those links work if need-be...

##See also: stats on the use of shorteners in comments

The big, big advantage of this particular service is that it contains all of the data necessary to work in the URL (compressed and encoded). I can't overstate how great that is: an awful lot of similar sites store the code in a database somewhere, indexed by a short string in the URL, meaning the link becomes useless if the database is lost or the service decides to age out entries.

This, coupled with the fact that Matt made this all open source, means that links to http://gcc.godbolt.org/ could easily remain useful even if that site drops off the face of the 'Net forever! All the information necessary to make this happen is contained in the posts that link to the site, in the links, rather than the site being linked to. This is the same philosophy that drove the creation of Stack Snippets.

...And using URL shorteners completely destroys this advantage. Now you're back to depending on an opaque key into some 3rd-party's database; if they ever drop the associated entry, you're screwed.

Please, just put the full URLs in the posts you're writing. Sure, they look huge, but they're not really all that long; for any non-trivial amount of code, the URL will be shorter than posting the code itself. And ten years from now, someone reading your Stack Overflow posts from a data-dump via a holographic display while on Mars could still make those links work if need-be...

See also: stats on the use of shorteners in comments

replaced http://meta.stackoverflow.com/ with https://meta.stackoverflow.com/
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The big, big advantage of this particular service is that it contains all of the data necessary to work in the URL (compressed and encoded). I can't overstate how great that is: an awful lot of similar sites store the code in a database somewhere, indexed by a short string in the URL, meaning the link becomes useless if the database is lost or the service decides to age out entries.

This, coupled with the fact that Matt made this all open source, means that links to http://gcc.godbolt.org/ could easily remain useful even if that site drops off the face of the 'Net forever! All the information necessary to make this happen is contained in the posts that link to the site, in the links, rather than the site being linked to. This is the same philosophy that drove the creation of Stack Snippets.

...And using URL shorteners completely destroys this advantage. Now you're back to depending on an opaque key into some 3rd-party's database; if they ever drop the associated entry, you're screwed.

Please, just put the full URLs in the posts you're writing. Sure, they look huge, but they're not really all that long; for any non-trivial amount of code, the URL will be shorter than posting the code itself. And ten years from now, someone reading your Stack Overflow posts from a data-dump via a holographic display while on Mars could still make those links work if need-be...

##See also: stats on the use of shorteners in commentsstats on the use of shorteners in comments

The big, big advantage of this particular service is that it contains all of the data necessary to work in the URL (compressed and encoded). I can't overstate how great that is: an awful lot of similar sites store the code in a database somewhere, indexed by a short string in the URL, meaning the link becomes useless if the database is lost or the service decides to age out entries.

This, coupled with the fact that Matt made this all open source, means that links to http://gcc.godbolt.org/ could easily remain useful even if that site drops off the face of the 'Net forever! All the information necessary to make this happen is contained in the posts that link to the site, in the links, rather than the site being linked to. This is the same philosophy that drove the creation of Stack Snippets.

...And using URL shorteners completely destroys this advantage. Now you're back to depending on an opaque key into some 3rd-party's database; if they ever drop the associated entry, you're screwed.

Please, just put the full URLs in the posts you're writing. Sure, they look huge, but they're not really all that long; for any non-trivial amount of code, the URL will be shorter than posting the code itself. And ten years from now, someone reading your Stack Overflow posts from a data-dump via a holographic display while on Mars could still make those links work if need-be...

##See also: stats on the use of shorteners in comments

The big, big advantage of this particular service is that it contains all of the data necessary to work in the URL (compressed and encoded). I can't overstate how great that is: an awful lot of similar sites store the code in a database somewhere, indexed by a short string in the URL, meaning the link becomes useless if the database is lost or the service decides to age out entries.

This, coupled with the fact that Matt made this all open source, means that links to http://gcc.godbolt.org/ could easily remain useful even if that site drops off the face of the 'Net forever! All the information necessary to make this happen is contained in the posts that link to the site, in the links, rather than the site being linked to. This is the same philosophy that drove the creation of Stack Snippets.

...And using URL shorteners completely destroys this advantage. Now you're back to depending on an opaque key into some 3rd-party's database; if they ever drop the associated entry, you're screwed.

Please, just put the full URLs in the posts you're writing. Sure, they look huge, but they're not really all that long; for any non-trivial amount of code, the URL will be shorter than posting the code itself. And ten years from now, someone reading your Stack Overflow posts from a data-dump via a holographic display while on Mars could still make those links work if need-be...

##See also: stats on the use of shorteners in comments

added 164 characters in body
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Shog9
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The big, big advantage of this particular service is that it contains all of the data necessary to work in the URL (compressed and encoded). I can't overstate how great that is: an awful lot of similar sites store the code in a database somewhere, indexed by a short string in the URL, meaning the link becomes useless if the database is lost or the service decides to age out entries.

This, coupled with the fact that Matt made this all open source, means that links to http://gcc.godbolt.org/ could easily remain useful even if that site drops off the face of the 'Net forever! All the information necessary to make this happen is contained in the posts that link to the site, in the links, rather than the site being linked to. This is the same philosophy that drove the creation of Stack Snippets.

...And using URL shorteners completely destroys this advantage. Now you're back to depending on an opaque key into some 3rd-party's database; if they ever drop the associated entry, you're screwed.

Please, just put the full URLs in the posts you're writing. Sure, they look huge, but they're not really all that long; for any non-trivial amount of code, the URL will be shorter than posting the code itself. And ten years from now, someone reading your Stack Overflow posts from a data-dump via a holographic display while on Mars could still make those links work if need-be...

##See also: stats on the use of shorteners in comments

The big, big advantage of this particular service is that it contains all of the data necessary to work in the URL (compressed and encoded). I can't overstate how great that is: an awful lot of similar sites store the code in a database somewhere, indexed by a short string in the URL, meaning the link becomes useless if the database is lost or the service decides to age out entries.

This, coupled with the fact that Matt made this all open source, means that links to http://gcc.godbolt.org/ could easily remain useful even if that site drops off the face of the 'Net forever! All the information necessary to make this happen is contained in the posts that link to the site, in the links, rather than the site being linked to. This is the same philosophy that drove the creation of Stack Snippets.

...And using URL shorteners completely destroys this advantage. Now you're back to depending on an opaque key into some 3rd-party's database; if they ever drop the associated entry, you're screwed.

Please, just put the full URLs in the posts you're writing. Sure, they look huge, but they're not really all that long; for any non-trivial amount of code, the URL will be shorter than posting the code itself. And ten years from now, someone reading your Stack Overflow posts from a data-dump via a holographic display while on Mars could still make those links work if need-be...

The big, big advantage of this particular service is that it contains all of the data necessary to work in the URL (compressed and encoded). I can't overstate how great that is: an awful lot of similar sites store the code in a database somewhere, indexed by a short string in the URL, meaning the link becomes useless if the database is lost or the service decides to age out entries.

This, coupled with the fact that Matt made this all open source, means that links to http://gcc.godbolt.org/ could easily remain useful even if that site drops off the face of the 'Net forever! All the information necessary to make this happen is contained in the posts that link to the site, in the links, rather than the site being linked to. This is the same philosophy that drove the creation of Stack Snippets.

...And using URL shorteners completely destroys this advantage. Now you're back to depending on an opaque key into some 3rd-party's database; if they ever drop the associated entry, you're screwed.

Please, just put the full URLs in the posts you're writing. Sure, they look huge, but they're not really all that long; for any non-trivial amount of code, the URL will be shorter than posting the code itself. And ten years from now, someone reading your Stack Overflow posts from a data-dump via a holographic display while on Mars could still make those links work if need-be...

##See also: stats on the use of shorteners in comments

added 18 characters in body
Source Link
Shog9
  • 159.4k
  • 177
  • 1.2k
  • 1.2k
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Source Link
Shog9
  • 159.4k
  • 177
  • 1.2k
  • 1.2k
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