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V2Blast Staff
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There have been a number of changes to the articlethis Help Center page since you originally posted this request. This Help Center page is now titled "How to create a Minimal, Reproducible Example". The current URL slug for it is also more descriptive: minimal-reproducible-example (rather than just mcve – which still works, and seems to redirect to the current URL).

The text of the page has also changed in some ways – but I still see (a version of) the footnote you mentioned at the bottom of the page:

You may have been told to include an MCVE – Minimal, Complete, and Verifiable examples is what they were referring to. MCVE was also the former name of the page you're reading now, occasionally misspelled as MVCE, before it was renamed to Minimal, Reproducible Example (sometimes called “reprex”, “min-reprex”, “repro” or just “example”).

According to Shog9's answer, this footnote was originally included for searchability (i.e., so that this page would show up in the Help Center search results for MCVE or MVCE) – and it looks like it was later expanded to include more alternate terms as well.

However, it looks like the opening paragraph now mentions most of the important info from that footnote in a more natural way:

When asking a question, people will be better able to provide help if you provide code that they can easily understand and use to reproduce the problem. This is referred to by community members as creating a minimal, reproducible example (reprex), a minimal, complete and verifiable example (mcve), or a minimal, workable example (mwe). Regardless of how it's communicated to you, it boils down to ensuring your code that reproduces the problem follows the following guidelines:

Since this opening paragraph includes the relevant info already, I've gone ahead and removed this redundant footnote from the page.

(I don't think it's particularly necessary to keep alternate spellings like "MVCE" in the page text; there are simpler/more obvious terms you can search the Help Center for if you want to find this page, e.g. "minimal".)

There have been a number of changes to the article since you originally posted this request. This Help Center page is now titled "How to create a Minimal, Reproducible Example". The current URL slug for it is also more descriptive: minimal-reproducible-example (rather than just mcve – which still works, and seems to redirect to the current URL).

The text of the page has also changed in some ways – but I still see (a version of) the footnote you mentioned at the bottom of the page:

You may have been told to include an MCVE – Minimal, Complete, and Verifiable examples is what they were referring to. MCVE was also the former name of the page you're reading now, occasionally misspelled as MVCE, before it was renamed to Minimal, Reproducible Example (sometimes called “reprex”, “min-reprex”, “repro” or just “example”).

According to Shog9's answer, this footnote was originally included for searchability (i.e., so that this page would show up in the Help Center search results for MCVE or MVCE) – and it looks like it was later expanded to include more alternate terms as well.

However, it looks like the opening paragraph now mentions most of the important info from that footnote in a more natural way:

When asking a question, people will be better able to provide help if you provide code that they can easily understand and use to reproduce the problem. This is referred to by community members as creating a minimal, reproducible example (reprex), a minimal, complete and verifiable example (mcve), or a minimal, workable example (mwe). Regardless of how it's communicated to you, it boils down to ensuring your code that reproduces the problem follows the following guidelines:

Since this opening paragraph includes the relevant info already, I've gone ahead and removed this redundant footnote from the page.

(I don't think it's particularly necessary to keep alternate spellings like "MVCE" in the page text; there are simpler/more obvious terms you can search the Help Center for if you want to find this page, e.g. "minimal".)

There have been a number of changes to this Help Center page since you originally posted this request. This Help Center page is now titled "How to create a Minimal, Reproducible Example". The current URL slug for it is also more descriptive: minimal-reproducible-example (rather than just mcve – which still works, and seems to redirect to the current URL).

The text of the page has also changed in some ways – but I still see (a version of) the footnote you mentioned at the bottom of the page:

You may have been told to include an MCVE – Minimal, Complete, and Verifiable examples is what they were referring to. MCVE was also the former name of the page you're reading now, occasionally misspelled as MVCE, before it was renamed to Minimal, Reproducible Example (sometimes called “reprex”, “min-reprex”, “repro” or just “example”).

According to Shog9's answer, this footnote was originally included for searchability (i.e., so that this page would show up in the Help Center search results for MCVE or MVCE) – and it looks like it was later expanded to include more alternate terms as well.

However, it looks like the opening paragraph now mentions most of the important info from that footnote in a more natural way:

When asking a question, people will be better able to provide help if you provide code that they can easily understand and use to reproduce the problem. This is referred to by community members as creating a minimal, reproducible example (reprex), a minimal, complete and verifiable example (mcve), or a minimal, workable example (mwe). Regardless of how it's communicated to you, it boils down to ensuring your code that reproduces the problem follows the following guidelines:

Since this opening paragraph includes the relevant info already, I've gone ahead and removed this redundant footnote from the page.

(I don't think it's particularly necessary to keep alternate spellings like "MVCE" in the page text; there are simpler/more obvious terms you can search the Help Center for if you want to find this page, e.g. "minimal".)

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V2Blast Staff
  • 101
  • 3
  • 18
  • 31

There have been a number of changes to the article since you originally posted this request. This Help Center page is now titled "How to create a Minimal, Reproducible Example". The current URL slug for it is also more descriptive: minimal-reproducible-example (rather than just mcve – which still works, and seems to redirect to the current URL).

The text of the page has also changed in some ways – but I still see (a version of) the footnote you mentioned at the bottom of the page:

You may have been told to include an MCVE – Minimal, Complete, and Verifiable examples is what they were referring to. MCVE was also the former name of the page you're reading now, occasionally misspelled as MVCE, before it was renamed to Minimal, Reproducible Example (sometimes called “reprex”, “min-reprex”, “repro” or just “example”).

According to Shog9's answer, this footnote was originally included for searchability (i.e., so that this page would show up in the Help Center search results for MCVE or MVCE) – and it looks like it was later expanded to include more alternate terms as well.

However, it looks like the opening paragraph now mentions most of the important info from that footnote in a more natural way:

When asking a question, people will be better able to provide help if you provide code that they can easily understand and use to reproduce the problem. This is referred to by community members as creating a minimal, reproducible example (reprex), a minimal, complete and verifiable example (mcve), or a minimal, workable example (mwe). Regardless of how it's communicated to you, it boils down to ensuring your code that reproduces the problem follows the following guidelines:

Since this opening paragraph includes the relevant info already, I've gone ahead and removed this redundant footnote from the page.

(I don't think it's particularly necessary to keep alternate spellings like "MVCE" in the page text; there are simpler/more obvious terms you can search the Help Center for if you want to find this page, e.g. "minimal".)