Postulates:
- A good question is better than a poor question
- A poor question without an mcve can be improved by adding code that fits the error generated
- The OP of a question can always fix incorrect modifications to the question (possibly replacing code previously added with their own)
Given these, if the error is well enough defined and if someone is able to write code that demonstrates the error succinctly, it can turn a poor question into a good one and thus be appropriate to add in that it makes a poor question into a good one.
Without the code, the question would have otherwise been closed.
Here, the OP had been able to write the code described by the OP:
i want to set three div like that.
second(center) elements(div) set width 1000px other two left right(div) set the rest of browser width.
that exhibited the error or lack of functionality that was described. This then gives potential answers something to work from and also demonstrates to the OP how to ask a question that contains an mcve.
If this doesn't match the OP's code, they now have the template in the question to make the appropriate modifications to show what they actually have.
The edit that added the mcve was a good one.
I will note that adding code like this is often very difficult to read the mind of the OP and generate the code that exhibits the error (and if it does it is likely a dup somewhere). Languages such as markdown and markup (html in this question's situation) are significantly easier to read the plain english text and generate the associated code without having to #include "esp.h"
.