Python's documentation has a topic "Meta: Documentation Guidelines". Looking at its history, I see that it was created on April 7th with a pinned example:
These are just proposals not recommendations. Feel free to edit anything here if you disagree or have something else to mention.
Eventually this could be included or linked in the Hello World-topic.
At that time, another example was also added about how to include the outputs to examples. It was edited a couple of times but basically the recommendation was to put outputs in comments. For example,
x = 7
x
# Out: 7
One of my examples was edited citing this recommendation. It made sense to me so I decided to edit my other examples as well. I wanted to link that example but I saw that it was deleted.
It had 5 contributors and 8 upvotes before deletion and got deleted by 1 suggestion (as a result of an improvement request) and 1 approval (it had also 1 rejection).
Can we treat this topic like Meta where we upvote and downvote suggestions? If so, should we add the example again? Or is it too early to have rule-looking guidelines? Should these be discussed somewhere else?
Update: The topic got deleted.