I did a search for related questions and found this question.
However that's not the same thing and doesn't answer what MCVE actually stands for.
What does it mean in the context of these questions?
I did a search for related questions and found this question.
However that's not the same thing and doesn't answer what MCVE actually stands for.
What does it mean in the context of these questions?
It's an acronym (Stargateur was kind enough to point out the help center article about it - had I known that existed, I would have just linked to it):
It refers to the least amount of code required for someone to run the program on a stated architecture and be likely to reproduce the problem that's being described in the question.
Now how that's given can vary because languages treat dependencies in different ways. If your code depends on a static library (which might be proprietary), then you'd need to provide something to mock it, if it's not possible to isolate the code around it.
Likewise, if your code relies on dependency injection, you might need to provide a mock setter, or just annotate the code to indicate that you've eliminated that part as being problematic.
So "minimal" in some cases can actually be quite large, even with every effort given to offer only the code needed to reproduce an issue. It's in those cases where it's really likely that debugging prior to asking hasn't been done as optimally as possible, and help on how to diagnose the problem might be what's needed.
The term is expressed sort of eternally in an ideal sense, in hopes of guiding people to not paste their entire project into the body of the question - results vary from language to language.
In the best of outcomes, those that haven't fully optimized the example code to be as minimal as possible are shown how to better isolate problems using tools that they probably have. In the worst outcomes, the question is put on hold, and the user may or may not receive additional advice on how to debug, depending on how much time people have and how easily the chunk of code they did post can be processed.
In most cases, just indicating that you've done your best to post the minimum amount needed and tested it to see if the problem reproduces is enough to earn quite a bit of goodwill, and cause people to be more likely to help you further debug (which generally obviates the question anyway).
[mcve]
in a comment, the system will automatically replace it with a full link (not just the acronym) to that page.
[mcve]
. (on the main site only)
In context, MCVE is still duckspeak for "Please post code that I can run too which also shows me your error."
The main thing here that the acronym motivates is "Minimal" and "Complete". A code sample should be as small as possible while at the same time completely represents the error you're experiencing.
That is to say, it makes no sense to post five or six different classes if your actual error is isolated to how you interact with two of them.
I feel like the answer you linked does convey that pretty clearly:
The problem is that an MCVE is not defined by what it is, but rather what it should do: provide readers of the question with a clear example of your problem which leaves no room for guesswork.
If your example isn't clear, then it can't be considered an MCVE. If your example requires some guesswork, it can't be considered an MCVE.
In the context of the second question you link, I largely...agree that it's been used more as duckspeak in many unnecessary cases where an MCVE has been mostly provided but it's not complete enough. Worse, it's also utilized as a way to inflame or insult others for not doing enough to make their question perfect for Stack Overflow, which has its own way of putting people off from the site. The spirit of the message - show us code that replicates your error - is lost from the overall mechanic of the message.