This was the revision:
https://stackoverflow.com/posts/53024422/revisions
I thought it would be useful to provide reference docs for the property in question.
This was the revision:
https://stackoverflow.com/posts/53024422/revisions
I thought it would be useful to provide reference docs for the property in question.
I made this edit for two reasons:
I probably made the mistake to omit the explanation of my edit which is a bad habit on my side, I assume it.
UPDATE
To make things clear, I am not arguing that we need to automatically delete any links which is not related to an official source (blog posts, personnal website, etc). As stated above, the important reason for this deletion was the fact that this link is irrelevant and simply add noise to the question. Even if the OP shared the official link from the specification I would have delete it.
In other situation, where a link to any external website may be relevant, I will simply comment if I think that the source is not good or not reliable. (Ex: 8-digit hex is not a background-color value)
W3schools is not an official documentation or specification
well, neither is MDN. So I don't think "being unofficial" should be a reason for removing something. Considering that almost all answers here would also be classed as "unofficial". Now being unreliable (which W3Schools is) is much better grounds for removing links.
Because that shouldn't be a driving factor
it should be when the OP said it's the documentation. You can link to any website you want, I my self do this a lot of time as you may find better explanation/illustration within some blog posts but we shouldn't say this is the documentation. Linknig to w3schools is fine. Linking to w3schools saying it's the documentation is not fine.
Commented
Oct 30, 2018 at 9:19
I thought it would be useful to provide reference docs for the property in question.
Sure! But it would have been better to highlight what part of the behaviour being observed was contradicting that documentation. This could still be a valuable thing to add, if it actually is, but please link to official MDN more heavily scrutinized and reliable sources, or even the actual w3 recommendation draft.
W3schools not being an official source such an heavily scrutinized source of documentation, makes it an easy target for removal when it's not really useful for the question, and it being contradicted could be argued not to actually mean anything.
link to official MDN sources
official in what capacity? Because MDN is a public wiki - it advertises itself as "For developers, by developers" because of the open community contribution it has. Every single page has a list of community contributors - for example, the CSS background
page lists 47 of them.
Was the link strictly necessary? No.
Would I have removed it? No.
For me, having it gives me insight in which source OP used, and allows me not only to answer the core question, but also to help them use their source of information better, or refer them to a different one if I think it's really bad.
And even if it didn't feel strictly useful to me, I think one should always be very reserved about removing information from questions that OP thought was important for context.
In this particular situation I would not have deleted this link from the question, because it tells me that the asker has actually searched for this and studied some source of documentation, immediately suppressing the temptation to leave an RTFM comment.
It also tells me what that source was, so I could check it, and maybe find the cause of any misconception that may have caused OP to use the property incorrectly.
So, I don't think it hurts at all to have the link in there, since it may just be useful. And if turns out not to be, it can just as easily be ignored by anyone answering the question.
and W3Fools says they no longer have problems.
no, they say they have largely resolved the problems. That doesn't mean there are none - the page on JSON Objects is a huge flaw it keeps being brought up to justify being wrong. Yes, it's a single example I have but it's the only one I keep seeing. It does prove that not all errors are resolved.