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Stack Overflow is rejecting a post that I am trying to create regarding Python. It complains that my post has improper code formatting, for reasons that I don't understand, even though the preview mechanism parses it fine.

I have asked for help in the Python chat and was pointed toward a couple of meta posts which (unfortunately) do not solve the problem that I am experiencing.

I have attached a screenshot of the full webpage, which also shows the raw text of the original post.

Meta Posts:
Heading, followed by code: Your post appears to contain code that is not properly formatted as code
This message keeps me from posting "Your post appears to contain code that is not properly formatted as code."

Webpage Screenshot:

Webpage Screenshot

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    The chat discussion starts here. This question doesn't make it clear what OP tried, so this might be useful. tl;dr: empty space before code blocks are already there; code fences don't seem to help; changing heading markdown doesn't seem to help. Nov 1, 2020 at 23:47
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    That whole question is far too long
    – charlietfl
    Nov 2, 2020 at 0:08
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    @charlietfl that's entirely beside the point of a false positive formatting warning. And I'd add that SWIG is used for interfacing C/C++ and in this case python. That usually means quite a few moving parts. If you take a closer look at the files detailed in the question, they are all minimal. The only long block of code is setup.py which is responsible for building the extension module, and as such is most relevant to answer the asker's problem (that has to do with building extension modules). So no, the question is not far too long. Nov 2, 2020 at 0:25
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    Remove all irrelevant parts of the question. You don’t need a README (everything here will be licensed under CC BY SA). Don’t include “stubs” for irrelevant files. And I would remove the information about the file structure completely and if you need to convey that somehow (do you?) you can change the headers above your code blocks to have that info (eg example.c => ./swig_example/example.c). It could be that the bulleted list is what’s causing the system to get tripped up.
    – Laurel
    Nov 2, 2020 at 0:35
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    @Laurel I can't believe it, but removing the bulleted list showing the file structure actually fixed it. This is definitely a bug. Nov 2, 2020 at 0:48
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    If you're on linux you can use the tree utility to draw yourself a nice ascii file tree instead. Nov 2, 2020 at 0:52
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    @philipxy they can't post a question because of the false positive formatting warning. So there is no version of the question yet. Or do you mean posting the raw markdown to some third-party site? Nov 2, 2020 at 1:59
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    @AndrasDeak My mistake, of course there is no post. But then I would suggest that they put the problematic content as text at the end of this post.
    – philipxy
    Nov 2, 2020 at 2:00
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    Just strip everything out of that question. Check that if you tab out of the textbox the error will be gone. Add back the first paragraph, tab out of the textbox (to trigger a validate-body call), if no error, add the next paragraph. When you do get an error, remove the last sentence, tab out, check for the error. Rinse repeat for words, chars until you found the characters that trip the error condition. Report back here with your findings.
    – rene
    Nov 2, 2020 at 8:29
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    It also generally helps if you turn off caps lock when writing headers or any other text that has no reason to be in all-caps
    – Zoe is on strike Mod
    Nov 2, 2020 at 10:05
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    At least for this meta question, couldn't an MRE be much smaller (not a rhetorical question)? Nov 2, 2020 at 13:26

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