This Meta question was suggested as providing an answer to this question:
But my question – this question – isn't about formatting (i.e. anything that would require ANY Markdown syntax to be parsed in question titles)!
(I even think my 'Markdown emphasis syntax' in this Meta question's title is fine. It doesn't need to be parse/formatted! Markdown is, by design, expressive even as raw text. It's also obviously possible for us to go overboard; I'm not defending or advocating for that.)
This is something I've noticed now a few times, people editing my questions to remove the backticks (or other syntactical characters) for Markdown-style inline code. Here's the latest question I've asked where this kind of edit was made:
Someone changed the title to:
"git log --stat" ...
Is there any reason why double quotes are better, e.g. clearer, more easily understood, than the backticks? To me, given how much I used Markdown, the backticks are more clearly code than regular quotes. (SO also seems to nicely format my commands when displaying the question title too – sometimes anyways.)
I would be shocked if there was some kind of, e.g. SQL injection risk, or other security or technical reason to avoid backticks. (That would also be extremely disappointing – sanitize your inputs people!)
"
to`
myself, but I don't think there's anything wrong with it, it's just a style preference. And I think I've used both styles previously in my own questions."
is better than`
in titles, but to edit your question just for that is completely unnecessary.[Title](Short URL with my user ID)
. In posts, long bare URLs are automatically rendered with the full title, and HTML and Markdown aren’t parsed. However, in Markdown links like mine, HTML and Markdown are parsed (and they get me the Announcer badge eventually). To avoid HTML tags getting parsed, I usually edit backticks around them.'syntax'
in your title rather than`syntax`
?wilx
on the answer of the duplicate post. Titles can be bad and distracting regardless of whether syntax formatting is allowed. A plain text title can be bad by using obnoxious symbols (">>>>>>>> HELP ME LOL! <<<<<<<<<<"). We don't ban the symbols though just because they can be abused. If someone abuses formatting, that can be edited out like anything else. There's multiple (many actually) times that I've thought that I could make my title more sensical by making it clear that a certain word is code, not normal text._blah_
–blah
is visually emphasized because of the surrounding_
characters. Rendering it is, or can be, nice, but it's not necessary or essential for the raw syntax itself to serve the same purposes.