No.
The primary goal of Stack Overflow is to build an archive of questions and answers that are useful to people and situations beyond that of the original asker. A question with just a link to code subverts this goal in three ways:
It will nearly always be too localized: the problem exists only on one page, at one point in time. It's unlikely anyone else will write the exact same code (even if they encounter the same underlying problem), and once a solution is devised and the page fixed, the link won't even serve to demonstrate the problem.
Without code that demonstrates the problem, it isn't even a real question: Let's say you get a great answer to your question. How is anyone else with the same underlying problem going to find it? Unless you understood the problem well enough to describe it in detail, there's only a rough description and no code. How many questions with the same description do I have to wade through before I can find the one that actually matches my own problem?
The website or code you provide via that link might change over time: If you paste a link and later the website you linked changes, people can't retrace the initial problem. If you provide the code here on stackoverflow it will be archived directly with the provided answers.
Such a question is likely to be closed as off topic: "This question appears to be off-topic because it lacks sufficient information to diagnose the problem. Describe your problem in more detail or include a minimal example in the question itself."
What you should do instead
Debug it! Narrow down the problem, to where you can describe it with a useful, searchable title and a small bit of code. Don't just dump your entire page into the question — figure out which portion actually causes the problem, and include just enough code to reproduce it. Don't know how to do this? Ask!
Then post the code to reproduce the problem in your question, probably as a live demonstration using Stack Snippets. As some people are more used to them, consider additionally providing it on JS Bin and/or jsFiddle. Since these are third party services and may be unavailable at any time, make sure your question can be understood without visiting these websites.
Debugging tips
Before you try to debug CSS or JavaScript, make sure your HTML source is valid. "Broken" HTML is one of the most common causes of rendering and other errors, and different browsers will handle invalid HTML in different ways. Validating your HTML can reveal serious errors, like mismatched tags or duplicate id
attributes. While not all errors are crucial to rendering (missing alt
attributes for example), you should still fix as many of them as possible before debugging other code.
Validation tools
Debugging tools
A tutorial about how to use such tools: JavaScript debugging for beginners.
See also
http://tinyurl.com/so-debug
. – Lightness Races in Orbit Mar 20 '12 at 18:03