I've seen a few (more than a few, no links at the moment) suggested edits
where the user simply wants to add code
tags as he/she thinks code
is needed for every proper noun on Stack Overflow
. The source
is not otherwise improved
. Should I reject
? I have been using too minor
so far.
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11Yes. Reject as invalid, or too minor, if the edit doesn't fix other glaring faults as well. In that case, you can improve (and remove the offending code tags) if you have the willpower to do so. – J. Steen May 27 '14 at 11:23
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2meta.stackexchange.com/questions/137755/… – BoltClock♦ May 27 '14 at 11:25
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@BoltClock Ah yes, the classic. – J. Steen May 27 '14 at 11:27
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1Wasn't there a back ticks question only last week? – user692942 May 27 '14 at 11:44
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meta.stackoverflow.com/q/254990/692942 – user692942 May 27 '14 at 11:45
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@Lankymart: Indeed. This one's a bit different though - it's asking what to do with edits that don't use them according to the guidelines stated there. – BoltClock♦ May 27 '14 at 11:45
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1I usually reject with a custom message along the lines of "Please use code formatting for code only". – Lundin May 27 '14 at 11:52
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3@Lundin: Only problem is that many of these editors actually think what they're formatting is, in fact, code. – BoltClock♦ May 27 '14 at 11:54
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Reject surely. If it doesn't fit into any of the exceptions in that link then it should be rejected. – user692942 May 27 '14 at 12:32
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I feel I sometimes use them too often in my questions. Does anybody have the link to the guidelines so I can look when I should use them? – TMH May 29 '14 at 9:12
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@Tom Hart: Lankymart's comment links to it. – BoltClock♦ May 29 '14 at 17:01
Answer
is
YES you should reject
them...
I prefer invalid edit
over too minor
because that's precisely
what they are: invalid
. If anything, I consider
littering a post
with misused code formatting
a major
edit, almost bordering on vandalism
.
Actually, I think
I'm going to start rejecting
these edits
as vandalism
from now on. Here
is the description
of the vandalism
rejection option (emphasis mine)
:
This edit introduces spam,
defaces the post in some way
, or is otherwise inappropriate.
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11
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I have to step away from the computer for some time; I'll accept once I'm back as the timer isn't up yet – nanofarad May 27 '14 at 11:30
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3@hexafraction: No worries, take as much time as you need - I understand if the formatting abuse is getting too much for you ;) – BoltClock♦ May 27 '14 at 11:32
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24
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@BoltClock I resisted the urge to edit your answer sooo bad! It's actually painful to look at... – user692942 May 27 '14 at 11:45
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1These kind of edits unfortunately gets accepted very often. I try to rollback such passed edits when I see them. – Lundin May 27 '14 at 11:46
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@Lundin: Oh you have no idea how familiar I am with such edits. See the link in my comment on the question. – BoltClock♦ May 27 '14 at 11:49
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3
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1Ah Bolt, your humor is subtle and in your face at the same time. Very enjoyable. – crthompson May 28 '14 at 16:53
I will use back ticks for keywords that are a core technical component of a post, like a library name or technical elements in use (see here where I wrap push/pull
and req/rep
to attempt to make it clear that I'm referring to ZMQ socket type pairs rather than general messaging strategies). I'm getting the impression from the answers and comments that even this is frowned upon. But I do agree that it's sometimes rather egregiously used in edits for almost any proper noun, and I otherwise like the accepted answer to reject.
I just see the line between valid and invalid to cover core technical concepts inherent in the text rather than just code.
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1It matters whether it's a code keyword or a key phrase in the discussion. The latter shouldn't be formatted as code. (You correctly wrote 'ZMQ' without code formatting) – Ben Voigt Jul 27 '14 at 6:15