My SO question has been deleted. It had too many down votes anyway. (Feel free to look back at prior versions of this meta question, as I've changed it a lot given the changing circumstances.)
What I've gathered during the course of this Meta post is that my question, at its heart, is valid and good. Unfortunately, I used loose wording, and many people saw it as something it's not.
I'm starting over, and I will create the great post that comes up first on Google searches. (I might just end up answering it too.)
So I'm looking for advice on how to go about making a new question that avoids the fiery down voting and eventual death the last one fared.
I have several areas of concern:
People can't/don't comprehend the difference between parsing and lexing.
- Seriously, read up on it. They're different.
Documentation has the answer.
- You can argue my first attempt was poorly researched. But the documentation is a mess and I'd rather have a concise, convenient answer here...
Self-answering is scary.
- I'm willing to self-answer, and I think I should have my answer ready for when I post the question. After all, everyone had the opportunity to answer already the first time around. If I do it right, it should further help people understand that I'm not looking for what they probably think I am. But I need help to do it right.
Succinctly, what I'm trying to ask in my question is:
What's the lexical structure of HTML tags?
intext:HTML
, which still was catching the tail end of links. I don't find the spec to be particularly confusing, it's just verbose as there are a lot of irrelevant details. My point is: I can come up with my own answer, but I'm not going to bother until it's reopened (and preferably have a positive score).