I wanted to ask this question with regard to documentation while it is still young and there is the opportunity to convert everything to and establish a standard format.
For code examples, often you want to show the value of a variable. There are, in reality, several ways to do this. I will list a few below (in Python):
1.
>>> x = 1
>>> x += 1 # x == 2
2.
>>> x = 1
>>> print(x + 1) # 2
3.
>>> x = 1
>>> print(x + 1)
2
4.
>>> x = 1
>>> x + 1 # 2
5.
>>> x = 1
>>> x + 1
2
Of course, I understand that 3 and 5 only make sense within the context of the Python interpreter, thus requiring the leading >>>
for clarity, and perhaps even though that was once discussed here, it may warrant another discussion now that there is a Stack Overflow documentation.
Though this is just a small example, I believe it represents a larger issue.
If the goal of Stack Overflow documentation is to provide better documentation then what is out there, then we must consider that documentation is often less than comprehensive for the same reason it is often consistent: it is often written and maintained by one person or a small team.
As the large and diverse community that Stack Overflow is, I think it is important that we set some standards for the way examples should be presented in the documentation for the sake of consistency, which I hope many of you agree is important, if not critical, for a user using said documentation.
Side-note: I wanted to create a new tag called documentation-examples
, but I don't have enough reputation :(