8

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 :(

5
  • Actually, i had the same question. Thanks for asking :)
    – ABcDexter
    Jul 22, 2016 at 5:11
  • When writing answers I tend to put large chunks of code (class definitions, for example) as you'd see them in a source file (which you haven't included at all), then examples of usage as you'd see them in the interpreter (5, or sometimes 3). Mostly because that's the easiest way for me to set them up; write the big bits in a file, then import it and interactively demonstrate what happens. But also it helps the reader; they can copy multiline chunks directly, then the interactive parts show context, action and reaction.
    – jonrsharpe
    Jul 22, 2016 at 5:21
  • Also, note there already seems to be an effort to establish this within Documentation: stackoverflow.com/documentation/python/394/…
    – jonrsharpe
    Jul 22, 2016 at 5:23
  • Nice going Python community. @jonrsharpe, thanks for the heads up. Jul 22, 2016 at 5:39
  • Direct link to last version of the direct copy vs interpreter example before it and topic were deleted
    – LinkBerest
    Sep 7, 2016 at 0:36

2 Answers 2

10

I only know a tiny bit about Python, but my advice applies to all languages:

Use whatever style is most helpful to someone trying to learn or relearn the topic.

Generally, that implies:

  • simple rather than complex
  • commented rather than bare
  • direct rather than roundabout
  • modern rather than outdated
  • self-contained rather than incomplete
  • minimal rather than expansive

There's significant overlap to Minimal, Complete, and Verifiable Examples, of course. But there's also an added burden of actually illustrating the topic in some way.

To go back to your suggestions, don't use an example specific to the interpreter unless the interpreter is what you are illustrating. Consider using comments if they help explain the topic and aren't redundant. If the goal is to show how print() works, don't remove that function call. Don't use the += notation if that might confuse the reader.

In other words, don't worry about a standard style so much as trying to communicate to the reader. It require thought and a little empathy, not rules that limit.

4
  • 1
    Of course communicating to the reader is the most important thing, but what about consistency of documentation? Jul 22, 2016 at 5:16
  • 1
    Consistency is great, but we don't actually expect most readers to read more than one or two topics at a time. Most people will land on the page via Google, read enough of the examples to know how to proceed and start coding. (I've done this with SO answers many a time.) Maybe if we learn people are reading whole tag we might want to think about consistency. Jul 22, 2016 at 5:20
  • Fair enough. Thank you for your input on the matter. Jul 22, 2016 at 5:22
  • 3
    You're an adherent to the Zen of Python and you didn't even know it. :-)
    – davidism
    Jul 22, 2016 at 19:55
3

I think adhering to option 5 following pep-0257 in writing Python documentation would be really helpful, and it's a shame to not adhere to that standard while the official Python documentation does. Having different standards can be confusing for readers.

The fact that the introduction currently includes $ characters to indicate a command line prompt but doesn't adhere to pep-0257 is a shame and at times confusing. For example: the syntax section includes

 ' '.join(['stack', 'overflow']) ==> 'stack overflow'

which uses a ==> to show what that the code to the left of the ==> generates the string to the right, but the example itself is not valid Python code. This confusingly reminds me of R, where b <- 'a' stores the string a in variable b (and that is valid code).

Just like the standard Python documentation, the R Wikipedia examples are usefully preceded with a > to indicate a prompt. Comments preceeded by # (just like Python comments and highlighted accordingly) and lines without a > after prompt lines indicate output from the command on the previous line.

 > x <- c(1,2,3,4,5,6)   # Create ordered collection (vector)
 > y <- x^2              # Square the elements of x
 > print(y)              # print (vector) y
 [1]  1  4  9 16 25 36

Multi-line sections without > intuitively are read as a full file (or 'script') of code without being confused with a command line environment.

install.packages("caTools")  # install external package
library(caTools)             # external package providing write.gif function
jet.colors <- colorRampPalette(c("green", "blue", "red", "cyan", "#7FFF7F",
                                 "yellow", "#FF7F00", "red", "#7F0000"))
m <- 1000                    # define size

Thankfully the current StackOverflow first R documentation page use that formatting as well.

It is perhaps a function of the annoyance of typing >>> rather than a single character (like for R) that has fostered this frustration for Python documentation specifically. This guidelines discussion has been removed, apparently in part for the annoyance of failed copying of >>> from bits of code, and for the reasons mentioned in the accepted answer to this question.

I'm not suggesting all code examples should be based on prompts but—as the Python documentation does—using >>> to indicate what is a prompt versus examples without a prompt usefully differentiate to the reader what each code example is for. It seems a shame to shy away from that here and as ericmarkmartin suggested that has further implications for documentation of other interpreted languages (R and Ruby to name but 2).

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