I thought the current "Hello World" HTML example was bloated. It was also the only example in its topic, so I decided to write another minimal example of a basic HTML document. Soon after, it was edited to include the phrase:
However, as of this writing, the practice of excluding optional tags, which the browser will fill in anyway, is not common in production websites or applications. The practice is also not typically taught.
Following that, my example was met with an improvement request:
Other: Why is this useful at all? When would someone ever recommend another person actually create a page like this? This isn't code golf - no one cares what the tiniest page you can create is. If there's no useful reason to do this, then it shouldn't be mentioned at all.
This example is completely unclear, incomplete, or has severe formatting problems. It is unlikely to be salvageable through editing and should be removed.
Soon after, it was deleted with the comment:
Unnecessary and not useful documentation, seems to be a sort of edge case better suited to a stack overflow query like the referenced one.
Now, I genuinely think this is a good practice, I linked to the Google style guide recommending it, and I actually write all of my HTML like this because I find it clearer, since the <html>
, <head>
, and <body>
tags add two extra levels of indentation and don't really convey any information. My entire reason for creating the example was the hope that it would expose more people to this uncommon method of writing HTML.
A major theme of these "improvements" to my example is that they felt the practice was uncommon or an "edge case," and therefore the example should be changed to reflect that (or removed as not worth mentioning). So my question is, should we only be documenting "common" practice? This is one example, but this kind of logic could surely be applied elsewhere, similar to how using an enum as a singleton in Java isn't really common, but has a number of advantages worth mentioning.
If we are supposed to be documenting obscure practices, then what went wrong here? I made a "Hello World" example because the HTML tags involved make up the majority of one. Was there a more appropriate topic to place this information? Should I have merged this example into the already existing one? What is the proper way to go about documenting this?