For context I see a lot of new users who fail to realize there is a runnable inline code snippet feature that lets them have a running example.
Now unfortunately I don't know if there is a better way of actually getting users to use the feature and I don't think the goal is to do this. However, I have edited a bunch of questions/answers where I basically add this example in for them. They already have all the HTML/CSS/JavaScript separated out so its just tediously copying and pasting.
Is there anyway we can make it so when you use the stack snippet feature it can just copy the code related snippets that already exist in the answer/question you are editing? How it would do this is it could just see what code is already in the question based on the formatting.
It would be really nice if it could discern HTML vs CSS vs JavaScript and put them in the correct boxes (should be possible but if that's too much work, even just shoving it into an area to let editors move the code snippets into the correct boxes would be more than enough).
I think the only concern people might have is the fact that people might not always want to inject the code they have in the question/answer when adding a code snippet -- that's fine because it's really easy to just delete whatever is in there and then they should know to not add the existing code example as a snippet.
One last thing to mention is that this might just end up having people inject stack snippets that aren't runnable because naturally they don't work. I think that's still okay though because the stack snippet still makes it easier for answers to copy their snippets so they can edit/fix them
Related questions (although they don't seem to answer my question):
Automatic detection of copied code