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First bug report & meta post, and a rare poster. I appreciate any help in title, tags, terminology or else. If duplicate, searching tips would be welcome.

If you check revision 5 of this revision history, you'll see automated [Community ♦] user correcting one instance of "http" to "https" in the very end of that revision. It shows fine for "side-by-side markdown".

For "inline" or "side-by-side" however, it messes up and shows the removal of the whole URL, and then the addition of the question title of that URL.

Cross-checked current question version with the currently last revision history item (#5) to confirm.

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This is actually a side-effect of how full urls are replaced by their titles on rendering. It's not worth spending CPU time looking up titles for old-style http:// links.

If you include https://stackoverflow.com/questions/2686254/how-to-select-all-records-from-one-table-that-do-not-exist-in-another-table in a post, the title for that link is looked up and shown instead of the link. However (and this is the important bit) this only works for https:// URLs now.

So the rendering is correct; old-style http:// links are not supported anymore so are not shown as the title, while new-style https:// links do get the treatment.

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  • That raises a few questions: (1) This replacement feature, is it a property of SE websites? Or is it a property of something underlying/superceding? (2) Why is there a higher resource usage to process "http"? (3) Shouldn't it be a desirable goal to have the line diff. comparisons more consistent? (granted, feasibility, cost, etc. govern our actions, but not our desires. Didn't read/notice feasibility remarks yet though.)
    – KtX2SkD
    Commented May 31, 2017 at 12:01
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    @KtX2SkD: it's a property of SE websites.
    – Martijn Pieters Mod
    Commented May 31, 2017 at 12:04
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    @KtX2SkD: there is no point in rendering http:// links, since this edit just replaced them all. Everything is https-only now, so why waste CPU resources and code on detecting those links?
    – Martijn Pieters Mod
    Commented May 31, 2017 at 12:05
  • Yeah picture's clearing up now: Bot's repairing deprecated material, revision gets messed up. You can fix revision by supporting deprecated material, but, that is the whole point: You are aiming to deprecate this thing, continuing to support it is the exact opposite of deprecation, and a bad investment when much enough of the material is updated.
    – KtX2SkD
    Commented May 31, 2017 at 12:20

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