I just quote and link to the very nice comment by Makyen that, in my opinion, answers the question.
"If you put something in quotes, or quote formatting, then you should copy it exactly, with errors. You can note that the errors are in the original. If you're going to change it substantially, then it's not a quote. If the license for the material permits you to do so, you can create a "derivative work" by copying the code and fixing the errors. You should link to the source and note that you have fixed errors. [..]"
The comment has been shortened to the parts that are, in my opinion, essential to the question. Unfortunately I didn't find any mistake to correct. If so, I would have mentioned it here.
I also could have said that I think that quotes should not be altered in any way (or they shouldn't be quotes). That only leaves the possibility to mention any errors additionally or not quoting at all. Not quoting would mean creating a derivative work, which of course should be as error free as possible. This paragraph is a derivative work of this comment by Makyen, which I'm permitted to do because the comment was posted on StackOverflow. Would there have been any errors in the comment, I would have eliminated them before writing this paragraph. (That may be a reason to prefer creating derivative works instead of quoting long passages of text and code unless said text and code is spot on and error free.)
/* [sic] */