There is a lot of questions dealing about how code snippet aren't well used and in many cases, users are abusing of them thinking they may add value to their question. Here is some of them:
Abusing the Code Snippet for wrong languages
My concern here is about low reputation users editing questions to transform html/css/js code to snippet automatically without paying attention to the question and its content and especially to the code. They are simply looking to edit as much question as possible to gain the +2 and it works well with code snippet because of two reasons:
- There is no effort involved: select the code and click a button.
- They are sure that this kind of edit will be considered since it will add many characters to the initial question.
So let's say it's a good and easy way to boost some stats. In the other hand, these kind of edits are also approved automatically by many users. When they see that there is a code transformation to a snippet they think it's a good edit so they approve it.
Here is a recent example among many others I face regularly: it's about this question where I rejected the edit done by a user. In the question we can clearly read "This is the abbreviated HTML." so the OP shared a part of his code with no CSS and no full path; thus a code snippet transformation here is very bad and useless.
And if we take a look to the history we can see this:
- The user who edited the question has 13 suggestions rejected so I can conclude that some of them are like the above one, simple automatic code transformation.
- When checking the profile of the user who approved the edit, I see he's a .NET developer with a low activity on html/css questions so I can also conclude it was an automatic approve.
Here is another example where the edit was very dangerous and changed the question completely and made it irrelevant.
It's about this question: The OP was having an issue with Font Awesome 5 and I commented his question to see if he was using the JS or the CSS version because there is a huge difference and the JS version is leading to common issues. As expected, he was using the JS version BUT if we look at the edit history we will see a low reputation user editing his code to create a snippet and to include the CSS version (a pure automatic edit) and the worst thing is that he included a relative path of a CSS file.
By doing this he completely changed the meaning of the question and we can simply think that the OP is having trouble to correctly include the CSS file and the question may be closed as "a simple typographical error" which is not the case!
And what is even worse, is that this edit got approved by 2 users that are not active within the html/css questions so it was a clear automatic approve.
Considering this, a lot of questions can be asked:
- Should we add more restriction to code edit? Maybe some pop-up warning about a potential bad edit.
- Should we restrict code editing for low reputation user and make it available starting from a certain threshold?
- Transforming a code to a snippet should not be considered within the minimum values of character edit so we avoid such automatic edit
- We should add more test edits1 including code snippet to prevent automatic approval and maybe ban users that fails in such tests from the suggestions edit queue for a while.
1: I am talking about the edits that are not real and used like captcha to see if a user is automatically approving/rejecting edits
I think something should be done as these kind of edits are not few cases. They are very common and I see them regularly.
NB: I am talking about questions dealing with html/css/js where the code snippet is concerned. I am not including ALL kind of code edits as there is lot of them improving the question and making it better (I myself do them). I am not saying that all the user are approving code edit without paying attention, many of them are approving/rejecting them in a good manner.
My main concern is about automatic code edit done by low reputation users with no reason leading to useless/bad edit and in some cases making the question irrelevant.