I agree that H1 is too big (semantically), I've been switching to H2's as my largest/top-level heading. But if everyone agrees that it is too large, then this problem could be solved with adjusting the markdown translation - otherwise, why does Stack Overflow make the single #
heading formatting available?
This isn't a quote from anywhere.
I was quoting the question. Whenever I quote something word-for-word, I use the blockquote style to ensure the reader knows I am using someone else's words - I don't want to be accused or guilty of plagiarism - and I say who it is unless, through the context, the author isn't immediately clear.
Now the big question at hand:
Should I quote the title of the question?
I usually quote the relevant part that I am writing a response to.
Titles may evolve. Quoting the exact question explains to the reader the precise question that the answer is answering. It also helps signal to other users if the question's meaning has subtly been changed too much by editors.
It is also helpful to quote the question where other answers embark on tangents to remind the reader what is being asked.
Some might argue that the title is in the window decoration, but it is not repeated in the top of my browser (I use a highly customized XFCE desktop).
We may also link directly to the answer, and visitors following such links would find that immediately seeing a short version of question being answered by the post to be very useful.
I also find it helpful to simply remind myself what I'm answering, as I can be forgetful.
So I dispute the assertion, made in another answer, that precisely quoting the question is fluff.
In this very specific case, the answer is very near the question, so I'm inclined to leave it as edited without the quote.
Should such answers be considered problematic and worth an edit?
I would rather users not do this kind of unnecessary editing, though.
Are they worth a downvote?
If you don't like how an answer is formatted and want to downvote it because of the formatting, then you may do so.
You can downvote for quite literally any reason so long as it has to do with the post and not the author.
Response to another answer
However, quoting the exact title of the question at the top of an answer doesn't add anything.
I have offered several points of value that it adds.
So this is to be regarded as "fluff", for which we already have a policy: Should I remove 'fluff' when editing questions?.
The meta Q&A being cited here are about questions, not answers.
Further, the answer supports using bold as a heading, which is semantically improper, or H1, which goes against best practices.
Response to a comment
You're one of the few users that do this and while I accept your reasoning it might turn out this is your personal flavor of representing your posts, not one that is followed by the wider community.
I would suggest that community acceptance is represented by votes, not by studying the average style of posts. The average post is suboptimal. Some bottom quantile of posts are so bad that they are deleted.
I tend to write canonical answers to old questions. My answers show up sometimes under very old tangential or even completely wrong posts. I'm trying to use correct formatting to better communicate. A wall of text is not very readable. I prefer short sentences. Short paragraphs. Headings that direct the topic being discussed.
That's what the formatting is for - to communicate. Not to "draw attention."
I have studied communications in the business school - and I have taught that class as well. I'm following communications best practices.
I'm not saying everyone should emulate me.
Maybe more of the better answers should, though.
#
might not be as tasteful to some, but there is nothing fundamentally wrong with it, much less any reason to institutionalize down voting answers because of formatting or accused intent with the actual content is accurate and correct. But it is kind of a moot point with the entropy acceleration that is going on now. Pedantically debating using tags as typography is rearranging deck chairs when the site is sinking and veterans are leaving the sinking ship.