You ever had a post in front of you where the OP did mix up blockquote and code formatting? Not those easy cases where he/she wrote a >
character before the paragraph himself, but those cases when you have several dozen lines of code or command output, often with line lengths greater than the edit window's width, and the OP used the blockquote-formatting-button!
In such cases, it does not only add the >
character in front of every line, but also totally messes up every kind of indentation and reorganizes all the line breaks to fit the editor window width instead of the original structure.
You are not sure what I mean? Here is a horrible example in its original state (with blockquotes):
Wrongly used blockquote formatted question
And here is my attempt to fix the structure as good as I can:
(Hopefully mostly) correct formatting
I propose to change the behavior of the blockquote formatting button
!
The optimal and easiest way to convert a paragraph to a blockquote would be to just write a single >
in front of the paragraph's first line and keep all indentations and line-breaks just as they are. The output will be no different. If you have problems implementing this with checking the end of the paragraph (I don't think so, but...), it would be even an improvement if we stay with the >
sign in front of every line selected to be formatted as blockquote and just stop reformatting the content!
Everybody who once tried to edit such a monster has to vote for this and hope for the StackExchage stuff to soon implement this. Thank you for your support and any reactions.
>
character before each of what he tought was a separate line (according to how he saw them in the editor), ending up putting multiple>
characters on each line; using the blockquote formatting button would have retained the original line breaks, try writing say 3 long strings and formatting them using the button, only 3>
characters (in the right position) will be put.