| Thanks for reading! >Many tutorials reference many languages. (I frequently write tutorials for students that include bash, sql, and python.) Providing the prompts `$`, `sqlite>` and `>>>` makes it obvious which language a piece of code is being written in. I think it's fine to show the prompt character, but I think it's the author's job to make sure that copy/paste still works. I've seen a lot of examples that use CSS to show the prompt or line number without it becoming part of copied text, and I'm highly in favor of that. I think if I had to choose between breaking copy/paste and making the language obvious with the prompt character, I'd exclude the prompt, but I think that's a matter of taste. >Certain types of code should not be thoughtlessly copy/pasted, and providing multiline `$` prompts enforce that the user copy/pastes line by line. A good example is a sequence of commands that involves `sudo dd` to format a harddrive. But for really intro-level stuff I want the student/reader to carefully think about all the commands, and forcing them to copy/paste line by line helps achieve that goal. Yeah, I agree about preventing the reader from copy/pasting something dangerous. In tutorials that require a reboot, I'll never include a reboot command bunched in with other commands because I don't want the user to do it by mistake. And I agree for something like `dd`, you'd want to present it in a way to make it hard for the reader to make mistakes or run it thoughtlessly. |
This is unfortunately not compatible with writing the tutorial in markdown to be rendered on github.