I apologize in advance for the English-language answer; I'll ask Aki to translate when she's available. 

The crux of the problem here is that spoilers are a Stack Exchange-specific extension to the core Markdown syntax; as such, they don't interact well with other forms of markup. In this case, they don't work well with code formatting: if they did, you'd be able to write a code spoiler just as you might wrote a blockquoted spoiler. 

For a normal quote block, this Markdown:

    >     int main() {
    >         printf("Hello, world!\n");
    >         return 0;
    >     }

...produces this result:

>     int main() {
>         printf("Hello, world!\n");
>         return 0;
>     }

But this doesn't work:

    >!     int main() {
    >!         printf("Hello, world!\n");
    >!         return 0;
    >!     }

...The results aren't formatted as code. This is why [the recommendation on Meta Stack Exchange](https://meta.stackexchange.com/questions/105735/how-can-i-put-a-whole-code-block-in-spoiler-text) is to use HTML to format the code. However, the example there doesn't work well *here* because of this site's insertion of `<br>` newlines.

The proper solution (which can be used everywhere) is to trick the spoiler processor into treating a normal blockquote as a spoiler, by inserting an exclamation point (!) at the start of each line within the spoiler paragraph:

So this HTML:

    <blockquote><p>
    !<pre><code>int main() {
    !    printf("Hello, world!\n");
    !    return 0;
    !}</code></pre>
    </p></blockquote>

Produces this result:

<blockquote><p>
!<pre><code>int main() {
!    printf("Hello, world!\n");
!    return 0;
!}</code></pre>
</p></blockquote>


To use this effectively, you'll need to manually escape any code that interferes with the parsing of the HTML markup - for example, `&` must become `&amp;`, `<` must become `&lt;`, etc.