Ok, since I got no feedback anymore, I'm going for another round.
If you want to
ask a C++ question here, you are welcome to do so, although you probably will have a
better audience at
Stack Overflow proper. Posting a link to a proper question at Stack Overflow might actually give you better results. Users are here to chat and that includes off-topic subjects as well as the outcome of the standardization process and anything in between.
Wherever you ask, always make sure you
follow Roger's advice so that your question is actually answerable by others.
You can edit your messages for 2mins. Click the v
arrow appearing left of it when you hover your mouse over it and pick "edit" from the menu that appears. Also, Cursor Up
will edit your last message (doing it twice edits the one before that etc.), Enter
confirms the edit, Escape
cancels it. The chat will keep a fully history of your editing, though, visible for the others.
Messages are one-liners by default and max. 500 characterss long. You can add a newline by pressing Shift
+Enter
; such messages have no max length (that that any of us has run up against). Note that messages with too many lines (according to a definition unknown to us) will be truncated by default, requiring users to click on an "expand" link to see them in full.
Markdown works pretty much like in comments on SO proper (there are subtle differences, though, like newline working), but fails for multi-line messages (except for fixed-width code; see below). Apparently,
that's by design.
Code can be formatted using backticks or by indenting all lines of a multi-line message four spaces. There's also a "fixed font" button apearing when your message has more than one line.
Links to specific web pages (questions, answers, and user pages on the SE sites, Wikipedia articles, Twitter messages,...) will inline an excerpt of the page, when they are the only text in a message. The same goes for links to images. There's also an "upload" button next to the input pane, that will upload images to imgur.com, putting the link into the input pane.
Mentioning others using the @syntax will notify them - auditively if they are in the chat, and through the StackExchange inbox feature across the whole SE network. The UI will suggest matches after you type @
and the first letters. You can cycle between the suggestions using the tab
key, accept by entering space, followed by your message.
Reply to specific messages by clicking on the down-and-right arrow that appears at the right of all messages when you hover over them (or by clicking the v
arrow as mentioned above and picking "reply to this message" from its menu). This will start the message with :NNNNNN
, where NNNNNN
is the message's ID. (You can also manually type the colon, followed by the ID. You can find any message's ID in the permalink to the message.)
You can spend a limited number of stars per day on messages you like. Recently starred messages are shown on the right. The more stars a message has, the longer it stays there. If there's a number to the right of a star, it indicates the number of people (>1) who have starred it.
An expanded version of these first hints can be found at the
chat FAQ, linked to from the "faq" link at the lower right corner of the chat's browsers window. (A small popup window showing just the
formatting help of the FAQ can be invoked through the "help" link at the same place.)
If you wonder why we have so many room owners: This room was originally created by some user(s) who later disappeared, orphaning it, so that other users set up a new C++ room.
A moderator objected against two C++ rooms, and transferred ownership of the older C++ room to those who had created the new room (which was left to die).
To prevent this from ever happening again, we have the inofficial room policy to turn regulars into owners (and to remove those no longer here from the list of owners).
Ok, thanks for staying quiet.
All rejoice, we have a new version of the newbie hints! :D