I've been working on a VBA macro that parses HTML into a an Excel sheet. The code is functional, but extremely slow (it takes roughly 20 seconds to fill 270 lines from columns B to M). Due to the code being functional, I suspect it would be best submitted to Code Review.
But. The code I have is ...
what's the policy on registering new accounts? I have a question which is from a new account but clearly by the person who asked two previous questions (one of which was rather ill-received) ... should I flag or otherwise report?
What would you recommend I do with this comment? I rejected the guy's proposed edit + preserved the word "file" to the title. With that, it was a minor improvement; the question isn't great, but didn't require such a minor edit in the first place.
@cimmanon That was my judgment as well, and why I bothered editing. What to do about the user though? Let it pass and hope he figures it out on his own, or explain it to him?
I tend to comment in such cases, simply to understand why the user would think so. In this case, they though it was redundant, because the title contained "in a file" already.
I sure did, and I'm sorry... when I started re-/untagging, I still cared about noise and spelling/grammar errors, but I've done more than 3000 edits so far only in the bootstrap tag, and by now I just want this tag to be gone!
@durron597 If I had close votes, I'd dup it to his previous question. No need to do much else with it, as it will go away. The other question remains a problem. And if you look at his profile, he's got a pattern of re-asking.
CQRS comes into play for example when you use caching, you're reads will be from the cache, your commands have increased complexity because they now must handle cache invalidation among other things.
@approxiblue You can ping that user who edited that tag in and ask if he really intended to create that tag. if so he might provide an excerpt and wiki as well. I see more tags that categorizes testing-* If exception-testing has to go we might need to look into the others as well.
I've been mulling recently over how one might go about designing a Stack Overflow robot, to gain as much rep as possible without being detected as a bot.
Let me make it very clear that I have no intention of actually writing such a robot. It is just an interesting design exercise, like trying to...
@durron597 I copy/pasted that answer and it worked for me. When I copy/pasted yours I had to edit out all kind of noise that the compiler refused to compile, so no good. -1 from me.
AFAICS, there's just one tag on meta which has a high incidence of code in a predictable language:
data-explorer
How about we add a highlighting-hint for that?
@Deduplicator Rather than reject the couple more I ran into, I completed the additional edit, as if I'd come across the question in my "normal" activities. I invited him to chat, but he didn't respond. Would have been good to channel that desire a bit more. Hopefully your nudge will help.
@approxiblue No, he isn't asking for a recommendation. He's asking for what the requirements of an application are. He didn't include enough information in the question for it to be specific enough to be on-topic. I vtc-ed too broad.