@Drew: Ok, after I had figured out what you actually asked, I finised the batch002 list. Got some closed, but unfortunately, there are quite some I already CVed, so I'm afraid you need another one for these.
@Drew should be closed alone for both C and c++ tags...
seriously, people who can't take their time to formulate the question properly, and the tags, there's no good reason to answer the question, and there's a high-9 possibility that what ther're asking are already answered here, they are just too lazy to search...
@Drew It's good that you got me involved, but now I have to rush for a couple of meetings, I'll come back once I get some time, probably in second half of the day....
@Drew: Hi! I just finished C batch 4. Just one request: Date formats differ a lot world-wide. For instance month/day can be swapped. It would be great if you'd use ISO8601 extended format, because that is unambiguous and was developed exactly for that.
@Drew: Sorry, I should have been more specific. The filenames already use the standard format. I meant the daily summary, "date" column. This should be a minor change in the template.
Not sure I understand what you mean with "deal buster". Anyway, it was just a recommendation for a more international format (after all SO is an international site). But if that is too much trouble, Just leave it. Computers didn't burn when Y2K came either ;-)
That's good news. Actually, the batch-sheets are a bit problematic. Maybe it's rekonq, but that works for most sites very well (and for some even better than FFox).
One alternative would be to have the day-name in a seperate row above the numerical date. That would not bust anything. Either way, as you say this is a transitional solution, I'd appreciate if you just keep such things in mind. We should be as international as possible&reasonable.
All but #11 in the CSS batch is closed, that one might have been edited into a good enough state.
Hiya @DanielBeck! This is an effort by SO members to try to apply our close votes strategically, so we do a better job of closing questions rather than leaving them endlessly cycling in the review queue. (Because close votes gradually age away.)
Drew generates batches of questions that are close to closure, but often in danger of having close votes age away. We look at the questions, and apply our close votes accordingly. It really helps get a lot more close-worthy questions closed per day. =D
I see! I assume I came to your notice via my periodic rampages through the jQuery queue.
Looks like you're focusing mostly on languages I don't know much about, but if I can be helpful, yay. Or if I'm Doing It Wrong would be happy to hear ways to correct that
Ah, you have a CSS list -- that I can help with at least
Heh, pretty sure your language of choice is fine - they often keep an eye on review queues to find active reviewers for tags that we need more participants in. So I'm sure you'll get to keep working in whichever language you're strongest in. =D
That's pretty much it! At least until the Close Vote queue is fixed, this is the most efficient way of finding low-quality questions worth closing, and those worth salvaging
Phew ... I really thought there was some more intelligent algorithm not to pile such questions up. (e.g. many DVs/no answers/no accepted answer/etc.)
(Sorry, guys, I sometimes follow the chat without actively logging in. I'm of little use the next hours anyway - spent all almost all CVs to the batches today:-)
@Drew: Sorry, mA is milli-Ampere for me. What is it here? (And is there some documentation about that behaviour or would I have to dig in some PHP or whatever code?
@Drew: Sorry, didn't want to offend ;-) actually I meant the SE websites and their algorithms. No idea which language they use, PHP was just a rough guess, could also be Python or C# or Ada.
@Drew: I somewhat know most of the tools you mention just from hearsay (except c++, of course). But feel free to ask any question about enigneering and embedded systems, including C and many about my swiss army knife on the desktop: Python
@drew OK, better late than never :-) I've looked at (and closed) the cv4 link you provided. Am now off to the beehive (I think I've got the link saved...)
Oh, and I don't understand what you're trying to say with "Let JAL know if you were not on any and pushed up to cv4 so he can look at them. Otherwise we let them roomba? "
OK, did it - some real humdingers in there. And while I was at it I also wen through the C# list and closed a few of those.
@JAL According to Drew, I'm supposed to "Let JAL know if you were not on any and pushed up to cv4 so he can look at them. Otherwise we let them roomba? ". I did go through the VB-list in the beehive and there are a number that my vote has nicked up from 3 to 4...
@CindyMeister "not on any" meant you did not have a cv on a few (and subsequently vtc) so that JAL would know some 3's went up to 4 and he ought to take a look.
Still not following what you're saying, but definitely did push some 3's to 4... And believe it or not, "roomba" is a term that's still not clear to me :-)
@JAL There's nothing much left on the C# list. Quite a few of those were already closed and my vote closed a lot of what was left. Most of the VB.NET list was only at 3 when I went through, so now at 4 (unless others have picked them up from the Review Queue).
JAL and I try to go thru and help out people in their tags in this room that help us out. Like you and Stephen in asp.net-mvc . Stuff that can't get up there to close.