00:00 - 20:0020:00 - 00:00
12:00 AM
At this point after reading Shog9's comments participation on meta seems pointless. This is particularly telling - "I don't believe anything posted to meta registers at this point, regardless of tone. The people you might hope to reach are not reading meta.". Feel bad for Shog but they are probably best out of it. — Lankymart 36 secs ago
12:42 AM
@Trilarion Here is a plot. I don't know why it dropped in Jan 2019 though. Any ideas? — Has QUIT--Anony-Mousse 1 min ago
1:06 AM
Technically I suppose, but 5 years ago when that question was asked, I don't believe the site filtered the comments when many were present. Now that SE does this, "correction comments" can get lost in the noise. — Bender the Greatest 1 min ago
There is a fallacy in your logic @GeoffGriswald. First, You assume new people (or robots) would automatically fill the gap and provide as good answers to questions if old regular users are leaving in force. Second, you assume that those new people would not become feeling as entitled as current high contributors/mods if they contribute as much. — TelKitty 1 min ago
@ArunVinoth There's no easy way. I was talking about how 10k users can see deleted posts. You still need to know which posts you left comments on. The feature to see real progress is status-declined. — Anonymous 35 secs ago
1:38 AM
2:20 AM
3:12 AM
I fail to see how that’s a problem. If you don’t know anything or don’t care about [apache-arrow], then you aren’t going to know or care about [apache-arrow] when it’s being used with [c++]. — Cody Gray ♦ 48 secs ago
3:52 AM
Is the problem, perhaps, that you're located in China and reCAPTCHA is being blocked there? It is, after all, a Google service. — Cody Gray ♦ 1 min ago
4:14 AM
True. But I think questions can be entirely c++ issue, but it could get discovered during [apache-arrow] usage and it gets tagged with it. — InQusitive 1 min ago
4:26 AM
Does reCAPTCHA work on other sites? Does it work if you go to it directly? I haven't ever encountered this problem, and I get presented with anti-robot verification pretty frequently on Stack Overflow. Apparently I can click buttons as fast as a machine sometimes. — Cody Gray ♦ 54 secs ago
5:04 AM
5:44 AM
6:24 AM
Are you seeing the effects of the roomba there? meta.stackexchange.com/a/274590/270345 — muru 50 secs ago
What is all the commotion about? I must have missed something. The site seems the same to me... Ask a question, get an answer, make a comment. — TetraDev 16 secs ago
6:48 AM
@TetraDev See the answer at meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/392914/… Essentially: The quality of your answers will decline. The chance you'll get an actual workable answer declines, especially if you have a non-newbie question but something that goes in depth in complexer logic or libraries. — Tschallacka 10 secs ago
7:46 AM
If your "correction comment" gets upvotes it won't be filtered. If it doesn't then maybe it doesn't need to be shown. BTW there's no filtered comments on that question or its answers so I'm not entirely sure what issue you're trying to solve. — ivarni 44 secs ago
uhm... I'm quite noobie to this whole META thing, and visibly, not an active participant in the whole community, but back in the days when I was surfing the TechNet and now that I do the same in SE, I know one thing for sure, Q&A forums, not unlike any other community, network, generally entity built by mankind, has its own soul assigned to it, we simply don't interact with the entities directly, we interact with the soul, that's why Reddit for example, is so different from SE, and that's why when souls break, cold death comes, and members become stranger. — Star Helvanithri 57 secs ago
Regarding “search for a question on a search engine”: before The Downfall, I had plans to “mass-edit” “all” the questions that have a title like “Halp, why is this code not working” into good shape: with a title that uniquely describes the problem, but also the question body and tags. This would help any user simply searching for solutions to programming-related issues, and it would help content curators (like me, or mods) to find dupe targets more effectively and make related questions more easily findable. I’m no longer willing to dedicate my time to this endeavor for the “new” SE. — Sebastian Simon 32 secs ago
8:26 AM
@deceze Well, that's awkward. I thought of entangle as disentangle and tangle as entangle. Gess I should be spending more time on ell.stackexchange.com instead ^^ — leonheess 29 secs ago
FWIW I will almost certainly be filing an arbitration suit over relicensing soon. All they had to say in my case was "Whoops, sorry. You're right, 3.0 it is."…yet here we are a few months later having zero advantages for SE, and people like me no longer participating in any meaningful capacity (either posting, answering, or moderating). — jhpratt GOFUNDME RELICENSING 53 secs ago
So I guess this means I can enact my dreams of turning r17 into an anarcho-syndicalist commune — forresthopkinsa 1 min ago
@Cody agreed, and sorry about that. I should not get my frustration with this situation get the better of me. — CodeCaster just now
Why? Review is not about getting rep. Review is about cleanning the site. What the point of having a quality-checker that does not clean nor check? Yes it is a tedious work, but it's an important one. That's the exact reason review and rep gain are not related. It's too important, to let bad reviewer into the review queue. — xdtTransform 1 min ago
Does this answer your question? How can we get rid of misspelled (typo) and unused (or "zombie") tags? — rene 1 min ago
@usr I totally agree, the experts seem to have be dropping away for the last few years now, like darindimitrov, he used to always be active online and a great source of info in the areas i worked in. I think it is still a good resource for beginners. but its it no longer a site that grows with you as you progress as the knowledge is dropping off. — Alicia 1 min ago
I will still recommend reading meta.stackexchange.com/questions/155538/… . — xdtTransform 19 secs ago
The 25 user-promotion has ended on the 14th, it's not available on the page anymore. While the related announcement goes on and on about how great it is that the signup is "easier" now, the fact that the free offering for small teams is gone was only acknowledged in the comments. For existing users, "that plan/offer will run for the foreseeable future". — molnarm 1 min ago
The user doesn't seem to be enraged from the comments. I can't see the deleted question, but sometimes users delete questions or accounts because they don't want coworkers/tutors etc to find it. Could be one reason. — Modus Tollens 1 min ago
It seems too much like a coincidence. Last comment was posted and the account got deleted few minutes later. — Dharman 31 secs ago
Thanks for the plots. The drop at the beginning of 2019 is probably the auto-deletion effect, looking at the description you could probably filter it out by just looking at questions with a positive score. The overall trend seems to be stable and pointing towards an end of SO somewhere in the next 6-8 years (extrapolating). I still wonder what happened between March 2014 and June 2014 where there was a huge disruption and a fall of about 20% of everything. — Trilarion 20 secs ago
Could be a coincidence or OP realizing they were wrong. It's just speculation at this point. As for being too ferocious: this is a pretty tame example, I have seen far worse. Yes, we are sometimes too ferocious, esp in comments, but I wouldn't say it applies to this example. — Modus Tollens 1 min ago
Thank you for answering. However... I am confused. If the question is open ended and up to interpretation, what are you going to do with the completely worthless results then? If you don't know what my answer means, then it's kinda pointless, isn't it? — nvoigt 31 secs ago
@GeoffGriswald this belief about fresh blood was quite popular in the past. And many were wondering why following it tends to break things instead of improving, until Clay Shirky posted an article explaining why things don't work that way. Stack Overflow founders decided to give a try to alternative approach proposed in this article and it turned out to work fairly well until recent — gnat 1 min ago
That current view is mileading. You reviewed this version of the question: stackoverflow.com/revisions/59702005/1 and that's nothing more than a "gimme code" question. The correct choice were unsalvagable. — Tom 44 secs ago
@ivarni IIRC you can delete your account immediately of you posted or voted just once — Modus Tollens 28 secs ago
there is nothing against the rules in the question ... Hmm, maybe you need to help us which version of the rules you use. We might be mis-aligned there. — rene 59 secs ago
@ModusTollens I've always read that as "never (posted or (voted more than once))", not "never (posted or voted) more than once". — Nick A 21 secs ago
@Kev I think, alternatively, instead of putting all the burden on moderators and expecting them to do some action (e.g. strike) to make this situation better, we as normal users should think about what we can do. Some users, like me, has greatly reduced or stopped their activity (e.g. answering, flagging, editing, etc.) on the network. However, the problems still continue to be there and have worsen as it seems. So the question is: what else we (the normal users, and not only moderators) can do to show the management we are not satisfied with the current state, and to save this network? — today 1 min ago
I just saw this but since I have not been particularly active, can someone point me to somewhere that will basically shed light on what's wrong with SO currently ? — Menelaos Bakopoulos 2 mins ago
@Tschallacka ".... All your answers are just for making money for SO. They don't care about you or your input." -> I agree that the most valuable thing on this network is the content, i.e. our answers/questions. So what if we take back our answers/questions, i.e. deleting them (note there is always an undelete button, so it's a reversible action)? Do you think they would start to care then? — today 41 secs ago
@today your account would most likely get banned/suspended for vandalizing content, and all your delete actions would be reversed. They have a forever license to use your content, you can't pull back that license, it's for forever — Tschallacka 1 min ago
@Tschallacka Oh, really? I did not know that! Has this been specified anywhere, say in code of conduct or terms of service of the site? — today 18 secs ago
And if the mis-matches (which aren't apparent in the code shown here) were the problem this should have been a comment and VTC as "typo/no repro". So lots of things odd about this... — Cindy Meister 58 secs ago
@today Take your mouse, and scroll down to the footer. Bottom right. And in the terms of service you agreed to: stackoverflow.com/legal/terms-of-service#licensing check under header user content: You agree that any and all content, including without limitation any and all text, ... (collectively, “Content”) that you provide to the public Network (collectively, “Subscriber Content”), is perpetually and irrevocably licensed to Stack Overflow on a worldwide, royalty-free, non-exclusive basis pursuant to Creative Commons licensing terms (CC-BY-SA), and you grant Stack Overflow .... — Tschallacka 1 min ago
Nice answer. To clarify why I think the duplicate is not 100% fit: OP asked how to compare hours and minutes, not dates or timestamps. While the duplicate could still be useful it is not an exact duplicate. I am not keen on closing questions as duplicates if it is not obvious how they are helpful. For OP my answer in the comments should explain how to compare the hours and minutes against a string. — Dharman just now
10:58 AM
You are on Meta. This question will not be answered here and you may want to go over the Checklist and How to Ask before you repost on main. Please consider deleting this question. — rene 28 secs ago
I just don't agree to this sentence: At this point, you are just doing more harm than good. Maybe, but maybe not. Current system is just an audit error counter. Theoretically, after the last ban period doubling, he could have done 20 correct reviews for 5 queues for 29 days (before 30 days ban period having). 2900 reviews, with 80-100 passed audits, and he/she (they? :)) would have banned anyway at the first audit mistake. This is not likely the case, but I strongly believe that the passed audit ratio (as high as you want. 90%? 95%? Ok!) would be a far fairer metric. — Cubo78 37 secs ago
@CindyMeister Yeah - there's definitely been some fishy editing been done on both Q and A. I'm sorely tempted to rollback the Q to Rev. 1 but, as you've mod-flagged it, probably best to stay away. — Adrian Mole 1 min ago
11:24 AM
Indeed, there isn't. I should have verified my claim, but was on mobile, sorry. — Martijn Pieters ♦ 48 secs ago
11:46 AM
Does this answer your question? Should we have a more specific close reason for vague debugging questions? — gnat 1 min ago
That's... murky. The company has legal obligations when it comes to information about current and former employees, for example, hosted on their sites. User-generated content is, I think, largely exempt, but as soon as employees of the company interact with such content the legal boundaries can get blurred. Not a lawyer myself, wouldn't want to be one, but that's one possible connection that might have corporate lawyers sweating. — Martijn Pieters ♦ 21 secs ago
I fail to see the issue with the duplicate, you're using
re
with a non-str
, the duplicate is about using re
with a non-str
— Nick A 48 secs agoHowever, I'd not expect an official or even knowledgeable answer here, Meta.SO is not a good place to ask for insight into legal arguments. As such I'm closing this as off-topic here, sorry. I can't comment on whether or not this is on topic for law.SE. — Martijn Pieters ♦ 1 min ago
@MartijnPieters well, if SE employee interaction is a source of legal concerns, then AFAIK the first employee interaction was de-featuring the question. — Tadeusz Kopec 2 mins ago
Thanks for you answer. It is true the that Wiki entry references gfortran often, however when reading the Documentation, you notice that they always talk about GNU Fortran and when the word
gfortran
appears, it is always styled as a command. This sort of implies that the GCC-team prefers to use the term GNU Fortran to reference the Fortran compiler suit. — kvantour 1 min agoIf the solution is the same, and you got the answer you needed... why do you care? The dupe system is there to help you and other users to get to a helpful answer. — yivi 50 secs ago
@BhargavRao Just for clarity: you list things that "only moderators can do." Are CMs (and other SE employees who have the ♦ after their names) also implicitly endowed with moderator powers? So, if (perish the thought) all mods went on strike, could CMs (theoretically, at least) 'take over' their duties? (For example, do CMs see the "Moderator UI?") — Adrian Mole 52 secs ago
@yivi I got my solution from the answer to my question, not the other one. As I point out, the other question is confusing: it deals with running
re
on float
, not on UserString
. And the error message TypeError: expected string or bytes-like object
does not clarify the situation either, because it does not state explicitly that it needs a str
. — xealits 12 secs ago@yivi the point is not only in the solution, but in the problem where it is applied. — xealits 24 secs ago
And triage review guide. And First Post too. I reviewing your review their is few questionable choice. This is code only stackoverflow.com/review/first-posts/25073324, And those are under unclear too broad or no mcve stackoverflow.com/review/first-posts/25073363, stackoverflow.com/review/triage/25071023 — Drag and Drop 21 secs ago
"But there is no response from @wiktor" If you want someone to get a notification about your comment, you should mention their username in that comment. There is a good chance that Wiktor has never seen it. — Ivar 1 min ago
12:40 PM
Indeed there was. Good riddance. I looked at the revision history. I wouldn't believe so many high-rep users would involve in such petty puns. — Tadeusz Kopec 1 min ago
@Ivar Wiktor did not comment on the question, can I really reply to him in my own comment? I was prompted that it was he who closed the question only by the "(Private feedback for you)" label. Therefore, I assumed that he will not be notified by me mentioning him in the comments. I have just added a comment to him, though I am not sure if it actually got to his account. Thanks for the suggestion! — xealits 1 min ago
@xealits That should work. Although I'm not sure that a dash in their name works.
@Wiktor
would suffice, or otherwise @WiktorStribiżew
. — Ivar 54 secs ago1:04 PM
"Do you want to do X?" - "Yes" - "Why?" is a perfeclty reasonable follow-up question asking for clarification, so the OP can be helped in a better way. I do agree that they have a huge XY problem. "Makes no sense to me at all" is not offensive if it's genuine surprise. — CodeCaster 1 min ago
@Trilarion the OP responded to the very comment you decry as not helpful with his actual problem, after already having responded to the previous comment by Dharman. So in this case it was definitely helpful to ask a second time. — l4mpi 29 secs ago
Well yes and no. For the basic question "how to check whether it's later than a fixed time", dozens of duplicates exist for each programming language, and that's that. I don't agree that all comments under said question must address that specific problem. If they want to shutdown their entire webserver from 20:00 until midnight, then that's a massive problem that any beginner would (or at least should) be glad to have pointed out by more experienced developers. — CodeCaster 37 secs ago
I doubt we'll get an official answer to this, but my guess would be that someone is afraid that featuring a post like that might appear to officially condone or support the sentiments expressed in it? — user56reinstatemonica8 1 min ago
The CoC comment, while funny, is not helpful and could be interpreted as slightly non-nice to OP. I don't see how the XY problem comment is not nice, and might be slightly helpful if OP knows what "XY problem" means (or googles it and learns the meaning). It could easily be made helpful by adding "ask a new question about backing up your data instead". — l4mpi 5 secs ago
@CodeCaster yeah, it's not the most constructive thing in the world, but your answer states it's not nice. I don't see how. — l4mpi 13 secs ago
@l4mpi it is not constructive, it is commentary aimed at nobody in particular. — CodeCaster 1 min ago
What's wrong with the community these days? Oh, I want you as a moderator. :( after this post of equilibrium of votes on your post meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/374617/… Why are so many moderators are resigning these days? — Harshit Agrawal 1 min ago
Wasn't there also a userscript that let <1K people get that vote breakdown? So it's not like it's new... — Patrice 23 secs ago
I am used to click "Edit" and replace in address bar "edit" with "timeline". For button I need documentation, because I am not sure when to click it! (sarcasm off) Well, I was expecting announcement from SO developers first and release second.. since it's opposite they can post announcement here in the answer! — Sinatr 1 min ago
Nevermind I'm not sure if it appears for low rep. The thing is I opened stackoverflow.com in incognito and saw the button and immediately thought it would appear before even clicking on the button. But now I clicked and the votes count doesn't appear, only events appear. — Peter Haddad 25 secs ago
I'm pretty sure this isn't new here's a post asking for a link to it from 2017, noting that it was experimental in 2015. Ah! What's new is there is a link to it now. — Heretic Monkey 1 min ago
Please make the downvotes of this question equivalent to the upvotes of the answer but u know in negative :p — Peter Haddad 26 secs ago
you know the dupe system is really just there to make it more convenient for users and moderators. — Mr PizzaGuy 5 secs ago
Like said here: meta.stackexchange.com/questions/3053/…, its good to have something on a post and not worry about it getting downvoted. This is also the reason why we don't get reputation from comments. Stack Overflow doesn't want everything to be tied to be reputation. — Mr PizzaGuy just now
@JonClements: there is a lot the site doesn't show you any more, isn't there. It's a travesty. No, a conspiracy! (We miss you, by the way). — Martijn Pieters ♦ 38 secs ago
@MrPizzaGuy right now my question is -1 downvoted, when it provides a useful information about
UserString
and does it in a clean way. The other question does not provide such information. Questions are there to get some useful information out, not just as a convenience item for users and moderators, are they not? — xealits 9 secs agoAlso, Stack Overflow wants users to be able to leave something on a post and not worry about their reputation changing. This is also the reason why comments don't give reputation. Stack Overflow also doesn't want everything to be tied to rep. — Mr PizzaGuy 34 secs ago
Perhaps you change your mind? Perhaps a new answer is added to a duple target? Perhaps another duplicate was added to the list? - These are reasons as to why it should reappear... or... perhaps it's because it asked you to edit your question and you didn't? — Nick A 7 secs ago
The link for the timeline has now been added for questions and answers, for all users. — Martijn Pieters ♦ 2 mins ago
@xealits I was just pointing out that the dupe system may not always be correct. I was the one who upvoted this post because I agree with you. — Mr PizzaGuy 1 min ago
@NickA, no, no, no, yes. So it annoys me to force me to edit? But why resubmitting? What does submitting actually do? Someone sits there and reads all this submits? And what he is doing afterwards? I guess shall I click "yes", my question is immediately doomed and auto-closed as duplicate... so all this nightmare will stops... — Sinatr 15 secs ago
@MrPizzaGuy thanks! I agree with the point on the convenience of the dupe system. And indeed the two questions are linked by the usage of
re
. But I think my question has a value on its own. If I again had this issue, the other question would not help me to resolve it. — xealits 25 secs ago@Sinatr: or you can edit your question to show how it is unique. You could have read the answers of the other two posts and explained why those don't answer your question, for example. You didn't edit the post, so there was no way for the system to know you didn't accidentally choose 'no' and hit submit. — Martijn Pieters ♦ 1 min ago
Great insight. would be interesting to see if closing of questions has decreased at a similar level too, I'm still answering the occasional answerable question but I've stopped any other content moderation for the time being. — Sayse 40 secs ago
@MartijnPieters, didn't consider that system may try to care about me.. I like that accidental no protection.. that's.. solid reason. I will edit my question next time and better this form be gone then! — Sinatr 51 secs ago
Adding to duplode's comment: #2 does not necessarily need to be failed. The point is that the tag adds no value to the question, nobody would ever search for it, watch it or anything like that. For example tags like "question", "computer" or "help" would be useless and should be deleted. — Fabian Röling 1 min ago
Not only are you gutted, the site is too. @HarshitAgrawal why are so many resigning? Links here — WBT 1 min ago
The professionalism of this moderator (who I did not know before -- I'm not that involved) is on the point of making me agree with this answer. I'm on the outside of the core, so unlike Madara, I can't see what's actually going on. But it has me worried about a site that I loved for years before I could get upvote privileges. — Josiah Yoder 1 min ago
@MrPizzaGuy How does the dupe system make anything more convenient for users and moderators? If anything, Stack Overflow goes out of its way to make it difficult to find and mark things as duplicates. Right now, all it takes are three votes by people with 2k rep or greater to override the duplicate status. If the OP has edited the question to include specifics on why the question is not a duplicate, it may very well be reopened. Looking at the question now, however, I see no such edit performed. — Heretic Monkey 32 secs ago
3:02 PM
@WBT In 20 years, when "Stackover" becomes urban slang for "diarrhea", they'll regret naming themselves Stackover Flow. — user253751 22 secs ago
I think "legal issues" is a blanket term that means -> "This reflects badly on SE" — George Stocker 1 min ago
@user253751 now that would be an interesting way for the community to respond to and somewhat accurately label what the company's doing here. If widely adopted, it could be more effective than the username changes, especially following the company name change. — WBT 1 min ago
3:56 PM
4:08 PM
I think when the community approve, it means that one user picked the "improve the edit" and removed the thanks. — Temani Afif 1 min ago
@TemaniAfif You really think so? The English is not improved, only equally badly rewritten and the formatting is all over the place. — leonheess 26 secs ago
Basically to unfeature, choose an employee, ask him to open/reopen/lock/unlock/deleted/undelete/protect/unprotect/feature/unfeature. Then un-feature the post. — Drag and Drop 1 min ago
If without the "Thanks" the edit is good then it's better to do "Improve edit" and remove the thanks — Temani Afif 2 mins ago
Flag it for a mod to handle. Us normal users can't (or shouldn't) interact with the user over this. — Kevin B 13 secs ago
4:28 PM
@TemaniAfif: The initial revision of the second post did not include Thanks. It was introduced by the suggested edit, in both cases. — Martijn Pieters ♦ 59 secs ago
@Alex the plot is auto-graphed by stackoverflow. I'd also prefer to have the key in a different place. — Has QUIT--Anony-Mousse 1 min ago
@Larnu: no, they were approved by Community because a reviewer decided to use the 'edit' button, which includes an implicit approval. If you look at each review you'll see the Edit decision on each. — Martijn Pieters ♦ 1 min ago
It's a pity that those actions were used, because it means I can't now, as a moderator, revert the approval. That's only an option if the suggested edit is still the most recent revision of the post. I've reverted a few older such edits, however. — Martijn Pieters ♦ 1 min ago
I've come across a couple of similar edits (just adding "Thanks") in the last few days - seems to be the latest trend. Edits that just remove "Thanks" generally get my "approval" though. — Adrian Mole 1 min ago
Also, since reading posts similar to this one on Meta, I'm now sometimes finding it hard to choose between "Improve Edit" (thus rewarding the earlier editor) and "Reject and Edit" (= no rep. reward). Balance is generally between more undoing versus more re-doing. — Adrian Mole 1 min ago
5:06 PM
@J.Steen Or maybe I'm wrong, today I saw a post about a duplicate which showed a banner inviting edits. — Davy M 10 secs ago
5:26 PM
@Cubo Yes, if a reviewer somehow managed to identify audits and intentionally fail them, while was making correct (or mostly correct) decisions in other cases, it is theoretically possible that the statement "you are just doing more harm than good" would not apply to them. Although this is within the realm of theoretical possibility, it is...not likely. I can, of course, go through a user's full review history and see all the decisions they made, not just audits, and judge what I believe their "success" rate is. However, I am currently lacking any inducement to do that in this case. — Cody Gray ♦ 40 secs ago
Anyone who holds a diamond is effectively a moderator, @Adrian, and sees all the same UI. That includes community-elected moderators like Bhargav and myself, and it also includes staff/employees who carry a diamond. That diamond is what gives you the magical powers, including ability to do all of the things that Bhargav lists. Generally, the employees defer this type of stuff to community-elected moderators, since they have the specialized, per-site knowledge needed to handle it, as well as the manpower. Staff resources are quite limited. But yes, in theory, they could step up to moderate, too — Cody Gray ♦ 1 min ago
5:48 PM
@CodyGray since (I hope for you) you are not going to browse all non-audit revision, all you can do is to base our statistics on audits (if not we are implicitely admitting that audits are not statistically representative of the reviews population, and then useless and/or misleading). So: why an user failing an audit after (let's say) 32 passed audits should be marked as "more harmful than helpful? In my example they are 3.3% harmful and 96.7% helpful. So why isn't fail ratio better than absolute fails? — Cubo78 1 min ago
See the comments. I have a string of javascript code in which there is json code. I'm writing a web scraper so I need to extract this particular piece of code. — Ivan Gonzalez 1 min ago
"See the comments" It would be better if all information needed to understand the context of the question were in the question itself. — Heretic Monkey 1 min ago
Also, you want to edit your post for the long haul. That means you don't use the word Edit (everyone can see the post history, so they can see there how the post changed) and you leave out meta commentary (no I hope this is enough to reopen., that'd be outdated and jarring if the question was reopened at some point). — Martijn Pieters ♦ 17 secs ago
Your post is still under review in the queue. It was only edited yesterday, and well within the 5-day window. Posting this on Meta is a bit premature at this point. — Martijn Pieters ♦ 2 mins ago
That comment reads: The problem is that this piece of code is inside a large string of javascript. I don't have a valid json string to parse. Your question doesn't contain such a string. That's a problem, because someone might be able to help you extract the JSON from the Javascript, so you can parse it properly. — Martijn Pieters ♦ just now
6:20 PM
6:30 PM
@MartijnPieters I see a "thanks" here: stackoverflow.com/review/suggested-edits/25108862 ... — Temani Afif 1 min ago
6:46 PM
"should I go to law.stackexchange.com with this question?" for what it's worth, I don't think they'd be able to give you satisfying answer there. It feels like there might be something we don't fully know, so I suspect any answer would be speculation. Well, OK - even more than what's usually involved with law (basically, anything is speculation until a court rules on it). Maybe double check on their meta but think this sort of question will be closed as "too broad" over there. — VLAZ 41 secs ago
@maaartinus As per stackoverflow.com/help/minimal-reproducible-example, a reusable piece of knowledge doesn't require "multiple source files" because they contain much irrelevant stuff that makes it harder for others to relate the question to their problem. And if it's not reusable, it has no business staying on the site. — ivan_pozdeev 56 secs ago
7:18 PM
@muru thanks. I was expecting something like this to be causing this abrupt drop there; it was too hard to be manual. But if I omit all questions with 0 score from counting, I get the opposite effect, and everything seems to point steeply upward. — Has QUIT--Anony-Mousse 1 min ago
They should at least add a feature, where one can convert their worthless imaginary internet points into token money, which actually pays something ...everything else is exploitation of labor. — Martin Zeitler 1 min ago
@Sayse closing rates have were unusually high in August and December. But: some closed questions will be deleted after 30 days (so it will take two more weeks for the December value to be reliable), and the threshold has been decreased from 5 to 3. I don't know about August. data.stackexchange.com/stackoverflow/query/1181148/… — Has QUIT--Anony-Mousse 1 min ago
I'm convinced you're all suffering from mass hysteria. They're forcing the trolls to stop calling people attack helicopters, it's not unreasonable to ask these greasy sexually repressed cavetrolls to behave. I'm looking forward to the case study publications in Psychology. — Robin De Schepper 1 min ago
@HasQUIT--Anony-Mousse - Thanks for that! I'd forgotten about the change in required votes, the trial was september so that might be the other spike? surprised to see they've been roughly consistent — Sayse 53 secs ago
@ivan_pozdeev I care more about the reality than about the SO rules. Sure, most of the time, a small snippet is best. But sometimes, it's not. Having both the “reprex” and the project is better than having just one thing.
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Moreover, on Code Review, multiple files are very often needed.. +++
I'm here to give and receive help and to learn; I see the rules as a mean to make this site work, not as an ultimate law. — maaartinus 8 secs ago00:00 - 20:0020:00 - 00:00
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