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5:01 PM
I don't agree with such rules either, but those are the guidelines we must follow — CertainPerformance 43 secs ago
@CertainPerformance I was aware of this. But I have a different interpretation of "You flag things posted as answers that do not attempt to answer the question". Point taken. — Jean-Claude Arbaut 1 min ago
eh, no, i don't think you're overthinking it. A change was made somewhat recently that rewrote all of these close reasons with the intent of making them easier for the people on the receiving end of them to understand them. "Needs more focus" used to be "Too Broad", and included a sub description that covered more than just "is asking multiple question", it also covered something along the lines of "a book could be written as an answer to this question" Effectively, the scope of the close reason was reduced, but only in explanation. It's still used for the latter, thus making it more unclear. — Kevin B 1 min ago
I think you're making a mistake in assuming that all Questions need code. The "Needs debugging details" states "and the shortest code necessary to reproduce the problem" and your proposal seem to indicate code is needed too. While code may make it easier to understand a problem, nowhere in the help center does it say that code is required, except for Debugging problems that goes hand in hand with "Needs debugging details" if something is missing. — Scratte 11 secs ago
"explicit multiple questions in one are not really that common?" it's actually not that uncommon. Some users (particularly new users) expect this site as a traditional forum instead and ask multiple unrelated things in a single question. Though, we veteran users are used to the old description of "too broad" and regularly ignore the new description. — Andrew T. 10 secs ago
I agree in general, that not all questions need code, but that shouldn't be taken as missing code is never a reason to close a question. — Kevin B 43 secs ago
Alright, then I will call it Basic Scripting Program Language, or BSPL. If there is another one that's called like this, I will change it. — Answering It All 1 min ago
@AndrewT. This is what I did for a long time (choose needs more focus) for those type of questions. But lately got to the understanding that maybe the most important part of closing a question is holding off answers until the question is fixed appropriately. This means that the close vote description is one of the most important factors in this system. Newcomers struggle as it is to fit in the community. We should help them as much as possible by having the most accurate close reason AND description. — Tomerikoo 46 secs ago
Needs details and/or clarity is now the better option for a question that is asking for way too much. though, if it's specifically debugging info/code that is needed, the more specific debugging info reason would better apply. — Kevin B 41 secs ago
I will use "Needs more focus" and comment on why I think the Question is too broad. That way there's no mention of requiring code, but if they read my comment, they will understand why the Question is "not focused". — Scratte 22 secs ago
If the post is spam you're going to flag rather than choose needs author edit aren't you? — Robert Longson 45 secs ago
@Sean - The only part of the suspension process that is flawed is that you are not notified of a review suspension in more obvious ways than attempting to perform a review. Yes; Previous review suspension should be used, to determine the length of another review suspension. — Security Hound 10 secs ago
Well, @Scratte you found a sizable bug of my own creation that I've just merged a fix for, should be fixed within the next few minutes. Basically, I failed to add the new "Needs Author Edit" review result into the "Count the reviews to see if this review is completed" method. Thank you again for bringing it up. — kristinalustig ♦ 1 min ago
I would prefer that you didn't. We have enough problems with political issues on this platform already. — Robert Harvey 35 secs ago
I don't get why this post is downvoted though, why is this not a legitimate question. — zabop 39 secs ago
Your best face for Stack Overflow is to use it for what it's intended: to help other people with their programming problems, irrespective of their political ideologies or yours. — Robert Harvey 2 mins ago
@Zoe, "most of which would never, ever imagine causing others harm": yepp, and the vast majority of those do not care what someone else draws. — zabop 15 secs ago
Making it clear your suspended is the biggest problem, increasing the length of a suspension based on previous suspensions, isnβt one of those faults. — Security Hound 51 secs ago
Even if it was, the second question should be whether you should. Do you really want to go after a group with almost two billion followers, most of which would never, ever imagine causing others harm? by all means, show support for the attack, but showing support by effectively targeting an entire religion isn't the way to do it. — Zoe 1 min ago
"Obviously the right way to do it" Hmmm, not for a C# guy. I code more like the left upper part. And I agree with the first link that sais if it was the only thing to be fixed to reach perfection than do it. If you're editing this but there are many other things to edit, that's bad. — Antoine Pelletier 26 secs ago
(@Zoe, I don't think this is particularly important, but the notion of "most of which would never, ever imagine causing others harm" is not supported by data: pewresearch.org/global/2013/09/10/…) — zabop 34 secs ago
@SecurityHound That's not relevant to this question, though. I shouldn't have been suspended in the first place, but now this suspension will make it more likely for me to receive future suspensions, which may also be unwarranted. — Sean 39 secs ago
@CaiusJard Nope :') Glad they switched over to something that wasn't abandoned, but it has several pretty major flaws in just basic functionality. 100% accurate language detection isn't yet possible, but highlight.js' language detection pretty much feels like someone really, really drunk trying to classify languages — Zoe 53 secs ago
Assuming you were doing this on a non-CW answer, how would you intend to "promote" it? — John Montgomery 8 secs ago
If there is anything "funny" in all this, it's that a response like the comment is likely why no downvote reason was given. — user4581301 1 min ago
If you didn't think the comment was rude, why did you think it needed to go? Simultaneously declining the flag, and deleting the comment, just seems completely contradictory to me, mistake or not. — Asteroids With Wings 1 min ago
There's a difference between rude and unfriendly. Unfriendly comment still gets the axe, but the poster generally doesn't (unless they've built up a history). — user4581301 1 min ago
6:27 PM
Incidentally, many questions "need more focus" because they "need more details or clarity" to narrow down the problem. It is currently really not clear whether the close reason should be interpreted historically ("too broad"), by its description ("includes multiple questions in one"), by its name ("needs more focus") or some other way β and especially if all the CV'ers and OP agree on a meaning. — MisterMiyagi 32 secs ago
If it's really so rare for edits to make questions worthy of reopening, why do we consistently keep recommending that as the workflow? Seems pointless to me. — Mark Ransom just now
As the old saying goes, you only get one chance to make a good first impression. — Mark Ransom 29 secs ago
The problem I have with this is that it's not very grammatically clear what you are actually approving in the LQP queue. Approving the fact that it's been flagged low-quality, or approving something else? I don't/didn't particularly like "Looks OK," either. Maybe a "No action required" or something else? — Adrian Mole 1 min ago
Thanks for advertising those - really questionable recommendations in both wiki answers there, I voted accordingly and see to delete them if they get enough downvotes. — Alexei Levenkov 1 min ago
Thanks for advertising those - really questionable recommendations in both wiki answers there, I voted accordingly and see to delete them if they get enough downvotes. In mean time you may want to learn difference about the methods of converting to
double
mentioned in the wiki post you linked to... Also "if you are feeling lazy" rarely have place in SO posts and should be edited out (if that was used to imply that function call is better than conversion... you probably want to say that explicitly instead) — Alexei Levenkov 1 min ago@AnsweringItAll I'm not sure what you mean with that last comment. There's no schedule for posting questions (unless you're talking about a personal schedule you're following, in which case I'm not sure why downvotes would affect that), and while you can get question banned from downvotes on the main site, downvotes on meta don't have that effect. — John Montgomery 1 min ago
@zabop I say no because some may consider it an attack on a religion. And plus religion has no say in SO unless you consider jon skeet your god or something. Politics and religion aren't a part of SO and should never be. — 10 Rep 14 secs ago
Please edit this question to clarify what do you mean "promote my answer" - posting link on meta as you did here is possibly ok (as example of something for the question) and triggers meta effect, sharing link to question on other sites/platforms is expected behavior (there is "Share" button just for that). The only thing against the rules is to request upvotes from friends/follower/sockpuppets but I hardly can see it as promotion... So clarifying what you mean "promote" would greatly help this question. — Alexei Levenkov 20 secs ago
The COC is kind of clashing within itself. On one hand this answer says it doesn't matter if it is an intentional attack or not, but then the COC says assume good faith. Which to believe? — 10 Rep 22 secs ago
@gnat i say yes, because I really hate politics. I would prefer that it doesn't stalk me every where, especially on a place where it shouldn't be. — 10 Rep 2 mins ago
@MartijnPieters, there are 10 posts I susprect. I am raising the flag right now, including the links to the posts. — scopchanov 29 secs ago
Any post will do; if there is a specific post that you suspect has been the focus then thatβs probably helpful info to include, and if it makes this easier then put the flag on that specific post. It doesnβt really matter for us. — Martijn Pieters ♦ 1 min ago
The flag does not let me write that much characters, so I listed the suspected posts in my question. — scopchanov 44 secs ago
That is the sort of hidden statistic here, that most questions closed stand no chance at being reopened; moreover, that many askers simply abandon posts once asked. These are two important facets that this approach would address with regards to reopening, because, let's be honest: the issue isn't reopening, it's editing. — Travis J 1 min ago
@Scratte - This is a situation best approached prior to the closing, rather than after. Also, downvotes can be reversed. For posts which can be edited to be good questions, most users who downvote will reverse that vote, and will feel inclined to stay if there are edits being made. If a post is being edited, it is less common for it to receive downvotes or close votes. Once a post is abandoned, then it really doesn't stand a chance to be reopened, as the asker has either given up, or the question itself was not in a place to be remedied. — Travis J 1 min ago
...but then the COC says assume good faith. @10Rep That phrase does not appear in the Code of Conduct. But I think you're also conflating how the Code of Conduct talks about content on the site versus the people using the site. — BSMP 28 secs ago
The reopen stats are "the wrong stats": There should be some careful examination of some sample closed questions, by people congizant of this question - as an experiment, to determine what fraction of closed questions "should", given enough attention, be reopened. Then we should devide the actual fraction of reopened questions by this fraction. — einpoklum 44 secs ago
yes, you are right that the COC doens't say that anywhere (I think it should). This case in itself is different. It will offend people no matter the intent. I like the point you made in the answer, and I think you should include the fact that many people may not assume good faith in a matter like this. — 10 Rep 1 min ago
Seriously, if your triggered by a comment like that, probably shouldnt use the internet. — mxmissile 21 secs ago
Point 1 is verifiable through data. It would surprise me if more than 1 out of 10 questions got reopened through editing improvements. — Robert Harvey 51 secs ago
Point 1 is just false and a bad bias to have. Point 2 is indeed a problem, but we shouldn't just resign ourselves to closing being final. Instead, we should do something about it... Point 3 is a poor choice IMHO; but - do you mean you downvote, or just comment on the question? — einpoklum 2 mins ago
@Scratte Yes, and I prefer that politics doesn't follow me here. I don't think that post should exist on SO. Especially as a US resident. — 10 Rep 11 secs ago
Also FWIW, it's not just Linux, ublock origin has a few times been good at detecting malware squatter sites. — jrh 20 secs ago
By doing this, you essentially put the onus on the site moderators to decide whether the conduct is offensive, alienating, and/or causing a distraction. As Robert mentioned, we'd rather not be in the position of making that decision when it comes to political issues, so please don't put us into that position. — Cody Gray ♦ 40 secs ago
I'm surprised this behavior is seen as a bad thing. I could see naturally browsing a user's profile that had answered several of my questions and subsequently browsing their other answered questions, and possibly +1ing a number of them. This seems pedantic. — java-addict301 25 secs ago
@scopchanov I guess what I'm saying is that I don't see the problem with the user's behavior. — java-addict301 1 min ago
@rene stumbling upon them naturally is good too, but I sometimes see multiple interesting posts when I browse someone's profile (especially if they have answered one of my questions, since many other questions may be related). Am I supposed to ignore the curiosity to browse them? — java-addict301 1 min ago
@java-addict301 yes, don't vote on posts where you used the user as method of finding these posts. it will get your votes reversed, it is confusing for the receiving user and worst case it gets you a warning if not a suspension. not worth it. — rene 58 secs ago
@java-addict301, Here is an excerpt from the warning I received, when I was the one, who did it: While we encourage everyone to upvote great posts, the motivation for doing so needs to be anchored in the merits of the post, not the person who wrote it. After reading that it made more sense, although at first, exactly like you, I did not see anything wrong. — scopchanov 1 min ago
@scopchanov Yes I agree with the policy, however I don't they way one finds 'good' posts should matter. If a user answering questions well, then perhaps I want to seek out their answers. — java-addict301 14 secs ago
Depends on the question; is it well researched, does it present as an actual question, is it related to programming in the proper aspects, etc.. Many close worthy questions merit downvoting, and many questions not qualifying for a close reason merit downvoting as well. It is certainly true that qualifying for closure is not an immediate reason to downvote. — Travis J 26 secs ago
@rene I guess I don't see it as confusing or a violation of the policy, if the voting is still done based on the merit of the question (without regard to the author). — java-addict301 1 min ago
8:35 PM
roughly 57% of the reopen votes i have cast have resulted in posts being reopened — Kevin B 26 secs ago
I'm not sure a 'dedicated' chatroom for reopen votes would really work (at least, not in the way that SOCVR impacted the size of the CV queue). Reopening is a fundamentally different beast than closing. Yes, the RO queue is rapidly gaining weight (something to do with β¦ Sam?) but, other than the changes 'in the pipeline' (non-OP edits not pushing closed Qs into that queue), I'm not sure how to coordinate folks' efforts into reducing that growth. — Adrian Mole 30 secs ago
I generally do 40 RO reviews per day, as do many others. Many (if not most) I see are nowhere near worthy of reopening. I suppose what I (and others) could start doing is to post [reopen-pls] requests into SOCVR when one does pop up. Or just post the link to the review, to keep things 'clean'? — Adrian Mole 1 min ago
@TheMaster Well, if either you or Chipster get that going, I'd be happy to help out, if I can. But, as I said, I'm not sure what mechanism(s) to implement to actually pick up on the most reopen-worthy questions. — Adrian Mole 5 secs ago
The ROs there may be able to add some kind of interface directly in the RO queue (may even be there - haven't noticed) to pump a [review-pls] request from the queue (like Makyen's script does in the Suggested Edits queue). — Adrian Mole 1 min ago
@KevinB Just want to chime in to say that it's also possible you've gotten fairly "lucky" with reopenings in the grand scheme of things too. You may very well be exactly right; your experience however, doesn't invalidate Konrad's. It sounds like the problem he describes isn't a niche, unshared one in the community, based on the responses to this post. Both experiences coexist, and neither appears to paint a good, full picture of reopenings. — zcoop98 1 min ago
@AdrianMole I somehow managed to write this up backwards. It's actually changed to Looks OK. — kristinalustig ♦ 8 secs ago
We all know that frontend-only validation shouldn't be trusted. Locks only keep honest people honest. Beyond the cases this feature was meant to solve, it seems like we're leaving it wide open for anyone willing to spend 30 seconds to abuse it. — The DIMM Reaper 1 min ago
Btw, @TheMaster I'm certainly down for that, but I'd definitely like to wait and make sure it has sufficient community support before I try something like that. That being said, if you decide to go ahead and create such a room before I do, please let me know. — Chipster 25 secs ago
9:25 PM
@Scratte Let me clarify why this particular caricature is offensive. It's not debtable, and is against the Islamic Religion. — 10 Rep 50 secs ago
Interjecting here to request that any debate over whether something is offensive or why be taken to a chat room for discussion so that the inevitable back and forth isn't flooding my notifications. (Also, any disagreement with the Code of Conduct itself should be made into a separate feature request asking for changes.) This isn't particularly a complaint about your last comment 10 Rep (since you'll get a notification for this one) but I can see the fight coming and I don't want to get pinged about it. — BSMP 1 min ago
10:17 PM
Looks like some good changes. If there are changes that make it less punitive I may even consider starting up reviews again. — Vaccano 43 secs ago
I am not satisfied by any of these arrogant and self-satisfied appeals to community judgement. SO is a standard Web resource, and as such it has a responsibility not to consistently attack those "who have been warned" until banning occurs. Once banning has occurred, the assumption that spending a few minutes improving the questions involved will reverse the ban is clearly incorrect. SO is for those who love rules and love to use them to berate other people, the ones identified by the rules as recalcitrants. Blaming the victim is typical of males about rape and SO about its victims. — David Spector 1 min ago
10:31 PM
10:59 PM
11:21 PM
I think the reason why posts go into the reopen queue from an edit is that a lot of users do not know about the inner workings of votes, and what does what, and goes to which queues. I've encountered high reputation users making cosmetic edits to closed posts. They were unaware of the resulting push to the queue. I do not think one can expect a 1 reputation point or 10 reputation point user to know about the mechanics of the site. — Scratte 1 min ago
Yes Thank you Davy. If someone does not understand the question, why close it? Let people who know if read it and provide feedback, right? Is there a committee that does it or someone arbitrarily decides the question is not right. Who gave so much power to volunteers? I am a volunteer too and I just want to wait for someone who understands me question. By closing that change is removed. All I am saying is I want to challenge them. Thanks! — Pat 57 secs ago
@BSMP perfectly understandable. I don't think this debate is even supposed to be discussed here. I would rather it not, and I'm sure many people think the same. For that reason I have deleted the last comment. — 10 Rep 15 secs ago
I checked it out. Your claim is blatantly incorrect. At least 2/3 of the close-voters have far more than "half knowledge" of Go. They've demonstrated their skills and understanding countless times. Even more importantly, this is not the basis on which questions are closed or re-opened on Stack Overflow. Questions that do not meet our requirements are closed by other community members. Please take the tour and read the help center. — Cody Gray ♦ 23 secs ago
Triaging (unlike other types of reviewing) should not require subject-matter expertise, so, yes, this is normal and reasonable. — Cody Gray ♦ 1 min ago
Are you saving that your volunteers never err? That will be a blatantly incorrect statement if that is what it means - and there is no hope to reopen the post. We learn daily and this will be a good learning opportunity too. Now let us prove that - Who says that this question had no merits? I want a vote on this question: This is the Link: stackoverflow.com/questions/64612182/… I know this will not go anywhere, because who wants to prove that they are incorrect and do not wish to correct themselves? — Pat 46 secs ago
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