12:01 AM
First rule - don't edit crap. The 2nd answer is literally a copy and paste of the accepted answer. It actually should be flagged and get deleted as it isn't an answer to the question. IT is just an acknowledgement that the accepted answer worked — psubsee2003 1 min ago
12:35 AM
There's a difference to being able to post something good and determine where the line between OK / Should be Closed for whatever reason / Should be removed ASAP on other users posts. For that, there are a lot of rules. But, maybe you're just fortunate to have the ability to determine that without going down the meta path :) I didn't. — Scratte 2 mins ago
1:03 AM
There's a difference to being able to post something good and determine where the line between OK / Should be Closed for whatever reason / Should be removed ASAP on other users posts. For that, there are a lot of rules. Maybe you're just fortunate to have the ability to determine that without going down the meta path :) I didn't. I find the most tricky ones to be how-to Questions, and I'm not likely to risk asking any of those. — Scratte 1 min ago
1:55 AM
discourse.org, brought to you by some of the people who originally conceived and/or built Stack Exchange. It looks almost exactly like your example mockup. — Cody Gray ♦ 59 secs ago
2:35 AM
This is META Stack Overflow. You should be posting this over at the main site: stackoverflow.com/questions/ask — Gino Mempin 1 min ago
3:15 AM
Possibly related to the migration to Common Mark? I'm guessing not since they've only done Meta so far and this is a Help page. — BSMP 1 min ago
4:17 AM
Don't repost questions, the later are dupes of the earliest. The earliest is too vague. There's a way to anything. SO is not here to write code or teach programming. You need to ask a question with asm — philipxy 11 secs ago
4:37 AM
you forgot this one in your list - stackoverflow.com/questions/62274651/…... :) — Alexei Levenkov 1 min ago
@AlexeiLevenkov I did. But don't worry, I found it while I was going through and deleting the questions. :-) — Cody Gray ♦ 53 secs ago
5:07 AM
@CodyGray Thanks, but I don't believe moderators will "go-back" and re-open my question given that I have edited it. — Cherona 19 secs ago
5:23 AM
@Cherona It happens all the time. It's how the system is designed to work. Regardless, it is breaking the rules to continue reposting the same question, so don't do that again. — Cody Gray ♦ 1 min ago
@AndrewT. for you chats might me secondary for me not. but that is why chats are not displayed along the proper answers. you have to click on something more to see the chat — user2340356 1 min ago
Yes, I agree that, in certain cases, some Meta users abuse their delete votes. I regularly step in to stop this whenever I think it is inappropriate. I have even contacted users in an attempt to get them to stop misusing their delete votes as "super-downvotes" on Meta. But this isn't representative of any sort of "endemic" problem on Meta, and doesn't prove that you're being persecuted. It's just evidence for why we need moderators: to defend your right to speak constructively, in favor of or in opposition to the site or the majority, even as we might strongly disagree with what you're saying. — Cody Gray ♦ 1 min ago
@CodyGray I don't think it's a very sound system, a moderator should not need to go back and re-open the question, I don't believe they care or have the time to do so. That's why I just opened a new question - because it's open by default and does not require moderator approval. Why should closed posts require moderator approval to be re-opened, but new questions don't require moderator approval at all? — Cherona 1 min ago
It doesn't have to be a moderator. Anyone with privileges to vote to close a question also has privileges to vote to re-open it. See stackoverflow.com/help/privileges/close-questions. Note that there is an entire review queue designed for the express purpose of reviewing recently-closed questions that may deserve to be reopened. The intention of the "close" functionality is to allow problematic questions to be put temporarily on hold until such time as they can be fixed, and then reopened. @Cherona — Cody Gray ♦ 6 secs ago
A moderator only got involved here because (A) you posted on Meta where I happened to see it, and (B) you created a bunch of duplicate questions which required moderator clean-up (i.e., actual deletion, not closure). — Cody Gray ♦ 1 min ago
5:51 AM
@psubsee2003 I edited from the late answer review, I have flagged answers like both answer but always rejected, so I never flagged post like that again. — Muhammad Dyas Yaskur 1 min ago
6:03 AM
Really interesting analysis, thanks. I forgot how I used to enjoy reading burnination threads, mostly for the puns - even though I never participated in that activity. And I miss just kind of seeing the community going about its business, and occasional opportunities to participate. You're right that the featured posts are mostly either big controversies, or requests for feedback from the company. — Steve Bennett just now
@GeoffGriswald "If users are so dumb that they need to be told what is "hot" in order to engage with it" - what an incredibly uncharitable way to describe people. Not being aware of something doesn't make you dumb. — Steve Bennett 30 secs ago
Here is an example where a duplicate went belly up: meta.stackoverflow.com/a/398100/578411 — rene 41 secs ago
@rene exacly, that is partly my reasoning behind re-posting the question. My other justification would be that I believed my post to have been closed unfairly. Another reason would be the fact that my edited post would not be re-opened instantaneously — Cherona 52 secs ago
When you clicked that link in the post notice you were brought to the /ask page, right? Not the guidance in the helpcentre? And for your other point: No one here acts "unfairly" we might take an action based on incomplete information but that is hardly unfair, we don't have a magic 8 ball. If an edit would lead to immediate re-opening we could as well do away with closure. I know all people on reddit, Quora and Twitter would love that, but we care for quality so we rather have 3 pair of eyes doing a sanity check on the post and each other before allowing answers on an edited question. — rene 1 min ago
@rene I disagree, I believe it's unfair, specifically the part where I feel like I have to persuade people that my question is related to programming when I belive it's quite obvious that it is, give random people a hammer, and everything is a nail. They are too eager to dismiss questions as off-topic, just because my post does not contain code. — Cherona 1 min ago
Ok I Think I know the direction in where to find the answer. The question was meant to be asked in general with only the given post as example. Most reactions are about the given sample. There are some which luckily take the question, and give some clue about why this happens 'in general'. My personal opinion about this is 'Do not do these kind of edits', which make it usefull this post is closed as being 'opinion-based' 😉 — Luuk 7 secs ago
6:49 AM
That you personally feel something is unfair is never a justification to subvert the site's rules. I'm something of a subject-matter expert when it comes to Windows programming, and I find myself in complete agreement with David that your original draft of the question did not make clear that it was a programming question. We do get a lot of people who are asking off-topic questions just because of how popular Stack Overflow is, and we don't try to judge motives. Posts are handled based on how they appear at the time. Fortunately, there are mechanisms to clarify and/or correct mistakes. — Cody Gray ♦ just now
7:07 AM
As the question eloquently summarizes, this a for-profit company built on the back of a non-profit community, and the goals of both are not aligned. There are only two ways out of this: either the company converts to a non-profit organization, or the company starts remunerating its content creators just like other content platforms do. Both are unlikely to happen, and anything in between is just band-aids and veneer. — Robby Cornelissen 1 min ago
7:17 AM
7:49 AM
It seems fine for me in dark mode with Chrome Desktop 80.0.3987.106 on Windows 10 (2004). — Wai Ha Lee 43 secs ago
I wonder why people are downvoting the question just because the answer is "no". Or is there something fundamentally wrong with it? — Martin 5 secs ago
@rene and E_net4 I was not intending to change Stack Overflow to an "open end discussion forum". I'd rather see scientific discourse as something that can actually include stronger and weaker answers (by votes), and possibly even "best answers" that synthesize the state-of-the-art arguments to a question. — Martin 42 secs ago
You tagged it feature request and on those down votes definitely mean: don't do this but on Meta you see more frivolous voting, not only on post quality but also on (dis)agreement. — rene 51 secs ago
@WaiHaLee Could it be related to me having an active bonus of 500? Or that I was starting a bonus before the time (this one I don't think so because it showed I was able to and then some moments after allowed)? — Tiago Martins Peres 李大仁 59 secs ago
8:29 AM
As for "new branch" I assume you mean a new site: in that case see: meta.stackexchange.com/questions/76974/… as for the "discussion" type of Q/A, do check skeptics.se and how they deal with their "questions". — rene 1 min ago
@Adriaan I think leaving obscure edge cases (and discussion of specific cases) to Meta is probably fine, especially if the help center links to relevant subsets of those from various places. But the basics at least need to be covered well in the help center. — Bernhard Barker 1 min ago
8:53 AM
@RobbyCornelissen "...and anything in between is just band-aids and veneer" The content is CC licensed, the company would not need to convert to a non-profit organization, it would be sufficient if a non-profit organization is founded with the goal to continue the original mission and also most users would have to do the switch. On the other hand even that seems unlikely and maybe we just have to live with the imperfection of the structure here. Yes, popular feature requests are completely ignored by the company but then a non-profit organization is not a guarantee for better service either. — Trilarion 19 secs ago
I don't know - maybe? I don't really want to award a bounty of 500 to test it. Hopefully a Stack Exchange developer will see this and figure out what the deal is. BTW have you tried using another browser? — Wai Ha Lee 1 min ago
@GeoffGriswald "..If users [...] need to be told what is "hot" in order to engage with it..." With this logic we could scrape every bit of filtering based on importance. No more displaying the score of contributions on SO, because it's a measure of hotness, just one big set of Q&A and nothing else. I'm sure that the HNQ algorithm is far from perfect and the attention that the featured tag gives is undeserved in quite a number of cases, but basically that space on the right side of the main page is free advertisement for Meta and should be used to be best possible effect. — Trilarion 1 min ago
@Trilarion I'd submit that popular feature requests don't get implemented because they don't align with the priorities of the company, or are antithetical to its goals. And while the content is CC-licensed, the platform is definitely not. — Robby Cornelissen 6 secs ago
@WaiHaLee No i didn't try with another browser because after that change in the procedure it started to work and I was able to award the bounty. Now when I test it it works — Tiago Martins Peres 李大仁 32 secs ago
@RobbyCornelissen You're right. On the other hand the company pays for the upkeep of the servers, the bandwitth and the maintenance and at least only those who don't know how setup an adblocker are really affected. I just meant to say that maybe this is as good as it gets. Band-aids and veneer are all we are going to get realistically. — Trilarion 5 secs ago
@Trilarion "This is as good as it gets" kept companies paying for Experts Exchange subscription until Stack Overflow reached maturity. "Realistically, this is all we are going to get" is what kept people buying Microsoft Encarta CDs and Encyclopædia Britannica subscriptions before Jimmy Wales started Wikipedia... Panta rhei, and it's turtles all the way down. — Robby Cornelissen just now
OK I see now this is not a regular text field, it's their own syntax-highlighted editor. Sorry this doesn't work then, it would require some additional development specifically for that case. — CherryDT 59 secs ago
I'm honoured that this post has been featured. Not because I think it's a good post in and of itself, but because I believe and hope it will help to generate the dialogue, feedback and community interaction in order to build a better community. — Ian Kemp 52 secs ago
10:57 AM
The author did delete their post, back in 2013. Then undeleted it again, but the system doesn't keep a record of every deletion. So you only see the first. — Hans Passant 1 min ago
@MuhammadDyasYaskur it all depends on what you flag and how. You don't flag wrong answers, just downvote and move on. But for something that is obviously what's wrong, you flag NAA (Not an Answer) or VLQ (Very Low Quality). But for something more stuble like this one, you often need to use a custom flag to explain what is wrong. — psubsee2003 1 min ago
11:15 AM
What about a Github repository, where all the relevant decisions and discussions are kept in some kind of handbook with links to meta discussions in footnotes. It could be edited by everyone and serve as a summary of all the hundreds of meta discussions. Not sure that anyone could build that actually. Maybe Meta just needs a wiki it can edit. — Trilarion 48 secs ago
@Muhammad Dyas Yaskur: Welcome to our editors guild! Don't be discouraged. It is natural to want to be "right", but at the first revert, it is better to leave a comment with an argument and maybe a source (e.g. "I think A, B, and C because of X, Y, and Z."). You can then choose to engage or simply move on (to the next post). There is already plenty to tend to (19,626,136 questions so far) and there is no need to hung on to any particular post. — Peter Mortensen 1 min ago
"...I find the SO site very self-explanatory." Me too. Asking, answering and voting is quite straightforward. But there are nuances and often people get downvotes piled on without really knowing why. On the other hand, many new questions from new users are ill posed and not answerable without considerable edits or are badly researched and most likely duplicates. You somehow seem to have avoided these pitfalls, but others do not. Not sure though if more reading material would help them really. I put my money on that one day we can teach an AI how to teach programming and let it do the job here. — Trilarion 16 secs ago
12:05 PM
It's funny: I cannot relate to your woes. The general idea of what constitutes a valuable question is not hard to grasp and is not surprising. It certainly does not require hours of Meta crawling. For coding questions, the vast majority, the rules are very general: Do not ask what's been asked before, and then the usually necessary core information: Input, expected output, actual result, any diagnosis, and an example if possible. And, oh yes, you need to have tried something. What about that is hard? — Peter - Reinstate Monica 24 secs ago
It looks like this question is the source of the tag. I have pinged the asker in comments to weigh in — Machavity 1 min ago
Nothing @Peter-ReinstateMonica. You're talking about simple debugging Questions. It's all the other types of Questions that are tricky: Like how-to Questions. Sometimes they get a score of -12 and are deleted outright. Other times users are fighting over whether or not to close them or open them. Other times they are highly upvoted. This is very confusing. And what exactly do I need to have tried if I want to ask a how-to Question? — Scratte 1 min ago
Thanks anywayI asked it as a different questions since it requires a different solution: stackoverflow.com/questions/62271638/… — alper 1 min ago
It's literally CMake options (options in cmake) (stackoverflow.com/questions/60217470/…) - would support nuking it and just replacing it with [cmake] — Zoe 1 min ago
@Trilarion: You could do the same thing with a community wiki answer on meta. The problem is that such information must be made available during onboarding of new users, that content is owned by Stack Overflow, The Company, and they have no interest in onboarding users who ask good questions, and they have even less interest in onboarding experts that answer questions; they have interest in onboarding as many users as fast as possible to increase their ad revenue and inflate their reported user base. — Jörg W Mittag 1 min ago
True, but the debugging/"how do I program this homework" questions are the most annoying ones, and frequent. Other questions can be more tricky, true. But I wouldn't be too afraid of downvoted questions. The annoying questions are those lacking prior research or the information we need to answer them. All others may be turfed elsewhere or perhaps closed as opinion based, or you missed a dup (happened to me) -- that's usually not a problem. — Peter - Reinstate Monica 36 secs ago
Allowing local storage in code snippets is quite dangerous. I was just curious to see if it works now. — bravemaster 8 secs ago
Note that there is a feature request to add local storage capabilities to Stack Snippets already. — Heretic Monkey 1 min ago
Cool, just wanted to let you know that the lack of capability is a known issue :). — Heretic Monkey 1 min ago
I already knew that. Turns out this is such an old question. I thought it was new one, because it showed up at the top of my question list. So I thought a new feature just has been introduced. Meh... — bravemaster 10 secs ago
1:07 PM
Thanks for your reaction. However, I’d prefer to use tags [cmake] and [options] together rather than creating a special tag, just like we don’t have tags for other CMake commands like [cmake-if], [cmake-file], [cmake-get_filename_components] and so on. — Melebius 36 secs ago
@Melebius:
[tag:options]
must be the most generic thing ever. It would likely be misused, like the unexplained cmakelists-options has - and that's if people even think of it, which they might not when they type in cmake
. — einpoklum 24 secs ago@Trilarion I mentioned a review check-list earlier. I did consider making it a styled html page with colour-coding and all the fireworks. And then putting it in a snippet on meta, so one could either just grab it and run it locally or run it directly from the snippet while reviewing. — Scratte 1 min ago
While I agree and believe that, generally, Stack Overflow isn't too hard to figure out, I think we can do better anyway. The fact is, we apply rules very inconsistently, and this means that some people will get very inconsistent feedback and be confused. This won't be true for everyone, but it's true for enough individuals that it's probably worth improving. — Welbog 1 min ago
Disagree, and not just for the sake of disagreeing, but for a true view on it: you must have a day off, it is not about 1 second or 30 seconds, it is for the sake of being free from everyday life at some special days. This is important for some people. Just imagine an Israeli Pilot logging in on SO on sabbath while his plane stands still the whole day. Think of people who cherish a day by keeping it special. This is just a respectful and relaxed approach to human culture, and it is not about making the badge easier or put down the many enthusiastic users here. I see this issue clearly. — Lorenz 1 min ago
Does this answer your question? Dark Mode Beta - help us root out low-contrast and un-converted bits — Zoe 1 min ago
@Makoto hey repeating things on this does not harm too much, i can also say it again. I doubt that the fanatic is then a good incentive at all, if it means to log in on public holidays when you mentally take a day off for the love of your culture. It would not harm anyone to change to a 5 out of 7 week days approach, while the current badges lead some people to a behaviour that is not good for the soul. The human being has weaknesses, and such badges directly imply a disregard of special days. The enthusiast badge has the general problem. — Lorenz 1 min ago
" ...but I don't really care about my reputation (very much)..." You may not. But this site very clearly does, atleast by the way its structured. Being at 3k opens up a batch of moderating possibilities. Fine. But then there are perfectly valid posts complaining about the exceptionally poor reviewing, often by 'low rep' users who've just acquired that level, and who've previously never really taken part in any actual moderation (and often leading to quick bans). This is a problem for both the site and for retaining those users. And it has some straightfoward fixes. — ouflak 1 min ago
@Lorenz The point is that the days need to be consecutive. There's no requirement that you earn this badge or any other badges for that matter. If your religion or soul-heath prevents you from logging in, then you will just not earn the badge. And I don't see why you should, since it doesn't say "almost consecutive" or "5 out of 7". Nobody deceived you. I'm even fairly sure that some users have had to redo this because they lost their internet-connection on the last day. Maybe not having internet everyday is not good for the soul for them. — Scratte 1 min ago
There's another badge that only requires participation over a year. There's no requirement that one logs in regularly. It's the Yearling where you have to be an "Active member for a year, earning at least 200 reputation". This seems to fit your requirements for being able to take time-outs from Stack Overflow. — Scratte 1 min ago
@Catija stating you sent a reply on a public site, when there was no reply sent to me is disingenuous at best. So please forward me the reply and correct your comment. Making public statements that are not true is not ok.In the meantime the network now stonewalls me. What have I done apart from ask to be reinstated and show I'm annoyed by it? Is that not ok? Looks like the network just ignores any mod they don't want to deal with, only difference is, I'm not as well liked as Monica, so there's no uproar. — Yvette 1 min ago
2:21 PM
Technically there's the new landing page which new, non-logged on users see, although there's quite a lot of commotion about that as well. Otherwise I agree with you that the amount of information could be better, but preferably then only for "new" users, e.g. gaining the privilege of hiding the enlarged set of rules on top of the page at, say, 1000 rep or so. — Adriaan 1 min ago
2:47 PM
“But the plans were on display…” “On display? I eventually had to go down to the cellar to find them.” “That’s the display department.” “With a flashlight.” “Ah, well, the lights had probably gone.” “So had the stairs.” “But look, you found the notice, didn’t you?” “Yes,” said Arthur, “yes I did. It was on display in the bottom of a locked filing cabinet stuck in a disused lavatory with a sign on the door saying ‘Beware of the Leopard.” ― Douglas Adams, The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy — Ray Butterworth 55 secs ago
To avoid confusion, it is better to use the full CMakeLists.txt whenever possible. — Peter Mortensen 52 secs ago
What I think we're arriving at here @Lorenz is that you're not interested in being a fanatic. I'm cool with that; please don't try to numb or reduce the level of fanaticism required to achieve that goal. You haven't done enough to convince me that, just because someone wants to take a day off of the Internet, that the badge's requirements should be slackened to accommodate those people, and I'm no longer interested in any further debate on the matter. Either you want to participate at a fanatic's level or you don't. There's nothing more to this. — Makoto 15 secs ago
This post is incomplete and encourages moving broad, off-topic questions to other network sites. This is a real problem. More information is necessary to make this a valuable answer. Links to each network site's how to ask and on topic pages is a step forward. How about theoretical/conceptual computer science questions? CS SE is more appropriate than SWE SE. — ggorlen 1 min ago
Re "The problem is that we have a "ruling opinion", or "ruling attitude" here. People disagreeing it, are constantly voted down (close, del), resulting that most of them leaves. Yes, agreed. A lot of the voting is based on who posts and not the content of a post. It would be better to have a longer process of voting on proposals for new features (instead of immediate voting that sway subsequent voters, more like moderator elections with several phases and where voters don't know the other voters' votes until after they have voted). — Peter Mortensen 27 secs ago
@Trilarion Interesting! Could you point out where you see those stats? SEDE? Or did I miss some meta post about that? — Jan Wichelmann 55 secs ago
3:55 PM
" Each time I eventually answered my own question." Sounds like a good candidate for a self-answered question to save someone else half a day. ;-) — Michael - Where's Clay Shirky 1 min ago
@GeoffGriswald I do notice that you became engaged with this very post only after it had been featured for awhile (which kind of undermines your point, given that this post wasn't featured until several months after it was posted). — EJoshuaS - Reinstate Monica 20 secs ago
4:15 PM
On top of that, SE doesn't have a very good track record on "detecting" nonsensical things ("title filter" anyone?) so I rather not have them go implement a feature that is hard to get right, 99% of times wrong and annoys unsuspecting users that have a valid use of those comments, including the Meta crowd that might have to diagnose these ("your post contains mainly code" anyone?). — rene 27 secs ago
@rene some times you can, some times you can't. It's pretty inconsistent. Usually maps to the standard tab action (next element) — Zoe 32 secs ago
It's not unlikely that op missformated on purpose to circumvent the code-only filter. — BDL 41 secs ago
IMO, Fanatic is one of the easiest badges to get. Conceivably, you can write a cron task in a minute to get the badge (don't do this--it's a sad way to live). Have you seen the Epic or Legendary badges? 200 reputation per day for (total, not necessarily consecutive) for 50 or 150 days respectively. The time it takes to collect the knowledge can be very socially damaging (I'm only 8/50 towards legendary and have no friends). If you think a badge promotes poor behavior, ignore it. Nobody is requiring you to participate and badges are completely fake, made-up internet points that don't matter. — ggorlen 1 min ago
@bravemaster I just learned that that sometimes works. it never did for me in the last 6 to 8 years. — rene 35 secs ago
@rene I believe just indenting with tabs makes paragraphs that look like code snippets, no? — bravemaster 1 min ago
@rene Moreover, if they face "your question is mostly of code" message and they cannot get rid of it, they just simply delete some code snippets and pass the detail check. And the question gets uglier even more. — bravemaster 18 secs ago
Why is you not knowing about it a problem? Why do we "need" this feature in order to "fix" the issue of most users not caring about meta, not reading the posts on there or contributing to that forum? — Geoff Griswald 16 secs ago
If your religion prohibits getting a badge or you feel that it promotes an unhealthy lifestyle, just skip the badge. They're just silly incentives to be involved in the site by achieving made-up goals. Getting one or not has no real consequence whatsoever. BTW, if you think Fanatic is a hard badge to get, take a look at Epic or Legendary. If Fanatic is cold, Legendary is a nuclear winter. — ggorlen 1 min ago
ok, rephrased in a different way: If the purpose of Meta is to try and help the site developers understand what is important to users, then the premise of "advertising" meta posts in the sidebar is in itself counter productive. Since, once a post is promoted to "Hot", it will receive attention from users whether it is important to them or not. I think Meta should be entirely excluded from the "Hot Network Posts" section and only those users who want to seek out Meta questions should see them. — Geoff Griswald 1 min ago
If your religion prohibits getting a badge or you feel that it promotes an unhealthy lifestyle, just skip the badge. They're just silly incentives to be involved in the site by achieving made-up goals. Getting one or not has no real consequence whatsoever. BTW, if you think Fanatic is a hard badge to get, take a look at Epic or Legendary. If Fanatic is cold, Legendary is a nuclear winter. — ggorlen 52 secs ago
You can't (and shouldn't) build a system to compensate for the lack of guidance we give to (new) users. — rene 2 mins ago
@rene You're such a great moderator and I got much help from you. But this time, I cannot understand a word of your last comment. — bravemaster 19 secs ago
@BDL Exactly. I've seen many of them. I'm sure you had too. Any suggestion to help prevent those tricks? — bravemaster 1 min ago
@bravemaster sorry for being cryptic. What I tried to explain (badly) is that we should focus on guiding new users with editing their posts into shape / format correctly / contains all details etc; before they click "ask queston". When you show them an error at that stage, no "checks", "validation lists", error messages, warnings, electro shocks are going to withheld them from posting. The guidance and our expectation of a question with a code submission should be made clear upfront, when we still have their full attention, not at the end when their attention is wandering off. — rene 1 min ago
@GeoffGriswald wonder if you aware of recent research performed by SE engineering (which essentially triggered discussed feature request). "TL;DR - a high percentage (50+%) of curation/moderation actions on Stack Overflow come from users who at least occasionally visit MSO or MSE. This is true for the entire range of time we looked at..." — gnat 1 min ago
I'm glad chat and comments are ephemeral. "Permanent" (nothing is permanent) information goes into Questions and Answers only. See also: Under what circumstances may I add "urgent" or similar phrases to my question, in order to obtain faster answers? — ggorlen 1 min ago
I'm glad chat and comments are ephemeral. "Permanent" (nothing is permanent in life) information goes into Questions and Answers only. It's a single source of truth, the format works and I want to see a bare minimum of non-QA noise to dig through when searching for information. See also: Under what circumstances may I add "urgent" or similar phrases to my question, in order to obtain faster answers? — ggorlen 43 secs ago
@GeoffGriswald I assume you mean Shog9. He still cares about the SO community, even if he's now on the outside looking in — Machavity 42 secs ago
I'm glad chat and comments are ephemeral. "Permanent" (nothing is permanent) information goes into Questions and Answers only. It's a single source of truth, the format works and I want a bare minimum of non-QA noise to dig through when searching for information. See also: Under what circumstances may I add "urgent" or similar phrases to my question, in order to obtain faster answers? — ggorlen 1 min ago
@HansPassant the table do keeps record of deletion/undeletion events, otherwise the timeline would not be as useful. — Braiam 35 secs ago
5:25 PM
"Why has StackOverflow not publicly shown support for the Black Lives Matter movement?" - they have, on Twitter. — Zoe 47 secs ago
@rene yes, this was years ago. Fair enough, it probably did not go well. But in there own words: "We don't know if or when there will be another occasion that compels us to use our company voice to take a stance on something that's happening in the world." I would hope this issue would be something they would want to use there voice for. — Mark 17 secs ago
I don't want to sound insensitive or rude but I don't know about all this with companies supporting campaign. What are people going to think, all Stack exchange members support the campaign? All staff support it? Or all of management of the company? In my opinion when companies support campaigns I see that as a cheap way to get attention. As if they are riding a wave to get some "reflected glory" of something that in real life is a horrible thing. — Andreas 24 secs ago
The Stack Overflow Developer survey clearly shows people of color are underrepresented in our industries. We need to take action and start to fix this. You really expect Stack Overflow to be able to fix this? How? — EJoshuaS - Reinstate Monica 52 secs ago
@Mark The same can be said about other statements as well. Lots of companies feel they need to make statements, but far from all make actual contributions to the current situation. — Zoe 59 secs ago
@Andreas, I am a firm believer of the separation of religion,politics from corporate politics. But I don't believe in sitting silent when peoples human rights are being ignored. This is not about glory, it's about finding solutions and fixing a broken system.] — Mark 39 secs ago
You asked, "Why has StackOverflow not made a public statement that supports the Black Lives Matter movement?". When presented with a public statement that was made, you call it "an empty statement at it's best". Perhaps you should clarify exactly the statement you expect to see from an online programming question/answer forum. Then you ask, "What will StackOverflow do to help end racism and promote diversity, inclusion and equality in our industry?", but follow that up with "I don't expect them to fix this. I expect us to fix this." Somehow this question feels as empty as the tweet. — Rufus L 7 secs ago
@Mark You should be talking and/or sending messages (not literal messages, but the type of message a protest sends) to politicians, not a group of programmers. — Zoe 32 secs ago
Because the last time the got involved in politics it was a major disaster from a community building perspective. — Kevin B 16 secs ago
I'm still confused as to what, specifically, you want to happen here. Can you make a specific proposal? — EJoshuaS - Reinstate Monica 1 min ago
Please note that the code of conduct gives us all the tools to "fix" this, if it isn't already. — rene 40 secs ago
@Mark sure, you want to talk about a broken system. It's spelled USA. It really isn't harder than that. If you want to fix something then do so. I'm a firm believe that things can't be fixed "over the internet". You need to be more engaged in politics and have a society that is more accepting of changes such as lowering the violence by removing weapons. Less weapons means less violence. I understand that police who every day are at risk of being shot use more violence to protect themselves but that does not mean I agree with what they did, I'm just saying I see the issue. — Andreas 43 secs ago
The sad thing about this entire post is that people are being violated all the time. I don't mean any disrespect, but why this case? Why not the girl that got sentenced to death for fighting off her attacker in some other country? Why not the native in a jungle that got killed for logging rights? — Scratte 38 secs ago
@Scratte at the end of the day all of these issues matter. But we have the momentum to actually change something. Are you actually saying because there are other issues, you would rather not support anything? — Mark 13 secs ago
Re. dynamic close threshold and Troyen's anecdote: I've seen moderators go on rampages of closing highly upvoted, old, but still valuable Q&As that don't match their current interpretation of what is on-topic for an SE. It needs to be nearly impossible to close an upvoted question. — StackOverthrow 1 min ago
I do not get these banners since I voiced a critical opinion about the new CoC. No survey since then... — zx485 24 secs ago
@Dave it's not about just a statement. It's about making an effort to make change happen. I don't have the answer. I don't know what resources SO has. But more than likely they have more resources than any one of us developers. The ball is in their court to find ways to help build a better community. — Mark 7 secs ago
Markdown content of that comment is:
@JohnDoe, I don't understand what you said. probably you need: ⟨backtick⟩<div v-for="item in queue" :key="item.id"><email-queue-item⟨newline⟩⟨26 spaces⟩:item="item"⟨newline⟩⟨26 spaces⟩v-if="type == 'EmailMessage'"></email-queue-item>⟨newline⟩⟨8 spaces⟩<queue-item ⟨newline⟩⟨26 spaces⟩:item="item"⟨newline⟩⟨26 spaces⟩v-else></queue-item></div>⟨backtick⟩
. — user4642212 33 secs agoLooks like it’s a known issue: Large amounts of white-space in code cause comments to overflow in Firefox; this was caused by Multiple spaces in code in comments get merged into one. — user4642212 18 secs ago
from linked post: "They post their Question and hope/want an answer. Lots of them do not read any help pages. They do not even read the help they get during the process of creating their Question. I really don't think there's anything that can be done about that. Hiding their post will even remove the ability for most other user to comment and help. Just to be clear: There is NO WAY to make people happy while expecting quality, unless they want to provide the quality.". have you read that part, @IanKemp? doesn't sound like "we failing new users". — ASh 1 min ago
6:33 PM
If you see profit in maintainining a site with only bad questions (and, presumably but highly likely) likewise answers, I suggest you to invest in that. — usr2564301 2 mins ago
Could be one of the reasons why comments aren't meant to be used for multiple lines of code... — Heretic Monkey 17 secs ago
7:05 PM
7:27 PM
@Hogan Thanks for responding and inviting me to edit, but I think my edits would change the intent too much. I know things have changed in 6 years but I have to address the post as it is now since the question is heavily linked-to, canonical and still relevant. — ggorlen 30 secs ago
Does this answer your question? Don't treat closed questions on meta as rejected migrations from main — gnat 36 secs ago
8:03 PM
@Scrattle misunderstanding, that is not strict enough. I do understand the reason for the enthusiastic and fanatic badge. It is to keep the good participants on the site as much as possible, which adds to motivation. And I simply criticise that these badges are culturally and socially discriminating and not sensitive to special days that everyone should have sometimes in 30 or 100 days, and there is little less fanatism if you take out one day in a week. When I say 2 days, you can discuss that, that is not the point here. — Lorenz 26 secs ago
I agree with the dup target, but it isn't marked "status-review" so I hesitate to VTC this one. — 1201ProgramAlarm 54 secs ago
@Makato I doubt that fanatism like this is OK to aim at when it harms some wide-spread basic traditions of many cultures. I just have a clear empathy for keeping-days-special-people, and I have little personal experience as well, though it is not just about me. I still could get that badge accidentally some day without even knowing about it, as I usually work on something research intensive everyday at the moment. To make you laugh, I have "lost" it on day 20 of 30 after I had enjoyed Pentecost national holiday, forgetting about SO. Which gave me the idea of writing all of this here. — Lorenz 1 min ago
yes, @Steve, the badges should try to avoid some evil here. Because I really think it is a bit evil to simply offer that incentive at all, drawing many people into this who lose a little part of their traditions. Call me naive, and I would still say it, and that is why I started the opposing comments at all. It is not so much a game anymore when it incentivises users to actions reducing some basics of culture and social life. It would also be a good sign of SO just to change it to 5/7 or 6/7 week approach in respect of culture and social life. — Lorenz 1 min ago
Absolutely agreed! I have been meaning to post this bug report for literally years, and just never managed to do it. I'm glad someone at least reads my flag messages. :-) — Cody Gray ♦ 1 min ago
8:57 PM
@usr2564301 I see a profit in maintaining a site with a higher percentage of bad questions in order to attract a higher absolute number of good questions that can be selected for curation. — StackOverthrow 51 secs ago
9:19 PM
Since you edited it, it's already in the reopen queue. It will get processed in time like all the other posts in the queue. It doesn't really need a meta question unless you're asking for feedback on whether it needs further improvement. — Robert Longson 40 secs ago
What does "How can I make it only post the notification if I directly exit fullscreen, not exit while in fullscreen or anything?" mean. Those two things read like they are the same. — Robert Longson 35 secs ago
Swift users: Help one who is ignorant in Swift understand why this question isn't clear or answerable in the answers section below... — Makoto 10 secs ago
@CodyGray Anyone who knows you could tell from your way of writing that this was you :p — Nick 54 secs ago
9:51 PM
@JanWichelmann "..Could you point out where you see those stats? SEDE? Or did I miss some meta post about that?" Among others a SEDE query like Historical question grades by week which goes back to Jon Ericson and shows that "good questions" are now less than 50% of all question and steadily declining. I wanted to write a Meta post about this and other signs basically saying that SO is currently failing, but I won't do it today. — Trilarion 10 secs ago
as i suspected a short google search reveals stackoverflow.com/questions/33215860/… from here try literally enter the words you ask in a search engine, sometimes you have to play around a bit, to find the right words. But that is basic web research. And this is the problem with your question, you didn't make any research, you don't show code that you tried and failed, you only present a basic function and ask please make it for me, So take a little tine check again how to ask a good question — nbk 1 min ago
Black lives doesn't matter more than other lives, so why should anyone support it. What i am missing in this is, the hole video from all 4 cops around the person at the ground which is fixated. the short video sequence tells us nothing about the violence, that must have occurred to end in such a holding down. As slong as there are is not muich information, a more or minus objective position is impossible. — nbk just now
Does this answer your question? How can we find all the posts of a deleted user from its user id? — Laurel 18 secs ago
i don#t give you an asnwer i give you a hint, where to start. I simpy don't understand what you want with an notification at that point when your app is closing. At that moment ist time to chekc if everyting is save and shutdown properly. I still don't get what you want to do but at that moment after the click, there is your chance to get busy — nbk 1 min ago
10:41 PM
As I've seen your voting score, I've deeply felt, that it would be insightful. And so is it. I am close to think that the post scores should be interpreted negated on the MSO. — peterh - Reinstate Monica 46 secs ago
But that is the very same problem: you have content there, and there needs to be a decision whether that content is good to go. Where is the difference between deciding "initial question is good" and, "edits made question good"?! I like this quite a bit. It's one of those things that seems incredibly obvious and straightforward when you finally see it, yet likely wouldn't have thought of otherwise. — AMC 11 secs ago
Thank you for your question about this and bringing up this very important topic. We have been taking the time to deliberate on what we can do to back up our words with actions. To that effect, we are having important internal discussions with our employee-created affinity groups - particularly our Black and Brown Affinity Group (BnB) - in order to have intentional, impactful, and sustained actions that move us toward helping to end racism and promote diversity, inclusion and equality in our industry. (1/2) — Sara Chipps ♦ 28 secs ago
BnB made short and longer term recommendations to our Senior Leadership Team yesterday and our action plan will stem largely from the proposal laid out by the group. This is a very important issue to us, and one that we’re committed to taking on, which is why we’re taking a bit of time to listen, educate ourselves, and work to make a lasting impact to the movement, both internally as a company and externally as a community. You can expect to hear more details on how we will take a stronger stance later this week. (2/2) — Sara Chipps ♦ 1 min ago
Side note: please do not fill your question with "searched alot" text. It is not a way to "demonstrate research". If you found something - link to article/question end clarify why it did not solve your problem. I've removed such text from you linked question. — Alexei Levenkov 1 min ago
11:01 PM
11:21 PM
@Scratte Yes. I've been on SO since its first year, and my main account is around 9K rep. But I no longer waste my time reviewing edits or anything. I've watched a handful of bullies maintain a fake consensus about the site's purpose by driving away new users with different visions who would otherwise become a majority and overwhelm them. — StackOverthrow 1 min ago
11:37 PM
@Mark No, that is not what I'm saying. If there's momentum, then it should be used. But I don't see how a small international company can really make a change though. It needs to come from the people and government local to the problem. How can someone from Berlin help with this? Or from Mogadishu? Perhaps their house is on fire too. — Scratte 30 secs ago
« first day (313 days earlier) ← previous day next day → last day (1440 days later) »