12:01 AM
@BSMP (and Scratte): It actually was announced, though in a "But the plans were on display..." sort of way. — Michael - Where's Clay Shirky 27 secs ago
12:17 AM
12:31 AM
12:47 AM
Does this answer your question? What can I do when getting “We are no longer accepting questions/answers from this account”? — 10 Rep 51 secs ago
Do you need to look at the code to solve all the problems? Isn't this a sign of incompetence? We aren't going to spend hours trying to figure out code without running it. We are volunteering time to help you, so you need to make it easy for us. Analyzing code is hard; if we can't do it, then that doesn't mean we are incompetent. — 10 Rep just now
Regarding question 2 - the CAPCHA is a completely separate issue from the question ban. — BSMP 28 secs ago
As a sidenote, whether you believe someone can (or does) answer your question, doesn't mean it actually can be. — fbueckert 22 secs ago
@JohnMontgomery I saw a +15 gain and saw one of his self answered questions. Then I jumped to conclusions. — 10 Rep 9 secs ago
You only have two visible downvoted questions with -1 each, and I don't think that should be enough to cause a question ban, so most likely you have some deleted questions that are counting against you. — John Montgomery 1 min ago
Thank you for your reply. Could you help me find out the unclear points of my two questions, and then I will revise them. Because the website only said that there were problems with my two problems, but I didn't know where the problems were and how I should modify them. I couldn't find them myself. — yanzhang.guo 11 secs ago
@Trilarion We can't see how many custom flags are being handled per day. From experience, I can say that a lot of those custom flags might take a few hours per flag. — Bhargav Rao ♦ 2 mins ago
Regarding the CAPTCHA: meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/365776/captcha-what-captcha — BSMP 21 secs ago
Start with the feedback you've already gotten in the comments on those questions. You added the code but there are a couple of comments specifically about your program or output. — BSMP 37 secs ago
1:45 AM
Note: asking a question does not entitle the asker to any specific help, so trying to specify what kind of answers are acceptable is a non-starter. Duplicates are also an often misunderstood aspect; it requires an understanding of the underlying concepts, not just a ready copy and paste. That is expected. You'll have a better chance if readers can see the effort you put in, and try to respond in a receptive mood. — fbueckert 1 min ago
Why should it be deleted at all? It's not great quality, but it's not bad enough for deletion, right? — Donald Duck 1 min ago
Note that nobody can see deleted comments except for moderators (indicated by a diamond next to their name). As for the existing comment by Dharman, they're absolutely right, you are opening yourself up to SQL injection attacks and you could well learn something positive from them. — Nick 37 secs ago
@fbueckert Thanks for the comment but it's difficult to understand why my question here was also downvoted too. Is that meant to understand that there's nowhere a neutral stance against abuses? Just asking. At least in real world there is something called customer support, where they try to help customers if any employee mistreated them. Here is a world with less fair/clear rules? Less human? I think I just announced an abuse, so I see noone happy to hear about it, or to deal with the issue. Sadly. Only caring about the numbers, not answering people? Joel, what would be ur position about that? — Eve 52 secs ago
Customer support generally comes with a price tag, @Eve. We're free. Volunteers. Spending our time to help others. Classifying pushback as, "abuses" isn't going to accomplish anything; it's just going to make it harder for you to get help. Remember what I said about being in a receptive mood? Yeah, that applies here, too. If you come at it from the view that you're being wronged, it's going to be rough. If you look at it from a, "I missed something here. Little help?" angle, though, people are going to be far more willing to help guide you properly. — fbueckert 1 min ago
@Nick, I think we're here on META section of the website. So I assume that the moderators can actually SEE the deleted/abusive/comments of Dharma. Writing simple queries was in my original question just a sample (proof of concept) not the final version. And a really helpful answer ought to be "write so and so" not just "your way of writing is wrong". Anyone reading my question see that I asked for specific help about prepared or transactions. Was that so much invisible in my question?? Hmm... Also my question is NOT duplicate because I could NOT find even same problem nor any answer to it. — Eve just now
@fbueckert dear friend, I joyfully contribute with my code here-even in my question. It's a volunteer work to write code and leave it to every1 here. How difficult is to just comment by being in a bad mood? Is that a 30 sec "work" a real volunteer work? I doubt it. If I would change my role here and be instead a bad guy (just commenting against other posts as a moron), could u say that I'm volunteering to the good of others? Nope. My question took me ~2 hours to write + format it. Was that work? Yes it was bcs 1 can see how to build an AJAX query, how to format it with Handlebars and so on. — Eve 1 min ago
Well, there's that entitlement attitude I was talking about. It's...not gonna go well. Do you want to solve your problem, or do you want to insult your potential helpers? One keep you moving, the other makes you feel better, but you're still stuck. The choice is yours. — fbueckert 12 secs ago
@Nick sorry for the harsh word, It was meant to be against me not others. My question is however why noone answers to actual post - what to do when someone downvotes instead of contributing - putting thus a post in a grey area directly even without allowing others to read this question. I am a very positive person so his dark mood just made me to feel something against injustice. The fact that he deleted his abusive comment actually makes me feel good now. He felt guilty so he understood that he made something wrong. Cheers to everyone. Have a great evening :) — Eve 45 secs ago
2:27 AM
@fbueckert I understand ur point. I appreciate taking the time to answer to me. On 1 side, there is that -7 reputation point to this question above. Right:) On the other side, there is a person - me - full stack developer, that took part in 3 fintech hackathons and won one, develops a startup and humbly teaches classes of frontend to interested people. And happened to not solve the blob thing issue. Yes, I created an account to ask here 4 an answer (with a pseudo-name). Which might mean that "everything has a reason". They downvote me for a reason (bad). Wishing them Dharma..."help":) — Eve 1 min ago
Votes on meta don't follow the usual voting rules, they can mean anything from disagreement to frustration, they also don't have an effect on your user reputation so you need not worry about that. As for the rest... I have no idea what fintech is, nor does it indicate anything about your skills as a programmer or question asker, your contributions on Stack Overflow alone will affect people here. And again, there's no need to name names, I'm certain Dharman hasn't done anything abusive and there was a simple misunderstanding. — Nick 6 secs ago
I actually saw something similar happen just recently. A user with around 500 reputation posted a bunch of spam answers with links to his blog, and I and others flagged those answers as spam causing him to lose all his reputation. I obviously don't know the details of what happened next, but apparently he asked the moderators to forgive him, since last I checked, my flags (which were initially marked as helpful) got marked as disputed and the user had gotten his 500 reputation back. — Donald Duck 1 min ago
My comment was not rude or offensive, I just asked him why he does not answer instead with something useful, including code - because being a programmer means to write code not just comment from outside. Other than that I reminded him that here is a website for professionals, where people help each others. Also asked him how to trust his promoted website (some external link that could even spread a virus) as time as he explained nothing about it. I don't agree to external links use here. He was not here to help, only to comment. So I just ignore him from now on, he won't have my attention — Eve 27 secs ago
3:07 AM
@Leonard 'for mistyping one letter of a function'... how is that possible in a copy/paste operation? — Martin James 35 secs ago
@Nick, Reading a ton of SO posts until today, I saw cases where people reasonably asked others why downvoted them. The answers usually exposed either experts knowing what they were talking about, or sad people with personality issues (the so-called trolls). If there was a duplicate issue, the poster received happily the link to that duplicate so he could solve his hot problem and walk smiling in his way (not the case here, as much as I would crave to receive a solution !!) Fintechs are software companies though financial rule-breakers (think Paypal, Transferwise, Monese, Revolut, you name it). — Eve 1 min ago
SO is a Q&A site for professional and enthusiast programmers. It is a very poor place for completely untrained/inexperienced people to get direct tuition:( — Martin James 1 min ago
@Leonard users say they want such comments until they actually get them. Then they start street-fights with the commenters on meta/Facepalm/Tutter that the commenters/curators cannot win:( — Martin James 1 min ago
'I just came across a recent question'... link please, or it didn't happen. — Martin James 1 min ago
Side note: only the rep loss due to voting correction does not say anything about the user whose rep sunk. — peterh - Reinstate Monica 1 min ago
Sometimes, moderators go through and clean out the sock drawer. This tends to cause drops in reputation for multiple people. No real reason to discuss this publicly. It's not a bug. If this were your account, you could see what happened by following these instructions. — Cody Gray ♦ 14 secs ago
5:29 AM
Does this answer your question? Editing misguided questions vs changing their meaning — HaveNoDisplayName 1 min ago
1 hour later…
6:51 AM
Under some circumstances even users with less than 15 reputation can flag. See this recent Meta post. — Jeanne Dark 1 min ago
7:15 AM
Ok, then maybe the median age of the backlog of custom flags? If there is a list sorted by creation date, could you look up the creation date of the 300th waiting custom flag? Just to get an impression of how much work there is. If a lot of these custom flags take a few hours handling per flag, I would say that two new moderators are definitely not enough. — Trilarion 1 min ago
@JohnDvorak That it did "We’ll be monitoring usage and other data over the next month". It's one month. And now they also posted some criteria about how to judge the outcome. — Trilarion 46 secs ago
@Andy Thanks for the link. I must have seen it because I had it upvoted. Six years is quite some time. It's a pity that nobody continued with your work back then. — Trilarion 36 secs ago
Does this answer your question? Can't edit a question due to "Title cannot contain [the original, unchanged title]" — Erik A 46 secs ago
The problem is code in the title. If you change that to classes I think you should be able to edit it. — Erik A 49 secs ago
For what it's worth, that user is the one who posted the question. They just chose to get rid of the account after accepting that answer. Related question: meta.stackoverflow.com/q/397919 — E_net4 is not cute 24 secs ago
@Jean-FrançoisFabre When it takes too long, then I am working on two computers simultaneously... so "few minutes now and then" no longer applies. — Dalija Prasnikar 54 secs ago
ok, so see moderation duties at work as a way to avoid burnout from work, replace it by burnout from moderating :) — Jean-François Fabre ♦ 18 secs ago
Yup, but the entire title filter is controversial and confusing. As this is behaving by design and has been previously reported, I've suggested a duplicate, but if you rewrite it to a feature request (disable the title filter when editing questions and not touching the title) that might gain some traction. However, some users think these titles should be improved when editing other things, as an edit should address all flaws in a post. — Erik A 1 min ago
Thanks for this fix. Regarding "The fact that tabs are being replaced with spaces is intentional." does this mean that the fact that it wasn't previously as can be seen in this question's snippet (feb. '19) was a bug? And while you're in this area, do you think updating the live preview so it does the replacement directly there would be doable? Kind of frustrating to have three different renderings of the same input (snippet, live-preview, posted all differ). — Kaiido 1 min ago
@YaakovEllis Thank you for replying. I didn't mean to say that I've been directly insulted by anyone. I haven't. I honestly appreciate your post here, even if I'm not fond of the feature. I only meant to convey that I would personally have been more fond of your resources being spent on what I believe to be more fruitful features. Please do not take this post of mine as anything other than that. — Scratte 59 secs ago
8:31 AM
Did the post you find ask specifically about C++11, or about C++ in general? — StoryTeller - Unslander Monica 1 min ago
@Michael-Where'sClayShirky linking to the meta post in the comment which your linked comment refers to would've been more useful. Besides, that's for Teams, not for SO Q/A. I can't (at a quick glance) find out whether it's proposed in an answer or comment on that meta post to also roll it out on SO Q/A. — Adriaan 1 min ago
Can confirm that it doesn't load for me either. I'm on Chrome/ Win10 and in Western Europe but I doubt that is the root cause. — rene 25 secs ago
Oh funny! Answering the community question about the 2 suggested duplicates just closed this question as a dup. :P — Andreas 28 secs ago
Quick check: does stackoverflow.com/users/current?tab=activity&sort=badges load for you? — rene 1 min ago
Same here. It's always been slow for me, maybe now it hits a SQL timeout somewhere? — CodeCaster 40 secs ago
9:03 AM
There are only 5 deleted comments on that post, 3 by the OP, one self-deleted comment by someone stating it would require server-side code and one by Dharman responding to a comment by you, saying Comments are not answers. They are either asking for clarifications or are criticism. I have warned you of a serious bug in your code which you must fix as soon as possible. Stack Overflow is about gathering useful questions and we do not answer every question that is posted here. This is not a help forum. I don’t see any abuse in these comments. — Martijn Pieters ♦ 1 min ago
@StoryTeller-UnslanderMonica stackoverflow.com/questions/9201506/… Not so sure.. In the context, it seems to deal with "new feature in C++", constexpr, but it also has general C++ tag. — K.R.Park 1 min ago
I suspect that you are assuming that because people commented on your question, and because your question was downvoted, that it was the people that commented that also cast those votes. That’s a common error and not something that is going to improve your experiences on this site. Please read our FAQ on that subject. — Martijn Pieters ♦ 1 min ago
9:45 AM
10:05 AM
What if, instead of deleting "thanks" comments, all comments would be automatically typed as "comment" or "reaction", and reactions would be distinguished in the UI? 1. "Reactions" should be collapsed by default (even when there are no other comments), and only shown by pressing a "Show reactions" link, next to the "Show x comments" of today. 2. Different formatting for reaction comments even when expanded -- indent the comment itself, perhaps a lighter foreground color. This wouldn't compete with voting, wouldn't add a vague icon to the UI, and not limit being personal or impersonal. — Zev Spitz 1 min ago
10:17 AM
Would there be subject matter experts on the Google-API that are only interested in answering Google-javascript-api questions? Is that concept even a thing? There is also a google-api-python-client, maybe that was also meant for the tag that is being discussed? — rene 16 secs ago
That's an interesting one - I agree. google-javascript-api tends to be used with google-api regardless. Plus, I thought we had sort of a consensus for these tags: api + language + [ api-specific tag ]. For what its worth, I think it should be: javascript google-api — Oleg Valter 27 secs ago
@OlegValter I agree. Each specific API has its own tag AFAIK. I personally wouldn't tag a question specific to one of their APIs with
google-api
and that tag itself is questionable IMO. But a combination of google-api
and javascript
tags seems appropriate for (too?) broad questions on any Google JS API. — MrUpsidown 6 secs ago@MrUpsidown - hope you won't respark one-tag / two-tags discussion :) That said, I also agree with rene's concern - that language-specific API libraries tags exist. I think if you are ready to defend the position, a broader discussion for consensus can be started. Otherwise, the tag can be safely retagged and then synonymized / removed - no one even bothered to give it a wiki (while the opposite is true for Python library) — Oleg Valter 56 secs ago
@rene So why isn't it showing the bookmark icon? It is inconsistently inconsistent :) — DavidPostill 1 min ago
Whether a tag has a wiki or not shouldn't be a reason to keep it or delete it. If the tag makes sense, we should keep it. If it needs a wiki, we should write one. The python client related tag points to a specific API client. If the tag I mentioned was supposed to exist for the JS client, then I believe it should be renamed to
google-api-javascript-client
and point to github.com/google/google-api-javascript-client. — MrUpsidown 1 min ago10:59 AM
@MrUpsidown - well, I just meant that since it does not even have a wiki and you have a valid point of the purpose of the tag better served by other means - the tag could be dealt with without much opposition (by renaming / retagging / merging / deleting - whatever the decision is). My thoughts are that it was indeed intended to represent API language-specific client library, so a rename + tag wiki creation would be a good idea (I would create one myself, but I have 5 pending already and cannot add another) — Oleg Valter 1 min ago
For reference of readers: google-api-php-client, google-api-python-client, google-api-ruby-client, google-api-java-client, google-api-go-client, google-api-dotnet-client — Oleg Valter 1 min ago
It would also be great if we had a reference to these language-specific tags in the wiki of the main [google-api] tag, just like we do with google-sheets and a lot of other tags — Oleg Valter 1 min ago
This is not the place to discuss about, or call out a moderator. As per the canonical on the subject of potential moderation abuse, these matters should be taken care of in private. — E_net4 is not cute 1 min ago
11:29 AM
@ZevSpitz That's also a possibility. Will add it for reference. It's also mentioned in other answer. Problem would be to draw the line between reaction and comment. It's possible but you know, people are people and may see things different. "Why did the system classify my comment only as a reaction...?" — Trilarion 34 secs ago
11:41 AM
@YaakovEllis "From what we have heard, to many others they are not." That's interesting. It looks like there are some people who find content here useful even though it didn't help them or found content not useful that however helped them. I would like to know more about these cases and under which circumstances they happen. Maybe the numbers after the experiments can tell which content is useful but not helpful or that is helpful but not useful. I think it should ideally be both, but maybe there are good reasons for being one and not the other. — Trilarion 1 min ago
11:59 AM
@Yatin Uh... it is a long story... but here are two links that summarize events meta.stackexchange.com/q/333965/313443 and meta.stackexchange.com/q/342039/313443 — Dalija Prasnikar 32 secs ago
There should be two, really, [google-api-javascript-client] (or [google-api-browser-client], which would be more accurate) and [google-api-node.js-client]. I've already seen questions confusing the two clients (trying to use the Node.js client in a browser, for instance). — Heretic Monkey 1 min ago
@HereticMonkey - hm, that's a very good point - and it is officially named that way. — Oleg Valter 11 secs ago
@Jean-FrançoisFabre Like I said, I really, really, really don't have time and I don't like half arsing things, so if I commit to something I am committed and "see how it goes" would inevitably take time (in case I would be elected, and even election process takes time, too). But beyond that I am really not in place where I would even want to volunteer my free time to SO as company. I know that this is not so much "for the company", but "for community", still... I am really far from motivated right now (except maybe for nuking things ;) — Dalija Prasnikar 53 secs ago
@Jean-FrançoisFabre also, I am not sure if that counts... but I was suspended on Meta for a week about seven months ago... — Dalija Prasnikar 1 min ago
@Braiam Thank you comments don't hurt anybody... I don't know why there is so much fuss about them. Adding warning when someone tries to write "thank you" should be more than enough to reduce numbers of actual "thank you" comments that don't convey any other meaningful message. — Dalija Prasnikar just now
and do you still want to run yourself? last time I seem to remember that it was pretty close. — Jean-François Fabre ♦ 1 min ago
I don't think it's a problem if it's not on SO main/meta. It's for the CMs to decide — Jean-François Fabre ♦ 7 secs ago
@DalijaPrasnikar I'm unsure what's your point? You claim that doesn't hurt but at the same time you approve mechanism to prevent them. My comment was a jab for people going out of their way to not upvote the post that helped them to upvote a single comment just saying thank you. That hurts the site since contributions aren't valued as they should be and privileges aren't awarded for those that consistently produce helpful content and to get the "best" content float up to the top. — Braiam 1 min ago
@Braiam Comments don't hurt. Thanks (reactions) feature can hurt because it can reduce voting. Generally it is very confusing feature. Also, how do you know who up voted thank you comment. — Dalija Prasnikar 1 min ago
@JohnMontgomery - You raise an excellent point. Being "moved" is a meaningfully different UX from being "closed". The semantics of "close" are quite negative. Something being closed indicates that it's "beyond redemption" or "unsalvageable". Whereas being relegated to a second-division subdomain strongly suggests that there is opportunity for redemption. Can you name something else on the web that you can "close" - your email account, your social media accounts, your Netflix subscription etc. - which you can later bring back? "Close" definitely has an air of finality about it. — Rounin 1 min ago
1:11 PM
"In case this data will be shared before being acted upon," - This is crucial. If SE published the data, I'm pretty sure that one could apply ~"some statistical analysis" that showed that the feature was not useful at all. Of course, one could also show the opposite, and it's very likely that this will be done - the main point is that there should be more transparency. (Apart from the fact that talking about "A/B tests to decide about the icon" or "the placement of the button" sounds like it was taken from a cheap parody about micromanagement...) — Marco13 just now
@DalijaPrasnikar comments hurt in the same way that the "thank you" button hurts: reduce voting. The site would benefit if we funnel all those comments to their proper channels: votes. Comments should be reserved for more nuanced stuff like clarifications. — Braiam 30 secs ago
Just because everyone has a clap icon, does not mean that this community have to do this as well. I used the thanks feature and it seems redundant. Also, thanks does not have anything to do with the reputation. Please don't make this community an fb for tech. — cindy 48 secs ago
@Adriaan The tweet that the Meta post quotes says "New ways of saying 'thanks' will be coming to the Stack Exchange network next year, too." — Michael - Where's Clay Shirky 58 secs ago
@Braiam I am not saying that people should write thank you comments, I am saying that thank you comments alone don't actually hurt. Having icon below voting arrows suggests official feature that you can use instead of voting. There is no "official suggestion" to write thank you comments. also, I highly question "thank you" comment statistics showing there is problem with thanks comments because you can say thanks for various reasons - not necessarily to thank for an answer. — Dalija Prasnikar 55 secs ago
'we are going to be asking the question internally "does this require a public announcement" much earlier in the process' - for me this comment misses the point and feels like you either don't know the main issue with your current approach or you're willfully ignoring it. Posting "hey, we'll be releasing this crappy feature in two weeks" is a small improvement over "hey, we just released this crappy feature", but you should be posting "hey, we've identified an issue and this is our current plan to deal with it, please give us feedback before we're moving to the implementation phase" instead. — l4mpi 39 secs ago
Oops, forgot to mention @YaakovEllis above. Also, in case the previous comment was unclear, announcing a feature is the wrong way to go about community engagement. Actual community engagement would be to start a discussion about an identified problem and lay out the current plan to deal with that problem, and then change that plan based on community input. All of that should happen before anything is rolled out and usually also before developing anything that amounts to more than a mockup. — l4mpi 15 secs ago
1:49 PM
@JD-Stack thanks for your response. It appears to be an entire class of ads, as I also uncovered a blue variant, leading to jobs from a different company. — Luuklag 59 secs ago
@omatai "But I give up - reputation is clearly a hornet's nest that nobody should ever dare touch" yet again - I do not see what your proposal is even about. My only issue here is that it seems that it's just "I don't like that others gain more reputation than I do". It's self-centred as opposed to a change that aims to improve anything. I've yet to see any value to this proposal. Why does it matter if somebody is still submitting posts or not in relation to whether the older posts are valuable? — VLAZ 1 min ago
After this past year staff should have approached the user base instead of this terrible role out. I dont think SE is listening to its user base. SE runs off the people and the continue disregard sooner or later it's gonna really hit your wallet. I hope you guys do the right thing and remove this than any "thanks" be added as rep to the users that gave an answer. — DᴀʀᴛʜVᴀᴅᴇʀ 1 min ago
2:23 PM
We should be careful about that, as there is the NodeJS client (which is obviously also written in JavaScript, but differently)... — Heretic Monkey 1 min ago
2:37 PM
"but this doesn't speak to a benefit" I think the benefit is already listed: the "burden on moderators" is reduced, so they focus on more pressing flags; human time is precious,, so reducing "time [.] users spend" is a plus. Also, reduced voting is kind of implicit, but you already noted that. I would hope that SE establish clear KPI for features it would like to launch and that those KPI are aligned with the objectives. — Braiam 31 secs ago
If someone can't agree to the Moderator's agreement, then that would disqualify them from being a moderator by default. So, the question would be whether or not if someone would resign if a change to the policy conflicted with their own beliefs, and that's...not something that I would expect a candidate to be able to answer before such a change lands. — Makoto 1 min ago
@Braiam: Moderators have to deal with the burden of comments period, since they're not moderatable by anyone else. Just saying that it "reduces burden" without specifying what it's reducing doesn't directly address the issue. — Makoto 12 secs ago
I have problem to understand the reason of this new post. Is it "lets switch from that downvoted thread to a new one and continue"? So naive. So wrong. — Sinatr 31 secs ago
3:05 PM
Yes, but I think there's far less drama around "The algorithm decided my comment was a reaction!" vs. "A user / moderator / other annoying person went ahead and deleted my comments, because they were personal!" And it still looks that way even if deleted automatically. — Zev Spitz 19 secs ago
3:21 PM
@DalijaPrasnikar Compile, nuke. Compile, nuke. Coffee, critique. Tea, essay. French intellectual: Jean-François Fabre; Croatian intellectual: Dalija Prasnikar... Perfect!! (Honestly Dalija, it's obvious woman are currently underrepresented among SO mods, it's been widely concluded balanced representation is extremely beneficial - for everyone. Either you or another candidate, it would be something to look forward to. I'm certain on a personal level you would be an excellent mod.) So I'm with Jean-François in his line of argument. — bad_coder just now
3:47 PM
@DalijaPrasnikar I was explicitly told to do that. Editing would mean basically re-answering all of the many thousands of questions, that's a ton of effort. Deleting is not allowed, according to people on Meta. Downvoting is the only thing left that doesn't take months out of my life for every Minecraft update. And some answers don't even have to be updated, because the question is no longer relevant, because there's now a built-in way to do it. — Fabian Röling 8 secs ago
As polygot working across a handful of established tags (
python
, pandas
, r
, php
, sql
, xml
, xslt
, vba
), I have not once seen any use of this new feature. In fact, many tags have a challenge of few upvotes simply due to audience levels as you know @ErikA in ms-access
. Thanks comments only come with very popular answers with 500+ upvotes from many years ago. For very new questions on SO with small view counts, random visitors or lurkers beyond OP will likely not use this feature. — Parfait 37 secs agoI mean the trivial answer to your 'problem' (well the one expounded on in your answer) is that we the old guard have a duty to welcome those new to the platform, and so to frame bad questions as 'rude' absolves us from the care required to turn these users into valued community members. However dismissive answers from the old guard are rude and add to the exclusive and exclusionary atmosphere. Also the type of 'clever' in your answer is off-putting to many. — Loofer 59 secs ago
I just got banned when the consensus was
Requires Editing
. I am aware that Requires Editing
implies "for questions that you can
make clear and answerable by editing." The term can
is generally deemed to mean something is optional- not mandatory. If you require the reviewer to actually edit the question, the definition of Requires Editing
should be improved to use the correct term. — fpmurphy 6 secs ago@FabianRöling That is wrong. If there is such problem with Minecraft, then you (not you personally) should have additional tag versions so Q/A pairs for old versions can be more easily discarded when searching for solutions without invalidating posts that were valid at the time of posting, and may still be valid for old versions. — Dalija Prasnikar 28 secs ago
I just got banned when the consensus was
Requires Editing
. I am aware that Requires Editing
implies "for questions that you can
make clear and answerable by editing." The term can
is generally deemed to mean something is optional, not mandatory, i.e. that you are able to make the question answerable by editing. I could have made the question answerable by editing but choose not to due to term can
. If you require the reviewer to actually edit the question, the definition of Requires Editing
should be improved to use the correct term. — fpmurphy 1 min ago@CodyGray actually that wouldn't necessarily be such a bad idea. It's not really (or at least it shouldn't be) about wanting to insult the poster, it's about expressing frustration and a downvote doesn't do that properly. If it were invisible to the poster, the downvotes and close votes would still do their job, but you'd get an additional "damn you!" button to let you vent without telling the poster to do unsanitary things... — Kayaman 1 min ago
The "officially named" link you provided (developers.google.com/sheets/api/quickstart/js) is about the Google Sheets API which is another thing. The main JS API client is Google API Client Library for JavaScript which should be
google-api-javascript-client
if we keep the same naming convention. — MrUpsidown 1 min ago@OlegValter agreed and I'll be happy to do it once we have done the proposed changes. — MrUpsidown 1 min ago
5:15 PM
5:43 PM
we could certainly use a woman as a moderator. Since Yvette left, it's not the same ... — Jean-François Fabre ♦ 1 min ago
@Makoto, Do you mean this agreement? I ask because there is really nothing in there (or the Terms of Service) that says anything about openly disagreeing with StackExchange policy. But there have been problems with moderators when such disagreements, and their handling, have come to light. This is one of my biggest concerns about becoming a moderator myself, and I think it's reasonable that any future moderator give us their opinion on this. It's directly relevant considering recent events. — ouflak 1 min ago
Do you genuinely believe that a moderator's job is (in part) to "bring back happiness to the community and motivate them to do more moderation tasks?" — Robert Harvey 1 min ago
"...and that the folks you think have your back may at any point turn against you?" -- Wow, that sort of hits home. — Robert Harvey 24 secs ago
6:07 PM
Since the "Thanks" feature offers no benefit to the poster, why bother restricting me from thanking myself? If my past self posted an answer that current me appreciates, I should be able to offer a thanks. — David Starkey 1 min ago
6:25 PM
@JD-Stack, yes I mentioned that I use the responsive design (which is the design that will become the standard design in the future in favour of the mobile design) on a mobile device. — Luuklag 41 secs ago
6:43 PM
They probably don't want to be accused of invoking a Meta (like) effect on whatever question they tweet out. I don't get the feeling that the discussion around voting is as fraught elsewhere on the network. I've seen complaints about close votes at The Workplace's Meta but not regular up and down votes for example. — BSMP 1 min ago
7:29 PM
Should the new moderator "...motivate them to do more moderation tasks..."? Like you said we're in a pandemic. Should the new moderator even consider suggesting that users who have lost income, caring for at risk family, etc. should be doing more moderation on the site? — BSMP 11 secs ago
Asking "why feature X does not exist" is generally too broad/opinion based even for meta. I'm very confused about this question - if you can't come up with even a single reason for the feature to exist why are you asking why the feature doesn't exist? It is rare when a non-trivial feature just get implemented when no one had any reasons for it. You may want to check docs.microsoft.com/en-us/archive/blogs/ericgu/minus-100-points ... — Alexei Levenkov 37 secs ago
A moderator can certainly do that, @RobertHarvey. For example, when we started working on tag cleanups, there were a handful of interested users. At the end of it, a lot of new users did join in to help weed out bad tags. — Bhargav Rao ♦ 1 min ago
Don't see any problems with it now... Likely some temporary issue... We probably should start new one if it happens again. — Alexei Levenkov 1 min ago
The feature does exist @AlexeiLevenkov, several Stack Exchange sites have twitter accounts. The question asks why it isn't turned on for Stack Overflow. — yannis 8 secs ago
I remember recently one user's rep dropped significantly and they asked what happened - turned out some unrelated voting ring used that user's account to dump a lot of "See, I vote honestly on good content, not just my ring" votes on that user's content (the user had high enough reputation so likely for the ring it was ok to blindly assume all they content was good and upvotes don't look suspicious). Indeed all that rep was gone as result of the cleanup... I have no idea if that what happened to the user in question - just wanted to point out that rep drop != vote fraud by account owner. — Alexei Levenkov 1 min ago
8:15 PM
@Loofer what duty? Why should skilled and experienced developers waste their volunteered time on unresearched, no-effort questions in the, usually vain, hope that, amongst the hordes of homework vamps, the odd one or two might want more than to hand in someone else's work on monday morning? I, for one, will stick with plan 'A': answering good questions and downvoting the bad. — Martin James 58 secs ago
8:27 PM
..and OP's will not be getting dismissive answers from me - I rarely answer now anyway. If I see an answer, or can hint at one, to a sub-prime question, I just comment it, (I don't want or need rep from cucumber answers. If anyone thinks I am rude, exclusive and/or exclusionary, that's not my problem. — Martin James 55 secs ago
I don't think it's neatnikism. I think there's a business reason this feature has been written, and the attempt at justification is falling flat. — Michael - Where's Clay Shirky 1 min ago
@AlexeiLevenkov The "feature" was launched back in 2011. Then the SOFU trilogy was not included but nowadays SF and SU have their Twitter accounts - bots. Do you know if this "feature" was discussed before? — Rubén 11 secs ago
I have made constructive suggestions in the past. One, for example, is to display the language FAQ wiki to new-account question posters who submit a question with a language tag, together with 'Are you sure that your question is not covered by these FAQ?'. If covered, many will post anyway, but they cannot then moan about getting heavily downvoted. — Martin James 58 secs ago
I can see an argument for not merging [[android-jetpack-hilt]](developer.android.com/training/dependency-injection/…), especially now that it's being used correctly, but the rest are definitely synonyms. — Nitrodon just now
@gnat While you and I would both like to see somebody standing up for the community and pushing back against bad policies, I feel like we're not the ones in control here, we're just along for the ride. Besides, I don't think moderators were ever intended to have that level of sway on management. We can shout all we like, but we cannot remove the cotton from their ears. — cs95 1 min ago
"Thank you" and other comments that go outside of the stated purpose of comments distract from the comments that provide additional information or that discuss the content itself. Such comments can be quite important, and distracting from them undermines the very purpose of comments. So we should certainly not just "stop minding" such comments. That said, I do think this feature is a terrible way to try to address that problem. — NotThatGuy 22 secs ago
@Shog9 As you well know, that is precisely what we have been doing for many years... It's worked well so far. Deleting a "thanks" comment that has outlived its usefulness is really not that big of a deal, and creates a lot less work for moderators than nonsense like this, which can be easily abused. Furthermore, even if a handful of "thanks" comments get missed, there is absolutely no harm whatsoever done. — Cody Gray ♦ 31 secs ago
The problem with "just flag the user" is that moderators will only see that one comment that you flagged, and in isolation it might be a totally reasonable comment. — Timmmm 49 secs ago
9:27 PM
@NotThatGuy Then let's also rid of profile pictures, as they have nothing to do with "content". And dark mode, since it's only cosmetic and adds nothing to raw information. And hot network questions, as they have literally nothing to do with the Q&A. And move profile icon next to question tags so it takes up less vertical space ... because who needs simple and minimal things that enrich site experience anyway, we're all just text-scraping bots here. — OverLordGoldDragon just now
9:45 PM
quoting the old question and explaining it doesn't answer your question is also a good idea to avoid FFGITW dupe closes — Jean-François Fabre ♦ 1 min ago
@OverLordGoldDragon Appealing to extremes is a logical fallacy. If you can't see the value of not hiding the comment you're looking for among 50 other comments that don't add anything to the post, then we have very different ideas of what the purpose of Stack Overflow is or what comments are for (or at least how they're used, because useful information from comments really should make their way into posts, but this doesn't happen all that often). — NotThatGuy 1 min ago
@NotThatGuy These comments might be distracting from the original purpose of comments, but they help to keep users in a good mood, resulting in friendlier responses, more patience and especially on smaller sites or tags with a small number of users, they help to create a community. — samcarter_is_at_topanswers.xyz 1 min ago
@TylerH The subject is close but not the same: it was about a misuse of terms. My question was phrased like it assumes a behavior which wasn't. Due to an unexpected negative ErrorLevel, I closed my mind on thining the command touches a variable rather than setting a internal error level. Btw the answerer doesn't provide a real solution, it tells about the struggle about finding a "good" editing, IMHO. — Amessihel 2 mins ago
@OverLordGoldDragon Also, I said this is a problem, I didn't say we should just get rid of these comments. In fact, I quite clearly said there may be ways to fix the problem without getting rid of such comments. So you seem to be putting words in my mouth. — NotThatGuy 58 secs ago
10:13 PM
10:29 PM
You can read it as self-centered, but that's your choice. I offered it 100% as a change that aims to improve something. The specific something is referenced directly to what the FAQ says that reputation is supposed to be about - convincing your peers. So far, literally everyone has ignored this pivotal fact. Being wilfully blind to that fact is also a choice - I would say that's where the selfishness lies here. Nothing I advocated would have had any effect at all on the signal of reputation, only on the noise. Please try reading what I wrote, not what you think I wrote. — omatai 28 secs ago
I would also add: what types of question should I downvote and "react" to? .. (no it's not a joke, maybe someone wrote a detailed answer but at the end it's completely wrong) — Temani Afif 7 secs ago
11:17 PM
@HaveNoDisplayName The subject is close but not the same: the question you linked is about a misuse of terms. My question was phrased like it assumes a behavior which wasn't. Due to an unexpected negative ErrorLevel, I closed my mind on thining the command touches a variable rather than setting a internal error level. Btw the answerer doesn't provide a real solution, it tells about the struggle about finding a "good" editing, IMHO. — Amessihel 1 min ago
11:59 PM
The [google-maps-direction-api] does not appear to be a synonym of the [google-directions-api] tag. Are you proposing that it be created as one? What is the difference between these two tags? This request isn't entirely clear to me. — Cody Gray ♦ 25 secs ago
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