12:07 AM
@Dharman we may need to wait for dev confirmation that my diagnosis is correct. Of so, a mod-flag would be plenty. — Martijn Pieters ♦ 11 secs ago
1:01 AM
I would consider it an important piece of information whether the answer actually says which versions of the software contain the fix. — David Z 25 secs ago
3 hours later…
3:43 AM
You can leave a comment on your answer too, and then delete it after the edits. — Samuel Liew ♦ 35 secs ago
4:37 AM
They won't be giving anything away. You can celebrate by helping to review some of those 20 million questions. — Cody Gray ♦ 1 min ago
Questions about SO itself belong on [meta]. This site is for programming related questions. You'll find your experiences here will be much better if you spend some time taking the tour and reading the help center pages to learn how the site works before posting. — Ken White 33 secs ago
5:19 AM
"You haven't provided any evidence that might do so." // Yes I did, but it was censored. I posted something that didn't meet the minimum---, but with an addendum asking what details I could add. No one was able to specify any detail that was missing, so I proved you wrong. And then it was censored. — BadDocumentation 1 min ago
"all the other information in your brain that you take for granted" // I was editor of a newspaper, got a degree in A.I. with a good amount of attention to linguistics, and studied law and argued cases before judges before posting here below the limit. Maybe I'm better at writing concisely than you, and you're projecting. — BadDocumentation 32 secs ago
Are you talking about the question you posted here, then self-deleted, and reposted again, only to have it closed as lacking details/clarity? Yeah, I don't really see how that proves me wrong. It just shows that we can't trust anything you say. I'm betting that you didn't argue cases before judges in courtrooms using less than 30 words. Also, you don't know my background at all, so probably best not to speculate. — Cody Gray ♦ 49 secs ago
5:39 AM
Why can't you specify any detail that was lacking from the post, you fucking lying retard? — BadDocumentation 22 secs ago
6:05 AM
@Catija, so that means I am simply supposed to DV and move on? Also,
Remember that moderators are not Subject Matter Experts for every single programming language there is, nor every programming issue, so they cannot judge
, I know, but what if we allow people a flag for wrong answer and 10 flags means wrong answer, or something like that? :) — d4rk4ng31 1 min agoNo, that's not how we use flags - the only time we use flags to get an answer deleted is for spam or outright rude content. Yes, just downvote. If you want to be more helpful to the person who has answered, feel free to leave a comment explaining where the answer went wrong... and then walk away. I recommend that you avoid getting in arguments about it but if the person responds to your comment asking for more help and you feel like responding, feel free to do so. If the answer is downvoted, high-rep users can vote to delete and are trusted to know when to do so. — Catija ♦ 37 secs ago
if
id
is kept, it would be an argument to add virtually every function or language construct form whatever language to the set of tags. — flaschbier 1 min ago6:27 AM
But if the post is deleted, how would the flags matter? Will someone please explain with an example? I mean the reason for flagging becomes moot when the question gets deleted, doesn't it? — d4rk4ng31 43 secs ago
@d4rk4ng31 Custom mod flags aren't always about the post being flagged. Sometimes they're trying to draw attention to other things that may relate to the post but tangentially or not at all. For example, you can't flag a user's profile, so you have to resort to flagging one of their posts, should their username or avatar be offensive. — Catija ♦ 13 secs ago
I updated the answer with why your specific flag shouldn't even be dismissed with the deletion of the post. — Cody Gray ♦ 54 secs ago
6:57 AM
Relevant is the Expected Behavior page in the help center: "Do not use signature, taglines, or greetings." — Jeanne Dark 23 secs ago
7:09 AM
@jpmc26: The burn criteria are still the same as they were in 2014. I don't understand what you're talking about here. — Cris Luengo 1 min ago
7:43 AM
The link in the post on Stack Apps no longer works. I have made a copy of that script: msleziak.com/stackexchange/oldusernames See also this post on MathOverflow Meta: Recognizing identifiable users changing user names — Martin 41 secs ago
Comments are meant to be temporary. And many comments are just noise that don't add much. If I comment on a post that it's missing something, that's useful information until the post is edited and the comment addressed. At that point, it becomes useless and just a waste of space - why would you want to read "X is missing here" when X is clearly present? I prefer to delete the comment when it's no longer relevant. There are many other reasons to make a comment irrelevant, as well. Most importantly, if I post a comment that is actually wrong, I'd prefer to remove it rather than keep it there. — VLAZ 35 secs ago
Comments sometimes do provide clarity on a Question. which is unfortunate, because the Question itself should be clear. Having to read outside of the boundaries of the Question to gain this information is a reason to edit the Question, preferable by the Question author, in my opinion. Sometimes one can even find clarity by which Answer is the accepted one! Which, again in my opinion, is a good reason to close the Question as "Needs details or clarity". — Scratte 31 secs ago
8:13 AM
Does this answer your question? Accused of posting commercial spam because of a link to my website as a signature — Ryan M 1 min ago
Signatures are not allowed in answers, and they should be edited out. If you would also like to raise a "requires moderator attention" flag on one of the answers, bringing to our attention that you had to edit out a bunch of inappropriate signatures, and ask us to reach out to the user to tell them to stop doing this, then you are welcome to do that in addition to editing. — Cody Gray ♦ 51 secs ago
9:05 AM
You are on Meta. This question will not be answered here and you may want to go over the Checklist and How to Ask before you repost on Stack Overflow. — Samuel Liew ♦ just now
1 hour later…
10:17 AM
Also, big milestones, in general, are commonly set to increase by a factor of 10 (1m > 10m > 100m, etc.), not by a factor of 2. Otherwise, it's not special anymore. — 41686d6564 46 secs ago
10:41 AM
I felt that your provided duplicate wasn't specific enough, because it centered on arrays, and the question being discussed here had a string as starting point. Yes, the OP cetainly could have synthesized a valid answer using your provided duplicate, but there are other methods which don't even use arrays. Your dupe didn't cover those methods. So, you either should have added other duplicates, or instead maybe just left it alone. — Tim Biegeleisen 1 min ago
10:59 AM
I say remove the useless tag. The term WinApp is too broad and unclear. We have console, winforms, wpf and uwp for windows application. Also if a question is related to the OS itself, then the tag should be windows. — Daniel Wu 25 secs ago
11:27 AM
because I don't want to lose the actual value of the coefficient, just print a shorter version of it
The first duplicate gives the answer to that. — Turamarth 51 secs agoThe first duplicate you were linked to shows you how to format a float to a certain number of decimal places when printing. It doesn't change the value of the referenced variable, so it's the answer you were looking for. — TheWanderer 28 secs ago
But It doesn't in relation to a Pearson coefficient? How does that work in code? — Pythonlearner 51 secs ago
I try to print this and it doesn't work. This is what I don't understand about how to implement the rounding in this context. If I just had the numbers in the code this would be easy. plt.text(3, 760,('CORRELATION(r,p)=',("%.2f" % round(r, p, 2), fontsize=12) — Pythonlearner 1 min ago
I should be clearer that I'm not actually trying to do this through the print command. I'm trying to print it as a line of text like this: plt.text(3, 760,('CORRELATION(r,p)=',("%.2f" % round(r, p, 2), fontsize=12) But this doesn't work? Nothing in the linked post appears to apply in this situation or I don't recognise how any of it can apply. I don't know how to express this as a question because I don't have the knowledge. — Pythonlearner 1 min ago
@Pythonlearner In your question, you show code that includes a
print
command (third line of three total lines). Here, you say that you're actually using something called plt.text(...)
. That's something entirely different. Evidently, you included the wrong code in the question. — Cody Gray ♦ 1 min agoEdit the question so it accurately describes your problem with the code that you're trying to get to work i.e. include that specific code. Describe the output of that code and how it differs from the output you desire. — Robert Longson 1 min ago
That's correct. No one can answer a closed question. Note that it's actually good the question was closed early, before it got any answers, because this gives you a chance to edit the question to reflect your actual problem. If it had received answers, then you wouldn't have been able to do that, because your edit would invalidate those answers. — Cody Gray ♦ 16 secs ago
I have a fairly large monitor and no ad blocking, yet I don't see the sponsorship information, so clearly both of these theories are incorrect or incomplete. — Cody Gray ♦ 35 secs ago
I agree with this use (wikipedia): a mnemonic is a symbolic name for a single executable machine language instruction (an opcode), and there is at least one opcode mnemonic defined for each machine language instruction. — Stefan 54 secs ago
I have changed it to better reflect the problem to the best of my knowledge. Does it remain closed? — Pythonlearner 1 min ago
12:35 PM
I get that the score on this question is basically a shortcut for answering no, but I wonder if the score would be positive would the question have asked if the 20 million in topic questions milestone would not be celebrated. I voted up because it's a clearly written question about something that seems worth to be discussed as far as such things go. — Trilarion 40 secs ago
1:27 PM
Because when Python 4 comes out with some breaking changes, you will have trouble finding appropriate questions and solutions. I don't know about tagging rules in python tag, but in some other tags it is customary to add general tag and edit questions that don't have it. — Dalija Prasnikar 17 secs ago
Does this answer your question? "This question already has answers here" - but it does not. What can I do when I think my question's not a duplicate? — gnat 1 min ago
2:11 PM
For me, the screen size seems to actually be the issue. I was trying on a private session with no extensions anyway but I couldn't see it. Zooming out to 90% then refreshing made that "banner" appear. However, when I went back to my regular browser (with ad-block) I couldn't get it to appear. Turning off ad-block made it appear again (with 90% zoom). So, I'm quite certain that those two elements play a factor, if not solve the problem completely. — 41686d6564 1 min ago
2:29 PM
3:01 PM
How do I write tags in questions so that they refer to stackoverflow.com/questions/tagged/python, for example? — Speedy Match 1 min ago
@CrisLuengo Those criteria weren't effectively adopted until the burn process became more strict, which didn't happen until a couple of years later. — jpmc26 1 min ago
3:23 PM
19,992,364 questions as of 2020-08-16T152731Z. So it is about 24 hours away as I write this. — Peter Mortensen 1 min ago
@41686d6564: YouTubers celebrate anything with a single digit different from 0. And 1/4, 1/2, and 3/4. 600,000, 700,000, 750,000, 800,000, 900,000, 1,000,000, 1,250,000, 1,500,000, 1,750,000, 2,000,000, etc. subscribers. — Peter Mortensen 1 min ago
Usually, one failure won't get you review banned. If this only happened once, then you don't really need to worry. Just, as yivi said, flag the post outside the queue, and move on. — 10 Rep 24 secs ago
@flarn2006 Then you can retract the flag. (Although flagging incorrectly requires several clicks, so "I flagged because of a misclick" is much less credible). — yivi 2 mins ago
@10Rep In this case, it did get me suspended. As I said, I'm not against that tool (though it might be a bit harsh), but it's left me feeling a bit raw to have been suspended for a misclick without being able to do anything to make it right. — Ruben Helsloot 1 min ago
@RubenHelsloot Well, it's a surprise to me. The only thing I can think of is that a mod saw your review and suspended you manually. But I think it makes sense to unban you(as long as you didn't make more mistakes). — 10 Rep 45 secs ago
Thank you, I can see how being suspended for being overly hasty can be a good wake-up call — Ruben Helsloot 42 secs ago
@Ruben review suspension is lifted... just do your best to not mis-click (although it happens!) — Jon Clements ♦ 1 min ago
4:15 PM
@Glorfindel Well, I've had that privilege for some time now and I can still see the sponsored links. Well, most of the time. — Adrian Mole 1 min ago
You may want to consider adding the [bug-report] tag to your question, after the issues that have been reported in the comments to the answers. — Adrian Mole 1 min ago
@CodyGray Other theories: (1) Info is hidden from users with two names, if the initial letters of those names are separated by 4 (CG) or 5 (HM) alphabet points; (2) It's a bug! — Adrian Mole 59 secs ago
4:51 PM
@Scratte who cares? if it improves the answer, it should be approved. Point. Or do you not want to improve SO? — Braiam 51 secs ago
@PM2Ring the site has wikipedia aspects of it: you are encouraged to fix, improve posts, not merely vote on them. Stack Overflow is a wiki first, the ability to edit others posts were there since the start and it's a core part of the SO framework. — Braiam 36 secs ago
5:13 PM
5:35 PM
@MartinJames We've discussed this before.... You are still fixated on that single point and failing to see outside of that. Yes that is a problem and we all admit. However, that is independent from the problem that good enough questions are getting unjustified and rude treatments. They are separate problems. Just because there are more rude questions does not mean we should ignore the problem OP and I mention. As you said, I'm no longer going to answer over and over again what has been discussed already many times. — Leonard 1 min ago
5:57 PM
No. All questions must be in English. There is a Spanish language Stack Overflow site for Spanish language programming questions. Note also that this is not and never has been a "forum". — Hovercraft Full Of Eels 1 min ago
@F1Krazy I want it to at least be visible given it at least has a highly voted answer. — maxwell 23 secs ago
While the moderators were convincing me not to worry about the question, the question itself has been deleted. Please help me undelete my question now. — maxwell 2 mins ago
@Braiam That's true, but in practice, because of the issue of post ownership, improvements made by direct edits generally should be incremental, and not significantly change the contents. You should not put your words into the mouth of the author. If it's a minor typo or calculation error, then sure, fix it. Otherwise, post a comment suggesting an edit, or post a new answer. OTOH, I admit that there's not much point in suggesting edits on an old answer by an author who's abandoned the site. — PM 2Ring 1 min ago
Please visit this link to undelete the question stackoverflow.com/questions/63433568/… — maxwell 55 secs ago
6:35 PM
@PM2Ring remember, that you grant a license to SE when you post; so I would say that the whole issue is a red hearing. If there's no author to coax into maintaining their post, why shouldn't we delete them when they delete their account. BTW, this "problem" is mostly SO painting itself onto a corner. Other sites forgo the author wishes if it improves the site (example) — Braiam 1 min ago
@maxwell Which moderators are you talking about? One moderator originally voted to close your question, along with 1 normal users, and 3 normal users voted to delete it. I cannot see any comments from any mods on that question, or this one. The edited version of that question is certainly better than the original, however it is now clear that it's off-topic for Stack Overflow, as Ryan explains in the 1st paragraph of this answer. — PM 2Ring 37 secs ago
@PM 2Ring I talked to at least three moderators in a chat room. The question is not off-topic. I have seen hundreds of similar questions here with too many upvotes on this very website despite being a newbie. This is not a nice way to talk to a new contributor here. — maxwell 6 secs ago
I was told that as my question had a highly voted answer, it could not be deleted. — maxwell 43 secs ago
While I requested the staff to delete this meta question, the main question was deleted. Please help me undelete that question which has so many upvotes. — maxwell 53 secs ago
7:03 PM
@maxwell I don't feel comfortable voting to undelete that question because it's off-topic. OTOH, I agree with you that it's not nice to be told that your question is safe from deletion, only to have it deleted, and lose those points (& privileges). Do you have a link to the chat room you had the discussion in, or the name of that room? — PM 2Ring 51 secs ago
@Patrice. Thank you for taking the time to review my post and contribute a reply. But I disagree with you. My opening posts does not mean "people should be nicer" it means exactly what I stated; this being "I don't know much about Javascript and I'm looking for some help". Your statement that "Stack isn't there to answer questions and teach people" is also misplaced. I refer you to the the button which is labeled "Ask question" as well as the home page of stackoverflow where it says "Get answers to more than 16.5 million questions and give back by sharing your knowledge with others". — MrPaulDriver 23 secs ago
Via comments, a number of people have provided real help in terms or pointing me in the right direction, rather than (arrogantly) saying "ask the right question". Indeed one member went as far as providing a very good answer via a comment in an unrelated question which I posted some months ago. — MrPaulDriver 1 min ago
Related question. Even if the tag is sponsored, it shouldn't have the icon because that's only allowed if the sponsor owns trademark on the tag name. — HolyBlackCat 44 secs ago
this might be the case and I accept that perhaps I did not provide enough information with my original question. However, I did make a point of editing my question and went on to provide a good amount of additional information. I admit that I was somewhat annoyed that some two hours later my question was still closed and I apologize it some of later comments were deemed by some to be "obtuse". But, I do not apologize for making this meta post to complain about how my question has been dealt with. Please be in no doubt about this. — MrPaulDriver 1 min ago
7:41 PM
The fact is, my question was closed by a community member, but after providing more information, no feedback was provided to suggest that my question was still "not a right question for Stack Overflow". I have "earned" a fairly good reputation on another stackexchange domain site where the culture is much more disposed helping people. It seems that here, voicing an opinion is likely to result in losing reputation. This seems wrong and quite sad. — MrPaulDriver 1 min ago
Also a bit silly that this post remains closed rather than providing a channel for honest feedback. — MrPaulDriver 10 secs ago
I agree with the sentiment of this; however, I understand the issues that others are bringing up as well. Personally, if I see a top/accepted answer that is outdated I would leave a comment on the answer mentioning that and post my own answer with the up to date information. The original author can then choose to integrate it into their own answer if they want; otherwise, the comment will help make future readers aware that there are other potentially better solutions. (At least if they choose to read the comments) — Herohtar 1 min ago
8:19 PM
I've just re-read your post and to clarify, this is about javascript rather than php. As mentioned earlierm the developer has not not yet had time to fix up the php, so my question is about modifying the current output. Thank you for your time and suggestions, it is appreciated. — MrPaulDriver 1 min ago
8:29 PM
Unfortunately correctly reviewing it now is not how you can get rid of the ban. Consider answering questions or edit posts to continue contributing until the suspension ends. — Harshal Parekh 1 min ago
8:53 PM
Yuck. Winapp really is the old name for windows runtime, but almost everybody used the tag wrong (assuming the tag matches the name of thing). — Joshua 18 secs ago
9:15 PM
@Braiam Everyone that writes Answers cares that their words are not misrepresented. If you want to make Stack Overflow better, use your own profile to write your own words. Don't put words in someone else's post, when there were never there to begin with. You're "if you don't agree, you don't want to make Stack Overflow better" doesn't fly! — Scratte 42 secs ago
@Braiam Everyone that writes Answers cares that their words are not misrepresented, or that they are not portrayed as saying something, they never actually said. If you want to make Stack Overflow better, use your own profile to write your own words. Don't put words in someone else's post, when there were never there to begin with. Your "if you don't agree, you don't want to make Stack Overflow better" doesn't fly! — Scratte 1 min ago
9:35 PM
9:53 PM
There are a couple of comments under that question where other users explain why they find it unclear. Why not address these concerns, instead of taking it personally? — yivi 42 secs ago
@yivi. I did see those and appreciate your suggestion. However, What really aggravates me is the assumption that if you are having trouble doing something, you should be able to ask the perfect question. If I knew how to ask the perfect question, I likely would also know the answer. Seems to me it's arrogant to close the question because it could be asked better (and makes me think SO helpers are out to show how smart they are). I doubt the two commenters were the ones voting for close but who knows. THey were both helpful. — Pete 43 secs ago
I am not sure what you are asking from us right now. Are you asking us to confirm that this question was unclear? Are you asking us how to request reopening? Or are you asking us how not to take things too seriously? The question was unclear and it looks like you never addressed the comments, so it makes total sense that it got closed. — Dharman 1 min ago
Note that explanations like "doesn't work" are virtually meaningless without more specific debugging details like what does/doesn't happen, errors etc and what your expectations are vs actual behavior — charlietfl 1 min ago
@Dharman If it doesn't matter to SO that closing a question feel like an insult to me, then no issue here. I put time into asking, enough people clearly understood enough of what I was struggling with that they could provide valuable insight including one perfect answer. — Pete 9 secs ago
Yes, those commenting were two of the three close voters. So you see, this assumption of yours is completely wrong. Realizing this maybe can prompt your to revisit other assumptions, those may not be correct either. — yivi 51 secs ago
Asking questions is a very difficult thing to do. Even users with lots of experience don't ask popular questions all the time. If the question could be asked better that is a very good reason to downvote it, edit and probably also close. If we think the question has some value we generally try to edit and salvage it, but sometimes we need Original Poster to explain what they meant. — Dharman 42 secs ago
I have no issue with people making suggestions for how to improve the question. My takeaway from the feedback here is that know one understands what frustrates me about having my question closed. Can anyone imagine why I might be frustrated? Am I the only one that feels attacked on SO for not knowing enough? — Pete 1 min ago
One thing to consider is that two people did take the time to write thoughtful and detailed clarification questions but got no response from you. frustration can be a two way street in Q&A — charlietfl 15 secs ago
Hopefully we can help you see that closing a question is not an attack, but an invitation to improve that question so it better fits the site rules, so the question is more useful for future visitors. I understand your frustration, but I advise you to try to channel it in a more productive way. — yivi 1 min ago
I actually do not understand your frustration. You have received feedback how to improve the question, you have received 3 answers and one of them worked for you. What is so upsetting about the system asking you to consider the feedback from comments and improve the question so that it can be more useful for others? — Dharman 10 secs ago
@charlietfl , I don't remember the times exactly, but the is no SLA on SO nor do I expect one. Answers often come in over several hours and in many cases, I'm sleeping or off doing something else, not waiting for SO responses. I have trouble faulting myself for not being timely on responding. That, and almost all the answers made it clear the understood where I was having issues. — Pete 1 min ago
@yivi, this is the constructive way I'm channeling my frustration. I appreciate you saying you understand and that I'm mis-understanding what "closing a question" is. I take it as a fail, yet frustrated as pretty much everyone who answered my issue understood exactly where I was lost and some had very good responses. While everyone here seems to agree it was a bad question, somehow, those who responded figured out exactly where I was having issues. Does that not count for maybe, somehow, my message got communicated effectively? — Pete just now
Well sorry to say but that attitude is probably part of your problem then. I'm only suggesting that if you expect others to invest time in your problem that hitting send and not interacting again for days isn't going to help your situation. You got notified when those comments were made and preferred to ignore them then get upset when people close question for lack of detail. — charlietfl 44 secs ago
I'd imagine it's also pretty hard to not take "How can I report those who voted to close it as uninformed and recommend they stay in their lane?" personally. Two of the three close voters told you why they were doing so (and we certainly get enough complaints when there aren't commends), in response to which you apparently neither constructively commented nor edited, so I don't see why you'd feel so hard done by. — jonrsharpe 22 secs ago
One thing you will find is that many people who recognize potential ambiguities in questions and see comments asking to clarify them will avoid answering. Some however will swing at the fences by making assumptions and provide answers that may or may not be in the ballpark (often are far off base and very low quality). More active answerers know that it can be a big waste of time making assumption based answers if those assumptions are incorrect and prefer to wait for clarification to resolve the situation. Good communication is a must — charlietfl 1 min ago
@charlietfl understood. Though, in this case, practically all the answers were spot on which makes me think they were all awesome guessers, or I had enough detail. For example, one request for clarification was "I should specify what I wanted to achieve", My question had "I need to return a method with that has a signature like this:". That nailed it exactly and everyone understood that. — Pete 32 secs ago
You'd click the "Ask Question" button. And mention the existing canonical so SO users know not to vote the dup. It is not at all a workaround for "I don't understand the existing answer" btw,, the more typical mishap. Well, not for you. — Hans Passant 32 secs ago
@Leonard 'Yes the resourrces can be limited but ignoring one problem over the other should never be the default attitude', well, prioritising problems over others is inevitable unless resources are sufficient for all. — Martin James 1 min ago
11:07 PM
11:19 PM
@Scratte then let me quote the editing page for you: Editing is important for keeping questions and answers clear, relevant, and up-to-date. If you are not comfortable with the idea of your contributions being collaboratively edited by other trusted users, this may not be the site for you. Editing is a fundamental aspect of SE sites. Without it, we would be another quora/yahoo answers. — Braiam 17 secs ago
At the end, he decided to remove its answer because it couldn't have it its way. But on the question its contribution is the highest scoring answer. We are collaboratively improving the site. That improvement can't happen without freely being able to edit each other post. — Braiam 40 secs ago
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