00:00 - 17:0017:00 - 00:00
12:10 AM
"I hope the roleplaying.se isn't still using
rand() for their dice generation
," said the <random>
fanboi. — user4581301 23 secs agoBadges are awarded in batches, so it's not unexpected or unusual that they would allow show up as earned at the same time. It's also not unexpected that someone would complete all of the basic site-usage tasks required to earn bronze badges all in one day. — Cody Gray ♦ 1 min ago
Note that in some circumstances, you may be able to successfully request that you be disassociated from a prior answer or question. Please check out this main meta site post for information on this. — Hovercraft Full Of Eels 43 secs ago
Certainly not. But, that doesn't explain why the first 9 badges where gotten at the same instant. Also, the user is not new, and has posted and commented before. They have 195 rep. — user17242583 33 secs ago
Strictly speaking it is allowed, asking and answering the same question isn't abuse as it can be done with a single account. It becomes abuse as soon as either account votes on the other (including accepting the answer). — Nick 6 secs ago
Anyone who actually had the problem you emphasized here, like me, and used PostMan, like me where it worked but didn't from the site, like me, would probably love to hear that making the PostMan request is the root cause of the problem, like it was for me. None of the fine folks who have issues with me seem to have ever used Akamai or a similar CDN that was misconfigured causing monetary and reputational losses because of it. Too bad StackOverflow won't be there to help the next poor soul who, like I had too, will wish there had been a hint that PostMan and the CDN conspired to cause issues. — No Refunds No Returns 8 secs ago
12:44 AM
@kevinb no, you are the opposite of the problem. If you're making rep points today in your sleep based on old answers it's because your old answers are still useful. Which is great! You deserve the points. It's the STALE answers/points that are the issue. My suggestion would be very simple: everyone atrophies points over time. 10% per year perhaps. Every day, everyone's reputation drops by 10%/365. For a 10,000 rep user that amounts to 2.74 points per day. Are you getting at least one upvote every 4 days? Then your reputation stays stable. It's about relevance. Freshness. — Peter Moore 52 secs ago
1:02 AM
The questions aren't visible to me (under 10K rep). Were they HTML/CSS/JS questions with a literal runnable snippet or do you just mean copy/pasting the code in an IDE to see if you can reproduce? — BSMP 39 secs ago
I think the answer is going to be "Yes" either way; there was a recent question about the Late Answer queue and the response is that both it and First Questions do require subject matter expertise: meta.stackoverflow.com/a/412489/4076315 — BSMP 1 min ago
Are you able to add version information to the answer? (You might also be interested in this: meta.stackexchange.com/questions/370640/…) — BSMP 27 secs ago
So how often do people skip the questions? How do people review 20 to 40 questions per day? Does the question in which they have knowledge come up that often? — Art 28 secs ago
Also, here is the quote from the first question help centre "The First questions queue contains the first few questions created by new users, who may not fully understand the best way to ask questions, or what's on- and off-topic on this site. The purpose of this queue is to give special attention to users who may need to be educated on some aspect of our model, and to questions that are more likely to need improvement." nowhere does it say that it requires subject matter expertise. — Art 1 min ago
@BhargavRao That's a pretty weak duplicate. The answer to which you're mapping as duplicate isn't even an answer; it is a comment, and the question is essentially unrelated to this one. — Robert Harvey 1 min ago
But, the question still remains whether it should be that way. The help centre for the first questions asks us to just check if it's on-topic or off-topic for the site and edit if the question needs to be refined. — Art 41 secs ago
That is not what it says. To quote your quote: The purpose of this queue is to give special attention to users who may need to be educated on some aspect of our model, and to questions that are more likely to need improvement." It goes on to list what to do for each action. It is not limited to checking for on topic posts and refining edits. — Bender the Greatest 44 secs ago
True, but don't you think it was probably because another account was merged in? (I'd have appreciated that said in a comment or answer though, instead of just closing it as a dupe). — user17242583 30 secs ago
Hey, thanks I did get your reply. I am just leaving it open to hear other perspectives on this. — Art 59 secs ago
@BSMP Checking for typos or checking if the problem is reproducible would require one to copy-paste the code and run it. Now, I am not sure how often do people actually run the code in the review. That's why I asked the question, should the question closed under typo come under the audits? if each question requires running the code I am not sure how many users would actually review the questions. — Art 1 min ago
@Art Sorry, I wasn't trying to be like "hurry up and reply", a few mins after I commented I remembered that comments don't notify people of responses without a name tag, but then 5 mins expired. Anyways, I'll remove this and my last comment shortly so we can keep this discussion on topic. Basically was just trying to notify you as a courtesy, sorry if it came across as pushy — Bender the Greatest 1 min ago
If only two people(author and another commenter) are in the discussion, the commenter does get notified without being tagged. You would require to tag only if another person joins the discussion — Art 26 secs ago
Yup, it was another user that was merged in. Sorry, thought that the duplicate was clear. Updated the dupe list. — Bhargav Rao ♦ 31 secs ago
@Art While I do cover my position here in my answer, I would like to point out that the review audits don't care what the close reason is as long as a close reason/looks good judgement is provided in accordance to the consensus and "correct" answer (quotes because "correct" does imply the consensus is correct which is not always the case). So basically as is this couldn't be changed without a change to how the review tool works in the first place. — Bender the Greatest 57 secs ago
2:22 AM
@Makyen agreed, but I already do refine and review posts that pop up under the tags that I have saved(without going to the review). If I use the filter then I could probably review 1 or 3 questions max. I really don't think all the people reviewing 20, 30 questions a day have knowledge in the question they are reviewing. So my question still remains shouldn't the question closed due to typo be removed from the audit? — Art 44 secs ago
@Tony_Henrich There are extensions that can enable a dark mode for you on many sites such as Stylus (a fork of Stylish but without analytics). Having a dark mode would be nice across all SE sites but the link from Jeanne does showcase the problem in that there are many sites across SE and to introduce dark mode for them would need a redesign that may ultimately be fruitless; new sites are created and redesigning even a couple at a time may be outpaced by new communities being created. I would recommend suggest a dark mode on the meta SEs you care about, see how it is received by those. — Bender the Greatest 46 secs ago
@Art There are a lot of questions which can be reviewed which a large percentage of people can say "As a question on SO, it has this/these problem(s) []", even with little or no expertise in the technology which is being asked about. Saying "Looks Good" often requires more subject matter expertise than saying "this issue needs to be fixed". If you have no familiarity with the language, then seeing things like typos is substantially harder and are a good reason to "skip". — Makyen ♦ 1 min ago
If questions which were closed as a typo should be used for audits is a good question. Let's see where opinions are on it. The reality is that the queue is asking people to exercise that type of judgement and make such decisions. As a result of failing the audits you have learned more about what is being asked of you in that queue. That's a reasonable benefit. On the other hand, in the past, audits have been intended only to see if the user is paying a minimum level of attention, not to specifically train users to review. — Makyen ♦ 1 min ago
2 hours later…
4:17 AM
meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/412356/… this appears to be the context for the post — TankorSmash 34 secs ago
1 hour later…
5:47 AM
Adding to what Dalija Prasnikar said, I've made far worse errors in judgement in my life; I've just been lucky that most of them weren't very public so most people don't know about them 😅 People have been making mistakes for thousands of years, and will continue to do so for thousands of years; one of the big problems with the internet is that it's all so darn public and anyone can come in and chide people for their mistakes. So: drama ensues over things that were fairly minor before. I wish people weren't so darn judgemental all the time, or learn that you don't have to have an opinion. — Martin Tournoij 44 secs ago
@ThomasWeller Where did Shree mention about Ryan M and Daniel Widdis don't deserve? Shree only congratulated Zoe, I think now you will be compelled to comment "Why Zoe deserves being congratulated but not Stephan". Your comment only builds bad blood between them. I think Shree only wrote that in good faith. This prolonged more than it should time to move on and invest time and emotions in somewhere. — TheScore 37 secs ago
6:00 AM
@holydragon This reminds of me of something. The courts found the 1912 sinking of the Titanic to be "an 'act of God'" and no charges were laid. However, they "warned that 'What was a mistake in the case of the Titanic would without doubt be negligence in any similar case in the future.' " en.wikipedia.org/wiki/… — flow2k 1 min ago
Practically, they got the advice they needed to get, whether they realize it or not
except for all the cases where using a regexp is just fine. This is the issue I have with these kind of answers: they just assume that it's not a good solution because it doesn't cover all use cases, but a lot times you don't need to. I've parsed HTML with regexp and with real parsers. For a one-off, a regexp is just fine, and often easier and faster. If your HTML is predictable it can also be fine for some longer-term solutions (and may avoid a large dependency, which can come with their own problems). — Martin Tournoij 37 secs ago6:15 AM
Happening intermittently with my all actions tab as well. Had previously reported it — Suraj Rao 38 secs ago
@MartinTournoij How many questions do you see, that go into that much detail that you can know for sure that your solution with REGEX will be just good enough for their scenario? I have never seen such a question. And I would never assume that the tiny glimpse of their program they show in their question or their single data point they post as an example is really all they ever want. — nvoigt 1 min ago
6:45 AM
Said it before, gonna say it again: If you cannot spot an issue with that specific Python question, you should skip all of them. — MisterMiyagi 1 min ago
I agree with "..even without answering any of the questions in a questionnaire, one might still win" — FanoFN 13 secs ago
On the other hand, in the past, audits have been intended only to see if the user is paying a minimum level of attention, not to specifically train users to review. @Makyen True but don't Triage audits also include posts that are closed for whatever reason? It's been a while since I've used it but it isn't only spam/abuse that gets used to audit that queue, right? — BSMP 37 secs ago
You still missed the question. Will you run all the questions under review queue to check for typos? — Art 59 secs ago
Reviewing is more than choosing between flagging / recommending deletion and "Looks ok". — Jeanne Dark 47 secs ago
Code-only answers never are "okay", so that's issue number 1. The python answer... If you'd have read the first line that might already have made you notice there may be a language difference... — Cerbrus 26 secs ago
@Cerbrus: What would you do with code-only answers? Just comment to encourage an explanation? Or do you feel they should be flagged? As for the first one, I was well-aware that it was in a different language. But as the question was looking for help on the algorithm, it offered potentially useful direction regardless. I probably should have skipped that one, as I remain ambivalent here. — Jeremy Caney 34 secs ago
@RobertLongson: Two weeks. It’s been over a year (and 16,000 reviews) since I last had a suspension. But I had several suspensions in a row when I first started reviewing, so am apparently still paying off that half life. — Jeremy Caney 54 secs ago
@Art You still missed the answer. If I think I cannot say whether a question is on-topic, I will skip it. If you think you would have to run the code to say whether the question is on-topic but don't do that, you should skip it. — MisterMiyagi 16 secs ago
IMO, I disagree with the review outcome here: stackoverflow.com/review/low-quality-posts/29729126 - I don't think it should have been deleted. It's a genuine attempt to answer the question. The fact that it's in a different language shouldn't be a reason to delete it - to me this is similar to describing the solution in pseudocode. Only it happens to be runnable with a different tool. — VLAZ 1 min ago
@VLAZ I don't think those reviewers were following the proper guideline on that review. Except for the one that picked "Looks OK". — Scratte 33 secs ago
You flag an answer (or recommend deletion) to have it deleted. That a post shouldn't be deleted doesn't mean it "Looks ok" though. — Jeanne Dark 32 secs ago
"we'll never get the required number of reviews done." It's not about getting reviews done. It's about fixing or filtering out low-quality and off-topic questions. Everytime a bad question is marked as ok, that makes it harder to do what needs to be done. — MisterMiyagi 28 secs ago
I just don't assume anything one way or the other, especially since I like questions and answers to be useful in the long term. So I'd answer "here's how to fix your regexp" and then continue with "but there's some downsides with this, and have you also thought about this other solution?" That certainly seems better than going on off on a rant about how it's all "cancer" like that Zalgo regexp answer. — Martin Tournoij 1 min ago
Does this answer your question? Why not upload images of code/errors when asking a question? — Nimantha 1 min ago
That's up to you. You already wrote it, so it isn't doing any harm to leave it. In the future, though, I would recommend not taking the time to answer these questions until they are edited into shape. @justANewbie — Cody Gray ♦ 42 secs ago
@JeanneDark that's always been the case, unfortunately "Looks OK" isn't "I endorse this answer". More like "Yeah, passes the threshold for being an answer. I've had issues with Looks OK in the past but was told that's what it actually means. The choice in the queue is between deletion and keeping the post (or editing to keep it). — VLAZ 1 min ago
Well, this is just great. Who are we going to get to fix it now that Taryn is gone? — Cody Gray ♦ 1 min ago
@VLAZ It seems that you are talking about the LQ queue, while this question is abou the First answers review queue. — Jeanne Dark 14 secs ago
@JeanneDark: And that may be part of my issue here. I’m used to reviewing in LQP. I should recognize that FA suggests more of a mentoring role, as these are (mostly) new contributors, and thus there’s more emphasis on offering feedback via comments. (Though, when I have time, I like to do that in LQP as well.) — Jeremy Caney 28 secs ago
Language barrier. Maybe if the OP posted in his native language and someone else could translate it there would be less confusion. Nevertheless, I sense sincere regret and a desire to make amends. — Mari-Lou A 1 min ago
From the other end, of course I appreciate good editing to make one of my questions better. I have had, on occasion, been plagued by edits which change the nature of my question, or impose stylistic changes I disagree with. Just be sure you don’t develop a reputation for hijacking questions. — Manngo 1 min ago
Does this answer your question? Feature request: images / links to images of code warning for new / low rep users — Jeanne Dark 18 secs ago
Wait, why shouldn't we delete answers in completely irrelevant languages? They don't answer the question... — Cerbrus 46 secs ago
@Cerbrus: FWIW: I flagged an answer twice—once as NAA and once custom—since it is for a totally different product and operating system than the question was asking about. Both were rejected. I would think “Here’s how to do this in [totally different environment]” would be NAA, but the moderator disagreed. That said, if the question is about an algorithm, I’m more sympathetic for the reasons VLAZ highlights above. — Jeremy Caney 32 secs ago
"NAA" is a different story. It is "an" answer. It may not be correct, or even in the right language, but as it's an attempt at answering, it it not "NAA" — Cerbrus 56 secs ago
8:24 AM
@Makyen for me it's quite the opposite. I read the entirety of the candidature posts, and liked Stephen's post because it showed some "I don't need to jump through your hoops, I know what i'm worth" confidence, in addition to being a mod already — Pepper 23 secs ago
8:39 AM
1. Audit: Even if it's an answer to the question, the bit of text (" We can solve the problem with slightly modified k-combinational algorithm. I'm using python but you can easily convert them to javascript.") could have been improved by editing (and you can directly edit), so "Looks ok" was wrong in any case. 2. Audit: Obviously does not "Look ok". — Jeanne Dark just now
@JeanneDark: You’re stretching it a bit with the first one, no? I edit plenty of posts for grammar. But I would probably leave that sentence alone unless there were other edits needed, such as formatting, since it’s perfectly clear what the author is saying. I’d certainly approve a suggested edit to fix it, and might make it myself if I were on a desktop, but that alone is a flimsy reason to fail an audit, and reads a lot like motivated reasoning to me. (I usually fix grammar when the intent isn’t immediately obvious, or it’s otherwise a really useful answer.) — Jeremy Caney 59 secs ago
Apparently, they thought the question was a duplicate. That is a valid reason to close a question as a duplicate. Do you disagree that the question is a duplicate? The solutions look quite similar to me, but I lack the subject-matter expertise to have a real opinion on the matter. — Cody Gray ♦ 35 secs ago
This post doesn't make much sense. You start with the idea that uninformed masses will just look at the score and vote. In that case why would answering the questionnaire matter? Why would having comments below it matter? And more importantly, how is it anti democratic when it's well within the rules and, like it or not, every vote (as uninformed as it may be) is worth the same? — Pepper 1 min ago
@CodyGray It's not about a solution. The question was marked as a duplicate, not a solution. As per solution I would dare to say that the referred solution was misplaced and irrelevant to the question asked. — Sergey Bushmanov 51 secs ago
Huh? What does that mean, "the question was marked as a duplicate, not a solution"? When a question is closed as a duplicate, it means that the question already has an answer somewhere else, namely on the linked duplicate. — Cody Gray ♦ 1 min ago
I got a "thank you" once. Don't believe everything you read on the Internet. :-) — Cody Gray ♦ 48 secs ago
Based on the title I was expecting to disagree, but you actually convinced me. What’s more, the moderator (?) response to the flag was incredibly poor, and I’ve noticed this happen to several of my declined flags as well. Maybe this merits its own question: response to declined yet reasonable flags is dismissive to the point of being outright rude and it causes me to use flags a lot less than I used to. — Konrad Rudolph 1 min ago
In my mind, pandas are the cute furry bear that eats bamboo. I've never seen one try to plot anything. So, I'm not really a good person to judge the technical correctness of this duplicate closure. I'm just trying to nail down what your arguments/objections are, because they seem to be all over the place. It is unclear if you're complaining about inconsistent editing, the fact that this person has the privileges to close a question, the entire notion of duplicate closure, or just whether or not this specific question is a duplicate. — Cody Gray ♦ 1 min ago
@SergeyBushmanov From your wording, you appear to be asking if one technology is a duplicate to another. I don't have subject matter expertise, but that's not what the duplicate flag means. It literally means 'the answer to your question is over here'... which, judging by the answer at the duplicate, it appears to be. Are you saying that
df.plot(figsize=(3,3));
!== df['some_column'].plot(figsize=(10, 5))
? I mean, even the answer referenced in the comment says that that line in question is for pandas. Please clarify. — Daedalus 1 min ago@Daedalus You may query SO database and vote to close half of it. What I'm saying these 2 are completely different questions (by meaning, by wording, by tagging by anything), and finally, if enter a search string into goolge, you'll get the most relevant one, not a simialr answer to a differemt question. — Sergey Bushmanov 59 secs ago
A question is suitably closed as a duplicate when the duplicate target contains posts which pretty much answer the problem given. In this case, the solution proposed is to "use the
figsize
parameter". Several answers in the linked question state the same thing (stackoverflow.com/a/39770939 stackoverflow.com/a/66638878 stackoverflow.com/a/67180265 etc.). Saying that pandas and matplotlib are different things is a red herring: users of pandas will generally plot data using matplotlib, as was the intent of the asker here. — E_net4 the curator 49 secs ago@SergeyBushmanov I didn't use hyperbole in my question, and I'd request that you not do the same(eg, telling me to vtc half of all questions isn't needed here). Apart from the fact that the duplicate answer references a column instead of the entire thing, I don't really see a difference between the two. I get that the questions are different, but the answer in question, the one referenced here, directly references pandas, and the two lines basically match. — Daedalus 21 secs ago
9:49 AM
Then what? If I choose 'unix' what happens, how is the system supposed to figure out which site you mean? Or are you asking for some kind of tree structure. At any rate asking for more options is asked a lot and denied a lot. The fact remains that as a group we're collectively terrible at migrating questions, i.e. we try to migrate terrible questions all the time. — Robert Longson 40 secs ago
3rd party websites are terrible at recommending Stack Overflow. They, the majority of the time, don't understand what Stack Overflow is about, and that other sites in the community exist. If a question is off-topic then vote is as off-topic regardless of if the OP has been "recommended" to visit the site my the documentation/vendor/etc. — Larnu 1 min ago
@RobertLongson I buy that last point: after all, some are sites are pretty specific. For the former yes, I'm asking for a tree structure, albeit one only 2 nodes deep. The algorithm would then select the top nodes as it currently selects the targets, so there would still be filtering. (I.e. there would be no risk of some completely irrelevant site coming up) — 2e0byo 1 min ago
@E_net4thecurator: I disagree, as someone who often searches for answers on SO, having the correct response buried in the middle among 31 answers is not helpful. That's why we moved away from forums. The question should be reopened. — user000001 1 min ago
Who said they're "chosen automatically"? That's not what the linked question says. — Cody Gray ♦ 1 min ago
Migration is generally problematic, because we would have to know what is on topic on other sites, and many of users don't know that, including moderators. IMO migration should not be an option for most questions as most of questions that have completely missed the site are of rather poor quality. I would just leave off topic closure that would list all other technical sites and with instructions to read their help center before posting question on any of them. — Dalija Prasnikar 48 secs ago
@user000001 The correct response is not even buried. The answer with the highest score gives you the
figsize
parameter. No, there is hardly a good reason to reopen this one. — E_net4 the curator 31 secs ago"which belongs on AskUbuntu" - Why? It's about installing a tool primarily used by programmers, that's explicitly on topic — Nick 11 secs ago
@Nick if I read it correctly it's about breaking ubuntu's system python install breaking some script ubuntu runs in apt updates, which I think is an internal os matter. In any case I don't have ubuntu to test and haven't used it for years. — 2e0byo 39 secs ago
@E_net4thecurator, ok, but that answer is not using pandas, as this question is asking for. Maybe an answer explaining why using pandas is not recommended should be added to the closed q. — user000001 46 secs ago
@user000001 As I already hinted in the previous comment, that is not relevant enough to merit an independent question. Plotting a pandas data frame is still done via matplotlib, and the solution is the same for both. — E_net4 the curator 24 secs ago
10:42 AM
@CodyGray "We don't enforce third-party licenses on Stack Overflow." - uh, but you DO respond to DMCA requests et cetera. Interesting that a mod would post instructions that basically say "you don't have to care about copyright of 3rd party sources lol"... or is the assumption that anything which fits into the SO answer box falls under fair use? — l4mpi 1 min ago
11:09 AM
“I'm asking the community if this is an example of fair/ethical behavior and if pandas is a duplicate to matplotlib?” - Yes; it’s fair and ethical to close a question that already has an answer as a duplicate — Security Hound 27 secs ago
@nvoigt: And I'm tired of seeing this "they should use an HTML parser package/dependency of their choice" argument, linked to the obligatory stackoverflow.com/a/1732454/6419007. The only correct answer is "it depends". If you're sure that the desired info is written with the
/\bBlaBla_[A-Z]{3}_\d{5}\b/
pattern, somewhere in the HTML tree, then it's perfectly fine to search the corresponding regex, and make sure that there's exactly one match. Or you could use a huge XML parser library, with a brittle and unreadable XPATH, which will break next time the page design is updated. — Eric Duminil 24 secs agoI notice another pattern : There are quite a few complaints for the
regex
tag, and even though they don't include any "link to specific posts so as to avoid a distraction", they seem to often be linked to a specific user which isn't too hard to find on stackoverflow.com/tags/regex/topusers. — Eric Duminil 1 min ago@l4mpi Mods do not respond to DMCA requests. We would decline those. Yes, this is an issue of fair usage and also of providing attribution to the original source. There seems to be a lot of confusion with regards to people thinking that quoting something counts as somehow relicensing it. It does not. The original license remains intact. — Cody Gray ♦ 47 secs ago
@CodyGray mods might not respond to DMCA requests but Stack Overflow certainly does (or at least did in the past), so whoever handles those DMCA requests at SO might take issue with your answer. Also, not sure what quoting/relicensing has to do with this - if you copy stuff from whereever else verbatim, then either a) the source must have a compatible license which allows reposting it to SO, or b) the excerpt must be small enough (or adapted enough) to fall under fair use, or c) it's copyright infringement. — l4mpi 49 secs ago
I'm more worried about the things that can still be seen (which shouldn't be seen). — Braiam 6 secs ago
@ruohola I think this is the more safe option. One last nitpicking. In principle your potential breach of copyright is still in the post history, i.e. still published on Stack Overflow (the post history is part of the public interface). In principle one would need to ask either a mod or staff to scrub that piece from the post history too (or do a rollback if that's possible). This is just for the sake of completeness, the risk seems to be rather hypothetical. — Trilarion 1 min ago
Just one example of an answer which proudly claims to be robust because it uses an official HTML parsing library : stackoverflow.com/a/38081155/6419007 Too bad the
//a[contains(@href, "twitter.com")]
patterns also matches "malicioustwitter.com" or "maliciouswebsite.com/twitter.com". It's possible to write dangerous and brittle code with both regex or HTML parsers. — Eric Duminil 19 secs agoI'm not sure what typical product cycles are in the technological world, I'm a bit in a special niche here, but my impression was that one year is a very long time and products that haven't shown to be a success are already declared dead much earlier (six months maybe). The intentions of the company with regard to collectives rather suggest that they think that they have more time available. No article within the first months doesn't seem to be particularly worrying as long as a change to the system is coming at some point. Maybe that's just how development is done and we need to be patient. — Trilarion 1 min ago
11:59 AM
@EricDuminil Does that pattern concern the actions of said user, or does it concern claims to protect anonymity when that's apparently not actually the case? — MisterMiyagi 1 min ago
The page showing all "linked" questions already exists: stackoverflow.com/questions/linked/69767473. It just isn't linked from the page itself when there are enough to fit directly in the sidebar with no overflow. However, I don't think a "related" aggregation page exists at all. — Cody Gray ♦ 33 secs ago
@CodyGray I was thinking more of scrolling the section into the viewport - I've added that to my request. — Andrew Morton 1 min ago
"it was not mentioned that any other language is not allowed" the fact that the entire site is in English is a strong indication that content should be in English. The fact that there are also alternative communities in other languages another. — Larnu 19 secs ago
If you wanna ask in another language, you need to do so on one of the appropriate internationalized sites, as mentioned in the dupe target. You can direct people to ask on a language site, if it exists for a given language, but there aren't a lot of those sites, so the general course of action is to translate or get closed and potentially deleted (possibly not in that order) — Zoe ♦ 1 min ago
@MisterMiyagi: It wasn't clear indeed. The pattern concerns the actions of said user. — Eric Duminil just now
12:34 PM
You indicated an answer that had already been deleted was “ok” and didn’t need any modifications at all. You choose the incorrect option, a deleted answer, definitely needs work. Had you been more diligent you would have realized that first example was already deleted. Seems you should refer to the rules of SOCVR if your making a habit of choosing the incorrect choice — Security Hound 10 secs ago
12:55 PM
You can write bad code in any language and with any framework, just as one can crash and burn in any car. It's just a little more likely when speeding on a mountain road compared to driving slowly in the city. Parsing HTML with RegEx is speeding on a mountain road. Certainly the best option under certain circumstances, but not something I would advise people to do when they ask how to get from A to B. — nvoigt 36 secs ago
You can add
#h-related
to the url (it's the Related id), for example: meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/412678/… . I know this doesn't solve the feature-request, but it's what you can use for now. — Rafael Tavares 32 secs agoIn this case, i think the question is too vague to be answered as is. The user needs to upgrade and they want to know if there will be any issues? Far too broad of a scope to answer. — Machavity ♦ 1 min ago
1:17 PM
This answer is incorrect. Any content that ostensibly belongs on Stack Overflow (or any Stack Exchange site) would categorically fall under 17 U.S. Code § 107, or the "fair use" exception for copyrighted material, including written/published material. Content quoted or borrowed for the purposes of--among other reasons--teaching is considered a fair use and thus not prohibited by law. Ergo, content from GitHub can be used to teach someone (e.g. by answering their question on Stack Overflow) without fear of violating GitHub's license. — TylerH 1 min ago
Legality aside, to publish anything on Stack Overflow requires that you comply with Stack Overflow's rules. For quoted material that means proper attribution must be given for something that isn't your own work. In this case it is encouraged to use block quote formatting to indicate content is taken from another work, so @ruohola was fine in answering the way they did initially. However, I agree it is always better to paraphrase/explain in your own words when quoting something, if possible. — TylerH 1 min ago
I thought the original answer by the OP was a bit too much quoted material, too little own content, and I would think it failed the "Do not copy the complete text of external sources" from that help page. — Mark Rotteveel 1 min ago
@TylerH You cite the U.S. code but I don't live in the US. Is it really relevant for me then? I'm not a lawyer and you can surely post that as another answer. If it wouldn't get expensive at some point, I would even like to test it and learn something. Regarding the attribution that must be given for something that isn't original to the site, i.e. incoming content, could you maybe point me to the relevant section of the TOS, so I know them in the future. Proper citation is surely good practice but may not always be required legally. — Trilarion 40 secs ago
@RafaelTavares Thanks, it looks like it might be an easy feature request to fulfil to make it more convenient than remembering to add that to the end of the question's full URL. — Andrew Morton 29 secs ago
@Trilarion GitHub and Stack Overflow are headquartered in, and their websites hosted in, the United States, so yes, United States law applies to you. However, regarding "testing" it, there's no way to do that without someone filing a lawsuit, because that's the only way that copyright and fair use are "tested" (much like any laws). And in the United States, at least, judges do not look favorably upon frivolous lawsuits (such as those just designed to test some aspect of the law). — TylerH 1 min ago
This is why the entire question is largely academic: it doesn't really matter what the license is for content that gets re-posted to Stack Overflow, until someone is willing to go to court over it (if you read the entire DMCA notice thread you linked under Cody's answer, you'll notice the staff ultimately just ignored it after determining it was a bogus claim. And... they weren't sued by that company for compliance to test it out, either). — TylerH 1 min ago
@Trilarion The purpose of a company is to provide a particular good or service. That for-profit enterprises make profits is not what is meant by "purpose". To that end, the "purpose" of Stack Overflow is to provide a repository for programming problems and their solutions. Regardless, the purpose of a specific post known as an "answer" on Stack Overflow is to provide a solution to a specific question, in reasonable terms that solution can be said to "educate" readers on the solution. It is not strictly limited to teachers in a traditional classroom setting. — TylerH 39 secs ago
@TylerH Sure, the risk may be very low and if you even think it's non-existing, feel free to post your own answer. The part with "all such content must have appropriate attribution" however is clear. Thanks for this. — Trilarion 16 secs ago
FWIW, the "fair use" exception also explicitly enumerates other methods that could easily be argued to apply: commentary, research, and scholarship, if you have bones to pick with "teaching" in particular. RE: posting my own answer, I don't think it is worthwhile because the answer I would post exists already in the form of Cody's answer. The issue raised by these comment is specific only to the argument you raise about quoting a GitHub issue comment being illegal without express permission from the author. — TylerH 1 min ago
Another perfect example of this popped up here even as I was reading this. Normally I'd just leave a comment, but to experiment I posted the correct answer instead of answering what the OP asked. Social experiment, watch me get down voted to oblivion :) — Lundin 8 secs ago
@TylerH I think you gave additional arguments, but they could also just be an edit to Cody's answer or remain here. To summarize: it all hinges on "fair use". And I think I actually leave this open in my answer, even explicitly state that one can argue like this and that's what you did then. — Trilarion 47 secs ago
It's really rather difficult to address this without actual examples, or even a specific theoretical example. I also don't see a convincing argument here that the downvotes you perceive are occurring exclusively because of the regex tag being included on the question, and it's impossible for us to determine that for ourselves without, well, examples. To whit, this question ultimately is just asking users to contour their voting habits to your personal preferences, which I don't think is particularly productive or realistic. — TylerH 1 min ago
@Scratte - Based on the description it seems like the author needs to slow down on their decision making and open the question for a review in another browser tab. — Security Hound 46 secs ago
2:20 PM
@TylerH, there's nothing to address here. The best this post can hope for is to a describe a perceived pattern of down-voting that is based on formal criteria rather than the merits of answers and plead for it to stop / ask those who do it - if they exist - to discuss. Criticism of this pattern is not a personal preference. As I said: My plea is moot if no such pattern exists; it cannot be proven, but at least anecdotally others have seen it too, as the responses here attest; nvoigt's answer paints a compelling portrait as to what the underlying motivation may be. — mklement0 45 secs ago
@SecurityHound Based on my experience with their reviewing and seeing the kind comments they leave for new people, I believe they are doing an excellent job at it. They're always very helpful to everyone. They don't ever seem to rush through reviewing. I've never seen them make a "You're doing it wrong!"-blaming sort of accusation either. I think the site would be a much better place if people would review like they do. — Scratte 1 min ago
Though it's not my area of expertise, I would suggest it's a valid answer here. The OP doesn't give a reason as to why they want to implement something that is considered bad practice, nor do they appear to be aware it is, so an answer that warns the OP, and future readers, that doing things the "traditional way" (with an actual
WHILE
) is still an answer and useful. Though the answer could do a "better™" job of explaining why such practices are bad other than to say it is called "spaghetti programming". — Larnu 1 min agoYou forgot to tell us what that question is... As much as many of us would love to be able to, we can't read the minds of the users here. — Larnu 52 secs ago
Does this answer your question? I have a question about my Stack Overflow post — E_net4 the curator 1 min ago
It is unclear why you brought this question here. It was correctly closed because it is primarily about machine learning rather than about a concrete programming problem. — E_net4 the curator 1 min ago
2:39 PM
I cannot understand why people think it's on topic. It doesn't even specify a programming language, and provides no code. That question should be closed with extreme prejudice. — Leonardo Herrera 1 min ago
@EricDuminil There's always nuance, and the merits of a given answer - whether it is regex-based or not - can only be judged individually. I deliberately didn't link to specific answers, as I feared we would get lost in the specifics of discussing their particular merits. My concern is about down-voting based purely on the formal criterion that an answer to a regex-tagged question isn't regex-based. Again, I only suspect that people engage in such behavior, and my post was about describing it as unproductive, to raise awareness and, if someone wants to defend it, to discuss it. — mklement0 1 min ago
@SecurityHound Note that the deleted answer from the first review audit has been undeleted. Thus retroactively voiding the audit. Your suggestion seems to be to check if it's an audit and act accordingly which I believe to oppose the spirit of reviewing. If an audit uses a post that should have have been removed, we should not accept it. It's us the users who are supposed to maintain the quality of the site. Not blindly obey audits. Ideally, nobody fails any audits because 1. reviewers do their job well 2. the audits work correctly. Both of these failed before OP here made a decision. — VLAZ 33 secs ago
@LeonardoHerrera "extreme prejudice"? Really? It's not a Question about knitting a sweater. And about the no code: Not all Questions need code. — Scratte 19 secs ago
Slightly sub-optimal, yes. Sometimes, an unexperienced programmer will ask the wrong question because their perspective is uninformed. When I answer those kind of questions, I try to first warn about the effects of having rope tied around your neck, and then tell them where to get a longer rope or how to build the stool they ask for. — Leonardo Herrera 1 min ago
Heh, that was just for effect. This specific question is not asking anything programming related: the OP does have an answer to their question about examples of hash collisions. But they want them as UTF8 strings: that's different, ie., "how do I convert this binary data to UTF8?", which is now clearly a programming question (and one that would be promptly closed without code, I might add). — Leonardo Herrera 31 secs ago
@LeonardoHerrera The OP is not asking for converting the known colliding binary strings to UTF-8 (which is bogus – binary is UTF-8 or it is not). They are asking for people to just list examples of UTF-8 data that has collisions – that's the issue, listing examples is not a programming issue. — MisterMiyagi 49 secs ago
3:12 PM
@MisterMiyagi I see your point. Then I'm even more confused why people think that is programming related. — Leonardo Herrera 20 secs ago
Sergey is clearly aware that Pandas uses Matplotlib: he added the matplotlib tag to that question. — PM 2Ring 43 secs ago
3:37 PM
3:52 PM
It is a standard homework question, forces the student to think how a compiler could translate language constructs into processor instructions. Context is king, we rarely get it for homework. Maybe that's a good thing, in this case anyway. Nobody will be looking for that answer, so there isn't much point in posting it. — Hans Passant 1 min ago
4:17 PM
There are no questions tagged [homework], since it's a meta tag. People can ask homework questions all they want (without the meta tag); nobody's stopping them. It would be nice if they would show their research, but it's not required. — Heretic Monkey 1 min ago
My mistake, I thought that was a valid tag in both places. Still, I feel the same sentiment applies, if the asker is up front in that they are trying to understand an assignment, why they were wrong, etc. as opposed to simply asking for the answer. — Bender the Greatest 1 min ago
(I'd upvote it if I were you. Otherwise it might seem like you're mad at Shree.) — user17242583 33 secs ago
I firmly disagree. A little work is no problem. This is Shree's post, and he should get to decide whether or not the link is no. RE-OPEN — user17242583 41 secs ago
I completely disagree with this question being closed; it's perfectly clear to me. — EJoshuaS - Reinstate Monica 51 secs ago
Me too - I voted to reopen it the first time too. Folks can we please stop this crusade? This starts to feel like a vendetta against the author for their actions rather than a rational attempt at getting clarifications from them. That is quite disappointing future visitors with close/reopen privilege that are not yet involved will see this and help it get reopened again. — Oleg Valter 18 secs ago
@SecurityHound: Regarding downvoted answers never being “OK”, that’s certainly wrong. A thoughtful, on-topic answer can be technically incorrect or outdated, but in a way that only a SME would recognize. Or might be downvoted because it was a bad question which the community felt shouldn’t have been answered. (That said, I believe only deleted answers are used for negative audits in LQP and FA, but this certainly arises with non-audits.) — Jeremy Caney 1 min ago
4:44 PM
It's probably worth pointing out that the author claims to have posted it to see how people would react. "Another perfect example of this popped up here even as I was reading this. Normally I'd just leave a comment, but to experiment I posted the correct answer instead of answering what the OP asked for. Social experiment, watch me get down voted to oblivion :)" comment by Lundin — MisterMiyagi 44 secs ago
I dont think who is a moderator makes any difference. the SO policies that they are going to enforce arent healthy anymore. the SO 5yrs ago was different and I think it was a lot more friendly and useful. Now idk what it is anymore. — Boppity Bop 1 min ago
Congrats to the winners. This is not an easy job and you have volunteered to take on a thankless job. We appreciate your commitment and dedication. I look forward to supporting and doing my part and helping SO users have the best experience. During COVID, I wanted to get answer for a simple question and I stayed on to learn so much. This is a great community and mods like you make it special. Thank You and Congrats again. — Joe Ferndz 1 min ago
I don't think a homework tag or even just homework context is relevant here at all. I've seen a fair share of good questions that wanted to have a complex abstraction explained with simpler primitives. There is no indication that the question was about a practical practical problem to solve in the first place. — MisterMiyagi 55 secs ago
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