12:42 AM
Re "I am not allowed to approve your edit unilaterally.": Isn't that what is happening if you choose "Improve Edit"? — Peter Mortensen 47 secs ago
1:07 AM
Folks, care to elaborate on what is unclear about this question? It might have an easy answer, but come on, "details or clarity"? — Oleg Valter 34 secs ago
@Lundin I WOULD blame those people and some here in the comments that say that they wouldn't notice. If you don't want to bother with reading long answer in full, the only proper action is to press "Skip". I see too many comments that show that reviewers obviously didn't read reviewed content in full nowadays. — Oleg V. Volkov 1 min ago
1:30 AM
Re "the company over the years has done more and more to encourage people to close other people’s questions.": No, they haven't. — Peter Mortensen 39 secs ago
2:15 AM
What if there are multiple good answers on other external sites? Is it ok to put them all in one single answer? — Miscellaneous 51 secs ago
Thanks so much @Michael. I still recall that comment and remember how it helped to drive my point home. So thanks again! :) — Bhargav Rao 1 min ago
2:44 AM
3:40 AM
Given that more than 24 hours have passed with only positive reactions, I plan to start removing the multifile tag from questions using it. Thank you for your support. — Jonathan Leffler 18 secs ago
1 hour later…
4:50 AM
I was going to post a list of your deleted questions, but all of them should be available from your recently deleted questions page. — Makyen ♦ 24 secs ago
5:04 AM
@Vicky Once they are good enough, flag it using 'other' and ask for it to be undeleted if a mod deleted it. — Someone_who_likes_SE 26 secs ago
@DanielW - I stopped leaving a comment when the the user’s who were submitting low quality questions turned around and serially downvoted my contributions were on another community where they had enough reputation to do so. So now my feedback is the close reason that often follows a downvote. — Security Hound 1 min ago
2 hours later…
7:02 AM
Depends. You can try to put them in the same answer but you can also split them up in different answers. The latter is useful to allow each solution to be ranked individually against the other. If the solutions are close and/or similar, one answer might suffice. — VLAZ 53 secs ago
2 hours later…
9:04 AM
It might still be useful to someone though, @TylerH . An answer in the wrong dialect/language might still be a correct and well formatted answer for that dialect. I'm not a fan of voting deleting good content, even if it's not useful (I realise those appear to contradict each other but they aren't; good and usefulness aren't always related). — Larnu 10 secs ago
9:30 AM
10:07 AM
First of all, remove noise from your post. Remove
Update
as this is meaningless — Dharman 19 secs agoI am having hard time understanding if the post you are editing is an answer or a question. — Dharman 57 secs ago
Later I might post an answer with additional thoughts/suggestions, though I'm not sure how productive that would be. I'm not too familiar with MSO, but I get the impression that post would become a hotbed for arguments. — tdy 40 secs ago
10:50 AM
If splitting them up into separate answers, I do recommend making them community wikis - otherwise it would look like you are trying to get extra reputation by potentially receiving multiple upvotes from each reader - there are some people who get grumpy when you post more than one non-community-wiki answer to a question, even when you did all of the work for those answers yourself. — kaya3 1 min ago
11:05 AM
To be honest, I'd consider deleting an answer just for the use of jQuery. I bet if there was a joke answer where the problem is solved by a Turing machine, it would be removed as not a real answer, and using jQuery in 2021 (when most of its functionality became standard browser API) is nothing short of joke. — polkovnikov.ph 1 min ago
1 hour later…
12:30 PM
Does this answer your question? What can I do when getting “We are no longer accepting questions/answers from this account”? — Jeanne Dark 1 min ago
Are you sure you don't have any downvoted or closed questions including deleted ones? (hint: no, you aren't, since else you wouldn't have a question ban, but unfortunately you'll have to wait for a mod to come by to show you since old deleted questions are only searchable by them) — Erik A 1 min ago
It is likely that you have deleted questions still associated with your account. That remark about your activity on Brainly does not seem relevant, the policies for asking and answering are different here. — E_net4 the curator 39 secs ago
Third party content is third party content. Doesn't matter if questions are repeated there. Just treat it as you would treat any other external resource. You basically commented "Solved elsewhere on the Internet", which is fine and helpful (IMHO), but won't help SO directly. SO wants to stand on its own. — Trilarion 49 secs ago
Re: "3-day question ban", I think it's not the real question ban (which is not time-based), but more about rate-limited. (The current duplicate might be misleading) — Andrew T. 17 secs ago
@E_net4thecurator But this is a push that I can feel. In Brainly they treated me even worse. — JakubDrozd777 1 min ago
My questions aren't fulfilling any of the 4 criteria (like rude, abusive, spam, off-topic). — JakubDrozd777 1 min ago
The 4 criteria are mentioned in meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/255583/… — JakubDrozd777 50 secs ago
Why is this question getting downvoted? I mean the issue is serious and I guess that the downvoters didn't even bother to read the comments. — Thekingis007 18 secs ago
Thank you for your update. Obviously, this isn't exactly what I hoped for, but it's good to know that the issue is recognized and registered. — Cerbrus 57 secs ago
Question bans are a rate-limiting mechanism. Don't think of them as punishment for bad behavior. They are intended to protect the library of programming knowledge that SO strives to be (not a help desk) from contributions its users didn't consider a useful addition to it. — Jeanne Dark 1 min ago
@Thekingis007 the topic is beaten to death and this question doesn't bring anything new to the table. The message is the same: either post better content next time or improve existing ones and if you're rate-limited: find an IP that isn't shared with others. meta is not a free personal helpdesk although many mistake it for that — rene 1 min ago
TBH, the main reason I've spotted @BoltClock at all is the Applebloom avatar they replaced only recently. And, well, the frequency of encountering it clearly highlights their selfless activity, especially in editing ;) — bodqhrohro 13 secs ago
I haven't asked any bad questions, and my votes are 0, 0, and 0. Zero-scored posts are not considered to be well-received. So a zero-score question has potential to become well-received and you're free to call it not bad but that is not qualification we use and as such those questions don't add up into positive contribution to the canonical Q/A site SO wants to be. — rene 20 secs ago
1 hour later…
2:44 PM
@JackubDrozd777 - You have deleted questions how many of those are downvoted? — Security Hound 1 min ago
@Thekingis007 - Author indicated they don’t have any downvote questions but they are question limited but that’s impossible so those deleted questions the author confirmed existed have been downvoted. At the end of the day, the author submitted questions that were downvoted, that’s the only way the author could be question banned. — Security Hound 5 secs ago
3:04 PM
I'm disappointed this is getting so heavily downvoted. We want communication, and when we get it, we "dislike" it. This is not a major issue, so it's really not a problem that it's not a high priority fix. — Cerbrus 55 secs ago
If the question has not received an (upvoted or accepted) answer then it can not be used as a dupe target, unless both questions have the same asker. — Andras Deak 40 secs ago
3:29 PM
@Clonkex "tiny detail"??, .Net versions (there are lots) is a pretty significant detail to leave out. There are too many askers who just assume we have been there while they've been debugging their problem, a good approach is to read the question back and try to disconnect yourself from the problem. That way you might notice specifics that would make the question difficult to answer for someone with no knowledge of your environment, configuration etc. In some instances, you might realise the issue yourself and not even need to post the question. — user692942 42 secs ago
@SecurityHound serial downvoting is often detected and automatically reversed, no? — TankorSmash 23 secs ago
@TankorSmash - Often this behavior was detected unless they knew about the serial voting reversal, then they would vote below the threshold, I reported the behavior but nothing was ever done about it (which is when I decided the close reason was enough feedback). — Security Hound 1 min ago
1 hour later…
5:12 PM
Fascinating to see that people held this opinion - and were positively regarded for it - over 6 years ago. Today I almost feel guilty for seeing things this way. — Karl Knechtel 25 secs ago
@Larnu If you surmise that an answer might still be useful to someone else, you shouldn't downvote it. — TylerH 57 secs ago
Thank you for the heads up :) I would appreciate feedback if it means getting help to my posts now and in future — Paul 34 secs ago
@cerbrus I think the downvotes are for the fact that they're giving this such a low priority. It's a bad UX, and people don't like bad UX. (I was actually going to downvote it myself for that very reason until I read your comment.) — RobH 43 secs ago
5:52 PM
"I think you should not hold yourself too much", I agree with this, but SO is a very strict community when it comes to duplication, poor quality or lack of research effort, that is why OP is being so careful about this. Meta is a good place to rid yourself of the insecurities of maybe making a mistake in the SE network. Is this healthy? That is another question altogether. — Matheus R 25 secs ago
@Cerbrus - I did not want to initially, but ended up downvoting after some deliberation. Although it is nice that we have the response, and the reasoning is definitely understandable, the whole feature wad shoved down our throats and is gleefully pitched as a success by marketing, whilst we can't even have small things like unintuitive button behaviour prioritized higher than "maybe, not likely, maybe sometime, maybe never. Noted". It is the bigger picture of the whole thing that makes me (and probably others) sad to hear that it will not be addressed anytime soon. — Oleg Valter 37 secs ago
6:07 PM
Stuff like markdown is used because it's generally easier than making people learn even a small subset of HTML and because even a small subset of html opens up a huge potential for abuse. You can script in some very interesting smurf to screw with people's browsers, so it's better to just shut html down completely and replace it with a limited tool that you can control completely at your backend. — user4581301 1 min ago
Doesn't look too long or wordy to me. Won't comment on the code, because I've developed a pathological hatred of Python I'm struggling to get over. — user4581301 1 min ago
6:24 PM
While a screenshot is reasonable to show where the error is displayed, if you want people to provide specific help, please provide an actual [MCVE], including the exact, complete text which you are entering into the post input/edit textarea in a code block here, or link to a specific post and revision (obviously not possible if you can't save, but you could link to what you started/ended with). As this is, if someone wanted to provide specific help, then they are left to stumble around trying to recreate whatever it is that you're actually doing in an attempt to duplicate the issue. — Makyen ♦ 11 secs ago
6:55 PM
Does this answer your question? How does one find out what the total reputation was at any given moment in time? — Ivar 1 min ago
There's nothing wrong with long questions, as long as they are focused. A huge description of a program with no attempt is bad. A question focusing on a specific error with many details is good. — Someone_who_likes_SE 59 secs ago
7:19 PM
That isn't how votes work, @TylerH . You vote on if the answer is useful/helpful for you, not if it might be useful to someone else. — Larnu 59 secs ago
8:00 PM
"If the other question ... is unclear" close it as unclear! Do not close it as duplicate. Unclear questions can't be duplicates because it's unclear what they are asking. — Braiam 51 secs ago
1 hour later…
9:22 PM
@Larnu The prompt says useful or not useful. It doesn't say anything about anyone else. If you think it could be useful, why would you downvote it? I'd have to go downvote 10 million answers if I prescribed to your philosophy because they aren't personally relevant to something I'm trying to do. If an answer could be useful, to you or anyone else, you shouldn't downvote it. If you think an answer is downvote-worthy, you inherently think it should be deleted. That's precisely how the system is designed, and why answer deletion is locked behind a negative score. — TylerH 54 secs ago
In my humble opinion, the question is too broad. It says "The functions produce errors to do with left/right attribute not being recognised. As well as that, the functions themselves are not working as I would hope.": this should be focusing either on a specific error (one!) or a specific behaviour that you hoped for and are not getting. It should not be about several errors and several misbehaviours. Also, the specifics of the problem should not (only) be explained as code-comments, but better be presented in the text itself. — trincot just now
9:34 PM
10:22 PM
I've made changes based on feedback. On the idea of behaviour, hoped for behaviours were addressed by test code. The question does rely on someone reproducing the errors and running given code to test functions such as add, etc. and see themselves the left/right attribute error. An editor recently changed question tags so that it now contains only binary-search tree which I am confused about as my aim is to implement three children per node and my understanding is that this is not typical of a BST although the implementation is similar. Would you say ternary (ternary tree) is more accurate? — Paul 29 secs ago
An editor recently changed question tags so that it now contains only binary-search tree which I am confused about as my aim is to implement three children per node and my understanding is that this is not typical of a BST although the implementation is similar. Would you say ternary (ternary tree) is more accurate? — Paul 55 secs ago
An editor recently changed my question's tags so that it now contains only binary-search tree which I am confused about as my aim is to implement three children per node and my understanding is that this is not typical of a BST although the implementation is similar. Would you say ternary (ternary tree) is more accurate? — Paul 27 secs ago
10:40 PM
I've made some changes based on your feedback. On the idea of behaviour, hoped for behaviours were addressed by test code. True, the question does partly rely on someone reproducing the errors and running given code to test functions such as add, etc. and see themselves the left/right attribute error. On the matter of being specific, as you can see from my test code (and in most implementations of tree) the functions are very much intertwined and work together (difficult to isolate as one issue). — Paul 37 secs ago
An editor recently changed my question's tags so that it now contains only binary-search tree which I am confused about as my aim is to implement three children per node and my understanding is that this is not typical of a BST although the implementation is similar. Would you say ternary (ternary tree) is more accurate? — Paul 30 secs ago
10:55 PM
@kaya3: Why should I care if someone "gets grumpy"? That's their problem, not mine. — user2554330 1 min ago
11:10 PM
I had a thorough look at your question, solving the assignment. But doing that confirmed that (sorry to say) most of your code in
_searchNode
, count
, remove
and max
is wrong. You surely can focus on one thing, like for example how to make max
work correctly. You don't need count
, _searchNode
, nor remove
for that functionality. Simplify the test case to just test that feature in a way that it illustrates max
is giving the wrong output. Remove any code that is not used. — trincot 1 min ago11:35 PM
Traumatic experience inheriting an incomprehensible a collection of cut-n-pasted shit cobbled together by a cargo-cultist. That's not the fault of the language, you can do the same with any of them, but wading through thousands of lines of excrement while people scream at you for taking too long is the absolute worst way to learn a language. Pretty sure the dude left because he knew the jig was up and wanted out before he actually had to do work and wanted to get a new job before he couldn't use our firm as a reference. — user4581301 1 min ago
It would help to be given an idea of what is causing the functions to be wrong. For example, with count, I feel like surely there must be a way to avoid having to check all the nodes' data before deciding on a count and even if this was the case, how do you traverse a three-children-node? I have seen someone suggest two midpoints. — Paul 1 min ago
And with max, why is it not enough to look through right-hand side when finding the lexicographically largest string in the tree? With remove I see I am currently only taking an index rather than a string contained in one of the tree nodes, this would need to be implemented somehow but even so there is a link between count and remove both requiring correct traversing that at the moment my code is not able to do. — Paul 1 min ago
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