1:04 AM
FWIW: While I probably wouldn't have used
const
ant, I've certainly done this before, and especially when the identifier doesn't fit grammatically within the sentence. E.g., "Use DateTime
s in these instances" or maybe something like "You Save()
d the value". It's certainly a stylistic preference, and it's not a hill I'd die on, but I don't see a problem with it, and sometimes it aids in readability without needing to add in filler words to maintain the conjugation of the code. — Jeremy Caney 59 secs ago1:14 AM
@user438383: Me too. I feel stupid for not knowing this, or looking up whether it might possible. I pretty consistently fix indentation issues, at least when I'm on a desktop, and it's a bit of a tedious process. Glad to learn this! — Jeremy Caney 1 min ago
2 hours later…
3:25 AM
Pedantic note, but Russell's paradox would be "a tag which tags those tags which do not tag themselves", or something. This isn't a paradox, and isn't even necessarily a contradiction - it's a tag which is only used on questions which don't have any tags. Logically, that's fine as long as all questions have tags and none have this tag, which happens to be the case at the time of writing. — kaya3 44 secs ago
1 hour later…
4:27 AM
As others have said, thee are readability issues, which are notably subjective. In the edited answer you linked in your question, the
const
keyword had already been explicitly mentioned with code formatting 3 times in the immediately preceding sentence. That, IMO, was more than enough to communicate that the const
keyword needed to be used. Putting "constant" in partial code formatting, i.e. const
ant, was unnecessary in order to communicate that const
should be used and makes the code formatting feel even more overused, although the OP there may have been trying for minor humor. — Makyen ♦ just nowOTOH, IMO, your short sentence examples using "
map
ping" are all the only place the .map()
method name is shown, so code format is not just reasonable, but desirable, particularly in combination with linking it to documentation, in order to be clear that you're talking about the actual .map()
method, rather than some possible other metaphorical way of mapping. For these, I'd probably prefer ".map()
ing" to be more explicit that you're talking about using the .map()
method of Array
. — Makyen ♦ 1 min ago4:40 AM
You think I don't consider what pedantic comments people might make before posting on the Meta site, @TadeuszKopec? — Cody Gray ♦ 1 min ago
2 hours later…
7:02 AM
Answer doesn't get a +1 from me because I think @Answerer that you "should" mention that #OP should post a Link to the "original" Qt, showing their "Research" and already "demystifying" (with some Explanation) why their Qt won't be closed as Duplicate.. (... at least with that Target...) — chivracq 1 min ago
Completely OT, but "I'll wait." has become a loaded and toxic phrase: "It’s extremely rude because it’s condescending. I’ll wait is typically said when someone is asking a question they already know the answer to...". I realize it obviously wasn't being used in that sense in the opening paragraph here, but even so it added nothing. It's best to avoid "I'll wait" completely unless your goal is to antagonize the reader, in which case I suppose it's a handy tool. — skomisa 33 secs ago
7:39 AM
actually at first I had problem understanding "
map
ping" (what? ping a map?) until I read the comments :-/ — user16320675 1 min ago@Kamil Specialists are often the worst people at assessing the clarity of their own answers. It's always clear to them, because they are specialists. However, all of that is besides the point. It does not make one a "hater" to downvote a post. Downvotes have nothing to do with hatred. I've downvoted tens of thousands of posts, and the only ones I ever hated are the ones that personally attacked me or other users. Downvoting is not passive-aggressive. There is no aggression at all. It's just a content-rating system; nothing more. There's no possible way that is can be "unfriendly". — Cody Gray ♦ 19 secs ago
What are you referring to? The edit that added flair? It's described in your profile: stackoverflow.com/users/16714199/user16714199/flair — Cody Gray ♦ 32 secs ago
8:19 AM
Thank you for the extensive answer. Could you just clarify what you mean by
const
ant being demonstrably wrong by comparing it with Int
ant? I mean, "constant" is a word (the word const
originates from) and "Intant" isn't. Do you mean the issue is that const
alone wouldn't be a real English word and that's why it's a problem, so "it should be an async
hronous" function would be bad too? (I do agree that the latter looks awkward because of the "ch" being broken up though.) Or, to use Int
, something like "You need to an" Int
eger for that". — CherryDT 18 secs agoOMG, one of those cancerous features making so-called modern websites unbearable, right after those "originally hide stuff and then waste time by slowly fading and slightly moving it in upon scroll, for every single freaking element, making scrolling and looking for something disorienting and frustrating" things. Hell no. — CherryDT 45 secs ago
@Mahozad TBH I hate this kind of thing, it's a waste of time and on top of that feels like someone just took the mouse out of my hands and started messing with it, taking away my control of the browser. I don't see any benefit, only downsides, so can you elaborate why you think it's a problem that it's not smooth right now? — CherryDT 47 secs ago
@CherryDT "constant" is a word but in order to form it, you have to add "-ant" at the end of "const". This isn't a regular suffix in English. Compare with the examples above: "-s", "-d" (which can also be "-ed" in other situations), "-ing" (well "-<repeat consonant)ing" in this case due to spelling rules). These are regular suffixes that you can add to almost any word to turn it into a related word. By comparison "-ant" is not. Nor is "-iable", "-lication", "-ual", "-ionary". — VLAZ 1 min ago
The duplicate is far from helpful. I propose to use meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/413469/… as a dupe target and that question is still duped against the same dupe targe used here. Alternatively someone with a gold badge could edit the dupe list. — rene 1 min ago
1 hour later…
10:14 AM
This is Meta Stack Overflow, for discussions about how Stack Overflow works. Your question is off-topic here. — greg-449 36 secs ago
10:34 AM
@Mahozad Then let me ask differently, why would anybody want this "feature"? Why do you want it? All your examples of where it's useful actually just describe where it's useful to scroll to a point, which already happens. I can't see any explanation as for why smooth scrolling would be useful. — CherryDT 1 min ago
10:59 AM
@CherryDT Click on the examples link in this page. Also open this link directly in a new tab in Chrome. — Mahozad 25 secs ago
but you did this on boltclock and Bhargav Rao's profile if I try stackoverflow.com/users/106224/boltclock/flair It says page not found is it that only mods can do it for others? — user16714199 1 min ago
It seems a bit like it might belong on Puzzling but I don't think it's inherently off-topic here. It's asking for how to solve a particular problem which is algorithmic in nature. — VLAZ 16 secs ago
11:19 AM
@HereticMonkey - huh, well, I think we do know the exact list of reasons provided by Kevin B above :) — Oleg Valter just now
@CodyGray I not say that someone who downvote is hater - this is your concept. Hater is someone who downvote good answer (even without checking it - or just to do something bad or for strategic reasons etc.). — Kamil Kiełczewski 38 secs ago
@CodyGray I not say that someone who downvote is hater - this is your concept. Hater is someone who downvote good answer (even without checking it - or just to do something bad or for strategic reasons etc. He downvote not because he know that answer is bad or low quality). — Kamil Kiełczewski 1 min ago
The question is... strange. While the question is tagged with algorithm, it only asked for the solutions. Out of the 3 existing answers, only 1 attempted to explain the approach, while the other 2 (including OP's self-answer) only showed the solutions, implying that it's trial-and-error (or brute force). I'd argue that's it's currently off-topic or otherwise very borderline. — Andrew T. 51 secs ago
@CodyGray I not say that someone who downvote is hater - this is your concept. Hater is someone who downvote good answer (even without checking it - or just to do something bad or for strategic reasons etc. He downvote not because he know that answer is bad or low quality). I not say that downvoting in general is passive-aggresive - this is your concept. — Kamil Kiełczewski 44 secs ago
11:49 AM
@TheMaster I did not know that SO prevents accepted answers from deletion. In fact I did not even know that deliting ones answers was so common amongst SO (I'm pretty new & don't have much experience yet with SO tbh). Moreover unfortunately you cannot accept more answers as solution (as far as I know at least). In this particular case the first answer I received actually solved my confusion - so technically it should be accepted. Though the answer from old_timer provided a lot of background info which was great as well. I don't know how to handle this situation so that everybody is satisfied. — Stone 35 secs ago
@KamilKiełczewski Thank you for your thoughts, I think everyone agrees some downvotes can come from people who do not judge your content, but have personal anticipation to your because of your previous SO actions. The point I was trying to make is that removing such answers and reposting them without downvotes was not "dodging downvotes" to avoid negative rep, but a good and responsible behavior for future SO visitors, who would have ignored an "evidently bad" solution otherwise. Now, when haters actively use "Follow" question feature, this does not seem an effective solution though. 😔. — Wiktor Stribiżew 1 min ago
The question is not related to programming at all. Neither the question nor the answers are using a programming approach to solve the problem. The question is totally off-topic on SO. — BDL 46 secs ago
@user16714199 that page is only accessible by the user itself, and while mods can access anyone's flair page, the format for the image flair is the same (
https://stackoverflow.com/users/flair/[User_ID].png
, so actually there's no need to access other's flair page to use it. — Andrew T. 7 secs ago12:24 PM
Another very common example from the Android world is "Intent" (or is it "intent"?). Even an official page spell it in two different ways (I am not sure if the context is different or not): "An intent is an abstract description" and "An Intent provides a facility" (my emphasis) — Peter Mortensen 1 min ago
Deletion is not common. In fact you can't delete more than 5 answers in a time period. I maybe wrong, but It is possible that old_timer deleted his post because you accepted the other one. But if you think the original one is the one that should be accepted, that is fine as well: You can't satisfy them all.(But if you do get enough reps, you may award bounties) — TheMaster 1 min ago
@gnat No. I know why the system chose this question to be considered good. And I'm also aware that the system is sometimes wrong. However, there's also the possibility that I might be wrong. So I asked to make sure that for this specific question it is not me that's wrong. — Bill Tür 46 secs ago
12:54 PM
Sample scroll target (only works once, even if it is off-screen - in Firefox at least) — Peter Mortensen 34 secs ago
This has nothing to do with the creative commons license - that allows you to make derivative works, the CC license by itself doesn't grant permission to modify the original. So this is a red herring. — kaya3 43 secs ago
1:32 PM
I have a web application for that (button "Remove common leading space"), mostly used as a part of automation (macro keyboard). Inline JavaScript would be much faster, though. — Peter Mortensen 1 min ago
1:47 PM
@kaya3 It's not modifying the original. It's a derivative of the original. The last derivative or revision is the one that's displayed. The original is preserved as the first revision. — TheMaster 7 secs ago
Is it similar to the famous find Waldo question? (Ignoring that the Mathematica site was launched about a month later.) — Peter Mortensen 1 min ago
As long as you are not suspended, you can always post comments under your own question or answer. This question appears to be about a programming issue itself, and therefore is not appropriate for Meta. — Ian Campbell 1 min ago
@skomisa Many would consider it rude to call someone out in public for something like this rather than handling it discreetly such as with an edit. — charlietfl 1 min ago
It would make more sense to consider the archived version as a copy of the original, since it appears at a different URL and is presented differently. My point is that we can take it as given that it is legal to edit someone else's question on Stack Overflow - the legality of doing so is not at issue - but the CC license doesn't make it legal to do so, Stack Overflow's terms of service do. Either way, this is not relevant to the question or your answer, because we're not discussing whether the edit in question was legal, we're discussing whether it was good. — kaya3 15 secs ago
2:30 PM
This should be an interesting project, and kudos for taking this on (and I wish more people would, the standard Windows UI leaves a lot to be desired). However, it is probably going to involve a lot of undocumented APIs, and a lot of poking and prodding into winapi, possibly reading some WINE and ReactOS source code. I've read a lot of books on Windows (old and new) and this never came up. Be prepared for 1) hacks, 2) trial and error, 3) your application randomly breaking in an update, 4) bugs/half baked 1980s era C/Asm apis. — jrh 33 secs ago
@kaya3 Content matters.Presentation is secondary. The original is preserved. The point of bringing up the licence is simple: The post's original revision belongs to the author. The rest doesn't. The post currently displayed/the current revision is a community effort. Any member of a community can attempt to improve the post acceptable within the community norms. The edit by OP doesn't deviate from community norms. The original author is not the owner of the current revision, but only the original revision. Bringing up the CC licence and ownership helps to see clearly whether the edit is good — TheMaster 1 min ago
Take a look at the responses to the questions you linked, they are all "I dunno, but maybe try this", except this one, which contains a link to a Microsoft blog which sadly have been getting shuffled around microsoft.com over the years and over time (even though they are not usually outdated). Those kind of blogs are extremely helpful, but if you don't already know they exist, you might never find them. Use archive.org a lot for dead links. — jrh 1 min ago
"The edit by OP doesn't deviate from community norms." What's at issue in this meta Q&A is whether it deviates from community norms, and the CC license is not evidence either way. If you want to know what the community norms are, instead of reading the CC license it would make more sense to read what the community has written about its own norms, e.g. here and here. — kaya3 1 min ago
3:04 PM
This is unscientific but I remember seeing a lot of "here's how Windows works internally" kind of blogs in the late Windows XP to early Windows Vista era. — jrh 32 secs ago
3:55 PM
This video was already raised: meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/413339/are-we-the-the-baddies — Nick 1 min ago
Just like on the main site, please put the relevant information you're asking about in the question itself, not in a video — CertainPerformance 42 secs ago
Any question can accept opinions. So long as the crux of the question is not about soliciting opinions. The answer has to be identifiable by objective means. Any and all opinions are a garnish on top of that. — StoryTeller - Unslander Monica 50 secs ago
4:20 PM
fair enough (retracted my vote). If your question explicitly referred proposed duplicate in the explanation it would be easier for me to avoid this mistake — gnat just now
Stack Overflow never promises to accept any kind of questions/discussions/etc. It's more of they are using the wrong site for that. There are sites for discussing opinions out there. Not everything has to be on Stack Overflow. — Andrew T. 14 secs ago
@kaya3 Understanding that this post belongs to the community and not just the author is a crucial factor in deciding that this edit is acceptable. What makes that understanding clear is the CC licence. I could make the case in those questions too. But this caught my eye and therefore I answered. I disagree that the licence plays no part in this decision. I consider the licence foundation for my stance. — TheMaster 1 min ago
@CherryDT VLAZ has it right; it comes down to standard prefixes and suffixes, which I probably should have mentioned explicitly in the body. I consider these formatting conventions as some of English's fun undocumented rules, like those regarding expletive infixation or adjective order. FWIW, I mean to describe what I believe are the rules here, not to declare them myself or empower grammar police (or
const
ables). — Jeff Bowman 1 min agoReleasing something under a CC license does not mean that thing belongs to the community, it means the author has granted the community permission to use it in certain ways. Editing the original posting to replace it with a different version is not one of the permissions granted by the CC license; the license only means that the OP can't sue you for creating a different version of their post, it doesn't give you permission to put your different version of their post in a particular place. It is Stack Overflow's terms of service which permit you to do that. — kaya3 26 secs ago
@kaya3 As I already said, The original is preserved. Only the derivative works are assumed superior by stackoverflow and the recent derivative work is displayed. Nothing kids is replaced. — TheMaster 5 secs ago
@kaya3 I agree. SO/Community decides what version is superior and needs to put in front. That has nothing to do with the ability to do put up a version for a community to decide. OP asks "Is it appropriate?" The license grants that authority is a important factor. The post doesn't belong to the OP only is a important factor. Except the first version, the rest belongs to the community is a important factor. — TheMaster 17 secs ago
5:44 PM
It is "Stack Overflow" and "Stack Exchange", not "StackOverflow" and "StackExchange" (see e.g. this page on Stacks (the last section). — Peter Mortensen just now
It is "Stack Overflow" and "Stack Exchange", not "StackOverflow" and "StackExchange" (see e.g. this official page (the last section). — Peter Mortensen 6 secs ago
It is "Stack Overflow" and "Stack Exchange", not "StackOverflow" and "StackExchange" (see e.g. this official page (the very last section)). — Peter Mortensen 9 secs ago
6:17 PM
Does this answer your question? Flagging migration should include more options — Jeanne Dark 1 min ago
6:32 PM
Choosing this option does not just mean the question may get closed, but migrated to another stack. Do you come across so many questions that are not only off-topic on SO, but also on-topic on another stack (and you are knowledgeable enough about the scope of all those other stacks to judge it), and also of high quality? — Jeanne Dark 1 min ago
Thanks, that is a duplicate. As it is 7 years old I guess I shouldn't hold my breath for it to be fixed! I'd already commented to tell the user which site (and a starter tag). I didn't realise that is a form for question migration. It is still bad UX: even some instructions to say "If another site, go back and choose Other, and specify which site" would be so much better. — Darren Cook 1 min ago
If you're interested in a more recent suggestion by a mod to fix it, have a look at this answer (last paragraph). — Jeanne Dark 10 secs ago
Whole issue has been discussed many times over the years. On face value it seems like a simple operation however there are actually far more cons to attempted migration than their are pros. Leaving a comment that includes telling user to check what is on topic on the other site is the generally accepted approach these days — charlietfl 1 min ago
7:15 PM
It's not a contest and the only value that is public is your helpful flags but even those are aggregated from multiple categories. Why do the rest even matter if you know that your helpfulness far outweighs the others? Seems like you are just wanting to inflate a relatively meaningless statistic. — charlietfl 1 min ago
7:49 PM
One suggestion is write a userscript that lets you manipulate the ones in your own profile any way you want. There are far more critical feature requests that haven't gotten attention by devs for years than this one that is fairly meaningless — charlietfl 46 secs ago
if you convince meta community at the target site to accept being a migration target from SO I am totally certain that this site will be added to the list. Besides, asking at target site meta would be a matter of simple courtesy, wouldn't it. "I'm coming to a party at your house. What time should I turn up? I've invited all my friends too." — gnat 40 secs ago
1 hour later…
9:10 PM
And now that it has been brought to the attention of the "Curation" Cult, they have managed to cast 15 downvotes in 8 hours to this perfectly fine 30 days old question. And closed it. And started voting to delete it. Standards be damned, helping people be damned, when the homegrown pretensions of our own purity cult are offended Things must be deleted! No one will be better off, most certainly not this site, but some self-important folks get to go home convinced that this kind of butcher-editing is this most important and valuable thing happening. — RBarryYoung 58 secs ago
1 hour later…
10:15 PM
"Jan 15, 2022. New York - Stack Overflow, Inc. is happy to announce a change of name of both the company and our flagship product, to Future Forums (with a space), including Future Forums for Teams (FFT). This is to align with the business goals of our parent company and our partners." — Peter Mortensen 1 min ago
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