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7:14 PM
Your flag was likely declined because 3 users with sufficient rep have reviewed the post in the Close Votes review queue and chose to "Leave it open". — 41686d6564 28 secs ago
Beat me to it. Frustratingly JavaScript allows you to create a new Date object that is complete nonsense. The second question should never have needed to be asked if JavaScript threw an error properly when attempting to construct a Date object with invalid data. — Greg Burghardt 1 min ago
@ThomasWeller Congratulations. You basically wrote an Article and that is probably what Articles should be used for (and a lot of Q&A should be closed as covered by a canonical article), but I'm not sure we are there yet with Articles, unfortunately. The company has decided to lock the idea within Collectives. — Trilarion 1 min ago
"The titles are different but they are effectively asking the same question and their answers solve both problems." no. You can do analysis of a string without using the Date object. Parsing as Date is only one solution, not all of the solutions — VLAZ 58 secs ago
"My flag was declined by one gold-badge user." no, that's not actually a thing that can happen. — VLAZ 37 secs ago
@Trilarion: indeed, this felt more like writing a blog post than a Stack Overflow answer. I don't care about that, but let's see what the community thinks about it. — Thomas Weller 19 secs ago
"6 users (including me) agree." - 6 users... in the last 6 years, when over 400 thousand people have viewed the page. — Nick 42 secs ago
@TadeuszKopec: asking that question will probably attract an answer like "Yes, it already exists in nature!" followed by a citation about some species of animal (non-human) that already does this, which is followed by another example of homo sapiens trying this and failing miserably (perhaps even being the cause of a large historically significant war). — Greg Burghardt 28 secs ago
7:34 PM
well, yes, it's asking why one exists, in the context of why do we need both of them, which is effectively what are the differences between them. — Kevin B 54 secs ago
@akrun I was confused by that too. In the answer summary it now shows the number of votes of the question on which you posted an answer and not the points of your actual answer. Only when you go to "view all ... answers" do you actually see the vote counts for your answers, which is clearly very unintuitive. — Bas van der Linden 1 min ago
@BasvanderLinden Yes, after going through it multiple times, I also felt like that. Anyway, it is not a user-friendly design. Summary page in essence should give a snapshot, instead it is becoming very difficult to understand what is going on. — akrun 52 secs ago
One is asking what the difference between them are, the other is asking "why does this exist?", which isn't really about the differences, but about why the language has it. Someone versed in the language might be able to intuit the second's answer from the first, or not .. I suspect not, but I'm not sure. — Anon Coward 42 secs ago
@AnonCoward the question asking "why does
null
exist" goes on to ask for the difference between null
and undefined
in the body — Aryan Beezadhur 37 secs ago@KevinB so would adding a "similar question here" notice in the question body be better? — Aryan Beezadhur 1 min ago
8:19 PM
@KevinB No, and I won't. I have no intention of mainly using SO on mobile, and that is why I don't like this design. — cocomac 41 secs ago
@ErikA - You can run their example code, but that code isn't the problem they encountered. They encountered the situation where they observed their code being outperformed and posted a question about it. That original problem, and situation, are not reproducible, because the premise of the question was incorrect itself. — Travis J 1 min ago
Sorry, i should have labeled that as satire, but felt it'd be more fun without — Kevin B 39 secs ago
8:52 PM
9:12 PM
So what do you propose should be shown in the red areas? I think the way empty profiles look is the least of concerns. — idmean 47 secs ago
So TL;DR my question was asked on the wrong site; the flagged question was of relatively low quality as-asked, failing criterion 3), yes? — Joshua Voskamp 33 secs ago
"the flagged question was of relatively low quality as-asked, failing criterion 3), yes?" - I would say so — Nick 43 secs ago
@computercarguy Try @nbk's
Activity
tab. The topmost answer actually displays the question, yet they look identical by pure coincidence: the vote counts happen to be identical; and the question has an accepted answer which happens to be the user's, so they are both green. — Greg 22 secs ago@computercarguy However, if you look a bit further down the list of "answers", you'll find this question: it is green with a score of
-11
, yet @nbk's actual answer is unaccepted with a score of +2
. — Greg 30 secs ago@Greg, yes, I see that the two lists of answers have different scores and accepted marks for the same answers on the two different pages. That's... weird. I'd think they have the same query for both pages. Sounds like a code smell as well as a bug. Nice catch. — computercarguy just now
Note that deleted posts still count toward potential bans. With over a thousand reputation, I hope you're far away from such worries, but I've seen too many thinking removing the stain of a poorly-received post with deletion is a better choice than fixing up the post and suffering because of it. — user4581301 1 min ago
From reading the accepted answer of the linked proposed duplicate provided as reason for closing, I understand the relevant portion of that Q/A is probably "I'm not sure that the average user with the close vote privilege would know what a good Code Review question looked like" -- but given a slightly-modified cross-posted version of the question received 3 substantial answers, would that not be a strong indication the specific question was indeed a good CR question? — Joshua Voskamp 56 secs ago
@computercarguy I ended up scrutinizing half a dozen profiles, out of paranoia that I conflated (1) "a counterexample hasn't been found yet" with (2) a counterexample does not yet exist"; or (2) with (3) "a counterexample cannot logically exist". — Greg 52 secs ago
The average user with the close-vote privilege is not expected to know what a good Code Review question looks like. That's why migrating to Code Review is not an option that is presented to you. A question should never be closed as off-topic or unsuitable for Stack Overflow just because the Code Review site exists. You should only close a question if it is unsuitable for Stack Overflow as posed. — Cody Gray ♦ 1 min ago
I use a smurfing HUGE mouse pointer because my eyes flat out suck and have pretty much the same opinion. — user4581301 1 min ago
This new design feels like I'm using a cardboard baby book as opposed to a paper chapter book. I'm not a baby, nor am I using a cell phone, and for those who are vision-impaired, I've never heard of a browser that didn't have zooming and/or large text, etc. — Sylvester Kruin 32 secs ago
My god, @KevinB ! I think you just made sarcasm work on the Internet. Uh... That was sarcasm, right? — user4581301 1 min ago
@CodyGray I'm not sure I follow. (Thank you for helping me learn.) I hadn't voted to close the question. I had flagged it for migration. The flag was denied, though the cross-posted version of the question received several substantial answers. — Joshua Voskamp 43 secs ago
Note: If a question can be partially answered, it's probably asking too many things and needs more focus. — user4581301 36 secs ago
The true beauty of the MRE is not in making life easier for us, it makes life easier for the asker. MRE is a distillation of some powerful divide-and-conquer-based debugging techniques and often the result of making the MRE is you find the problem and its solution and don't have to bother with writing the question anymore. Everybody wins. — user4581301 40 secs ago
Let it die at the hand of the community. It'll be downvoted, closed and either roomba-ed or nuked from orbit by 20k+ rep users. No need for mods to get involved. — user4581301 34 secs ago
9:57 PM
We can only migrate questions if we close them first, and we should only migrate questions if they are off-topic or unsuitable here. So... by flagging for migration, you were effectively requesting that the question be closed. The flag was declined by a Stack Overflow moderator. What happened on a different site is not within a Stack Overflow moderator's purview, and what other comments you see being left does not imply that those comments are correct. In fact, often, comments suggesting a question asked here belongs on Code Review are wrong. I have to delete tons of 'em. — Cody Gray ♦ 1 min ago
On the one hand, I get your point. On the other, your example is pretty far from typical. Most desktop users aren't running 4K, most have actual content associated with their accounts, most have smaller than 27" monitors, etc. I agree, just think a more realistic example would be a stronger point. — TylerH 1 min ago
10:32 PM
I think you're just being a baby. The screenshots/images are all texts, nothing there is code. Whatever that is code was posted as text and formatted as code. Stop being petty! — Morgs 8 secs ago
Note I do not use SO on phone so often, because I do not develop on phone so often... — TGrif 13 secs ago
@rob All the details needed to present what the problem is, is available as text/code. The details on the first — Morgs 25 secs ago
(as of 2021:) This has just been bumped by an edit. The music tag has already been burninated, so this Q&A is moot. — kaya3 15 secs ago
10:57 PM
there seems a lot wrong in the new profile sites maybe you should post that on the SE site itelf as there is already a huge thread open for it see meta.stackexchange.com/a/372716/347191 — nbk 1 min ago
SE is emulating Microsoft. There's tons of whitespace in the various Office products so that they can use the same interface on huge monitors and tiny phones. Sure, Office has a "reduced spacing" setting, but it only reduces it by a few pixels. Can't really blame SE for following MS, I mean, after all, MS is the industry leader and trend setter. Right? #BlameMicrosoft. — FreeMan 14 secs ago
eh, no, in that scenario the blame would rest on the people doing the following. — Kevin B 59 secs ago
I won't try to argue whether the change was good or bad (it's subjective and multifaceted), but what I will say is that information density is a very flawed measure of "objective" UI quality. If I fill up every pixel of the screen with information, I'm sure basically everyone will agree that's a terrible UI. If there's no information on the screen, that's also a terrible UI. The ideal amount of information density is somewhere in the middle (and that's also probably subjective and dependent on the layout of the UI as well as the brain of the individual observing it). — NotThatGuy 1 min ago
11:30 PM
@KevinB Just wondering: what is a "responsive" profile? I didn't read the blog on it, and I may have trouble getting to it. Does "responsive" mean that it updates faster or something? — Sylvester Kruin 15 secs ago
@NotThatGuy Maybe we could have a settings option for "less-concentrated view", or something, so that those who like this new profile can use it, and those who don't can go back to using the old one? — Sylvester Kruin 1 min ago
Developer Story is a separate feature to user profiles; the current efforts being made on user profiles is to make them mobile responsive (the linked Meta post discusses that). Anyhow, I can confirm this is a bug in Developer Story — allejo 35 secs ago
Stack Exchange testing in production again meta.stackexchange.com/questions/372049/… — SuperStormer 54 secs ago
11:59 PM
Just so you know, the users & mods on Code Review want people to not suggest questions on SO should be asked/migrated to Code Review, due to consistent quality issues. In fact, a long time ago, they created a bot that monitors for comments where people suggest an SO question should be asked/migrated to Code Review. As an example, this is the chat message reporting your, now deleted, comment on the question you linked which suggested that the question should be on Code Review. — Makyen ♦ 12 secs ago
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