12:37 AM
If you do reask the question on the Stack Overflow site, you will probably want to improve it greatly to avoid its being closed. — Hovercraft Full Of Eels 49 secs ago
1 hour later…
1:59 AM
Is it possible to bracket answers with a pair of tracking pixels so you can track which ones are actually visible and for how long? That information could be used to infer which answers were actually being read, based on the event timestamps. — Z4-tier 37 secs ago
2:17 AM
@chivracq No, I think the title is fine like it is. Accessibility, or its various declinations, should pretty much ring that bell anyway so, if a few people learn that as a side-effect, all the better. — Félix Adriyel Gagnon-Grenier 25 secs ago
2:34 AM
3:15 AM
I tried a simple broken factorial program to see what'd happen. Some thoughts: I like everything going on on the left hand side. It caught some simple mistakes (e.g. no output). It's really nice to head those off at the pass. The overall workflow wasn't entirely intuitive: that you keep hitting "Run" to get from stage to stage. It looks like a REPL site and those don't work like that. A separate "Next" button might help there. — John Kugelman 1 min ago
...I found the bottom right quadrant confusing. I had a multi-line exception message and I have to admit I couldn't figure out what all the tables and colors were showing me. I thought it was the question that was being generated... but no, it wasn't that. I eventually figured out it's a prettified version of Python's error messages. I found the plain text version on the left easier to read cause it's familiar. I respect the work you put into the fancy version and I'm sad that it just confused me. — John Kugelman 59 secs ago
3:49 AM
2 hours later…
5:54 AM
Does this answer your question? Does the question view count refer to members only? — Jeanne Dark 45 secs ago
Yeah I understand, but why doesn't the number views increase when I load a question page? — WalidSiddik 36 secs ago
@JeanneDark That answers it. so I should delete this question souse it's a duplicate — WalidSiddik 43 secs ago
1 hour later…
7:12 AM
@mickmackusa - That's a good point about spending longer trying to figure out bad answers... — T.J. Crowder 1 min ago
7:55 AM
8:29 AM
Does this answer your question? "This question already has answers here" - but it does not. What can I do when I think my question's not a duplicate? — Jeanne Dark 1 min ago
I presume (and hope) nobody is going to be such a smartass to answer with only "Learn how to use a debugger." in which case, I would argue it's not even helpful, it's just belligerent. Delete those answers 100% of the time. On the other hand, I would hope at minimum for a link to some learning resources to get them started. (Comment) However, a full answer starting with "Learn how to use a debugger" should be followed up with a step-by-step guide and images of how to identify their issue themselves via the debugger. In which case, it should not be deleted nor a comment. It'd be partial. — Ryan 1 min ago
Yikes, that question's been in reopen review for 21 days without a resolution...that's not great. :-\ — Ryan M 44 secs ago
What should be done with additional research by third persons having the same problem then? Commenting or editing the question? — Trilarion 22 secs ago
While those "catch-all" dupe targets are not great, the question is not worth reopening. It's an absolute mess, and it's impossible to salvage something useful from there. If via extended comment discussion you were able to find a solution, it's great. But for the next time, try to work a bit more in trying to isolate the issue. The problems you are having are about extremely basic concepts, and carefully debugging (not mentioning checking the docs) would allow you to at least fix your code to a "it works" state, even if not pretty. — yivi 1 min ago
Also, you say that your "refactored" code (on the same question) produces the same output, and yet it's impossible that it does. And easily proved that it doesn't. Again, work in reducing/isolating the problems to a minimal example. The question code has too many problems and moving parts to be that. — yivi 43 secs ago
The question would have been better closed as either "needs focus" / "needs details/clarity" / "needs debugging details", but I imagine the gold badger closed it as a "broad" dupe both for expediency and to direct you likely useful resources to deal with the question issue. In any case, it's worth reopening just to close it for a different reason. — yivi 45 secs ago
You should definitely mention that this is not the official question wizard and using it is entirely optional. On the other hand, great idea, thanks for the effort. Maybe the community could in general construct a better question wizard. For example, could you provide a separate (re)search section in the wizard that must have at least some content (and guidance)? Most new questions simply do not show any research and are likely duplicates and I hope that more explicitly requiring research could improve the situation. — Trilarion 1 min ago
How is this a question wizard, where do I state the question? It seems more like a Python code playground. — user692942 31 secs ago
It might be prudent to include "syntax error" in the typo close reason. Because really... if you can't even research a syntax error, you might as well give up. It might take a little longer as someone inexperienced, but that's the test - everyone who wants to do any form of programming must be able to solve syntax errors using the wealth of information and tools at their disposal. Nowadays you even have IDE's that tell you what you're doing wrong. If the tooling doesn't help you, if the documentation doesn't help you, experimentation does. — Gimby 1 min ago
The difficulty here is going to be to contain yourself. Posting it every chance you get is definitely not going to go down well, so when do you post it and when do you not? There is no standard measure for it. — Gimby 27 secs ago
9:39 AM
10:00 AM
@TheMaster Should Stack Overflow en español not then become
[sp.so]
, [mx.so]
, [ar.so]
, [bo.so]
, etc for each of the countries that speaks Spanish? Clearly doing it by language (i.e. [es.so]
, [ja.so]
, etc.) makes more sense. — Llama 54 secs ago10:27 AM
@Ryan Stack Overflow does not exist to do Google searches for people who are too lazy to do them themselves. If a question is incomplete, lacks debugging information, or is otherwise unfit for this site it should be closed, end of story. An answer on a poor question is a waste of everyone's time. — Ian Kemp 29 secs ago
Usually in those cases I add comments like "Related questions: [1] [2]" under the question. — user202729 1 min ago
@Llama There is no such country code as "sp"; "es" is both the ISO 639-1 code for Spanish, and the ISO 3166-1 code for Spain; the same is true for "ru" (Russian and Russia) and "pt" (Portuguese and Portugal). Because most country codes match with their indigenous language code, and people are familiar with country codes from top-level domains, it is a common mistake. In this case, it's also a completely harmless one, since "jp" is not assigned as a language code, so there is no ambiguity (which is presumably why the domain name itself already redirects, as has already been pointed out). — IMSoP 1 min ago
@charlietfl It's not that country codes are relevant as such, it's that people are more familiar with them than language codes. So if someone tries to guess the language code for "Japanese", they may well choose "jp" rather than the correct answer, which is "ja". Nobody is going to guess that the language code for Portuguese is "br", so that example is not equivalent. Since "jp" is actually unassigned, automatically correcting people's mistake and linking to the correct domain does no harm, and saves people a bit of head-scratching. — IMSoP 8 secs ago
10:55 AM
Some people won't answer your question but they will vote it down kind of annoying — Samuel Emeka 1 min ago
Some people will complain about downvotes but put no effort in creating high quality posts. It's kind of annoying. — yivi 34 secs ago
Everything about that collective smells meh... Kind of reminds me of the borg... "We are the Borg. Lower your shields and surrender your ships... Resistance is Futile" Can we just delete the whole concept and pretend its still a thing? — TheGeneral 50 secs ago
Just put yourself in the shoes of others, If you are having a problem which you want to quickly solve, you've made research but found no answer the you come to the site to ask and all of a sudden instead you saw an inbox instead of it to be an answer it is a down vote — Samuel Emeka 53 secs ago
"If you are having a problem which you want to quickly solve" then you don't head down to Stack Overflow to post a new question. If you wanted it solved quickly it's likely the wrong type of question for SO because either you won't get a quick answer, or because if you get a quick answer it's most likely a common question with a trillion duplicates, and a bit more research was warranted in the first place. — yivi 54 secs ago
@IanKemp Getting off topic. The subject is surrounding partial answers, not question quality. Presume, for the purpose of discussion, it's the model example of a perfect question. Where is the problem in directing the author to some online resources to assist in their learning if the problem isn't a lack of effort but a shortcoming in their knowledge. Everyone knows how to Google, not everyone knows what to Google so please keep that in mind before attributing simple solutions to a lack of effort on the author's behalf. — Ryan 1 min ago
11:27 AM
While I do agree with the sentiment, I guess this is status-by-design? The icons sticking out as much as possible is very likely to be an intentional choice.. — Oleg Valter 12 secs ago
@AndrewT. Nice bit of sherlocking, but what Oleg says sounds very believable. We have to keep in mind that collections are a product, not a site feature for our benefit. — Gimby 13 secs ago
@Trilarion well yeah, last time I checked, that's what comments are for - the researcher can ask the OP to include the information in their question too. As an alternative, if the context is sufficiently different, they could post a new question and link it over with a "related" comment or, given the privilege and other answers, by voting to close as duplicate. — Oleg Valter 1 min ago
@Felix, yeah, as you wish but I don't agree, a Thread/Qt Title should be clear and unambiguous and I find "Should X be accessible?" ambiguous and vague as all I think is "accessible [to what...? 70%] or [to whom...? 30%]", +Screenshots in non-English, then I think/thought "hum, OK, non-English native User, they probably mean(t) "visible" or "displayed" and don't want to see those Ads, hum, me neither, => good for a (+1)", ... that I can't retract now... => "Accessibility" could better have been used in the Title, and "accessible" in the Body would be fine... — chivracq 31 secs ago
You need to use absolute paths to resources, not relative paths that don't exist on the stack snippets server — charlietfl 1 min ago
12:15 PM
@Ryan "Where is the problem in directing the author to some online resources" for starters, the fact that's against the rules? Answers must be self-contained and they must attempt to answer the question as asked. An answer explaining how to use a debugger would not only be off-topic, but would violate the implicit "Stack Overflow is not a discussion forum" rule. We already have a torrent of garbage rule-breaking questions, we don't need garbage rule-breaking answers too. — Ian Kemp 16 secs ago
12:29 PM
@OlegValter I swear it had the correct screenshot. God dammit Firefox! Apparently the screenshot tool correctly detects the doom element but then ignore what is shown in the viewport that covers that area. — Braiam 20 secs ago
For me comments are for discussing existing content. New content like new research and new stuff that has been tried should eventually end up in a question somewhere. Maybe we can update that help center text to actually say where and how it should end up (not only where it shouldn't). What if the question asker does not respond anymore? Is it then okay to take over the question and enrich it with additional research? — Trilarion 1 min ago
They are so conspicious when I see one I can't help downvoting the question it's attached to. — oguz ismail 1 min ago
12:55 PM
Unsure what's "unclear" about this question. I do get the feeling that closure/deletion is used as some sort of "punishment" in meta. — yivi 56 secs ago
First of all, I said a script, not a userscript. Secondly, it's a joke - a script like that would also be illegal for reasons that should be obvious (removing collectives for everyone means modifying content on Stack's servers - see where this is going?). But this is what I get for leaving out the sarcasm switch — Zoe 1 min ago
@IanKemp Self-contained does not mean don't include external links. Would not be off-topic as it's a question tailored to identifying their problem from the question, using their provided code. Finally, would it answer the question? Partially. It would in fact point the author in the right direction. When they follow the steps provided, it would allow them to identify their problem themselves and fix it. We could make it a full answer by just giving them the solution outright at the end but if you're unable to do so for whatever reason, it'd still be an acceptable partial answer. — Ryan 17 secs ago
@Trilarion well, I can't say I have a stance on where they should go, it may very well be editing the question too (although it probably needs a standalone discussion because there are a lot of caveats to iron out, methinks). What I do know, though, is that those additional details have no place as answers (on which, I assume, we both agree) — Oleg Valter 20 secs ago
For example, if the author isn't even aware what's causing their issues. The above mentioned "Learn how to use a debugger" answer with the provided resources and a step-by-step on how to do so would allow the author to identify the cause of their issue, but not the solution. Hence, a Partial Answer as then the author can search more precisely for the solution or another user can use that answer as a basis to provide the solution themselves. This would meets @cigien's suggestion of at least solving part of the question to be a partial answer. Yet no such precedent is in place. Yet. — Ryan 1 min ago
@JohnKugelman thanks for the feedback. I responded to part of it in github.com/alexmojaki/futurecoder/issues/…, I think that would be a better place to discuss. Sorry to hear the traceback was confusing. It's meant for beginners who seem to blank out when they see the standard traceback, I think it just seems like an intimidating wall of text to them. — Alex Hall 45 secs ago
@Trilarion thanks for the feedback. I've put your point in github.com/alexmojaki/futurecoder/issues/… for potential further discussion. Would be happy to hear ideas from you or anyone else here about ways to make something useful for other kinds of questions. — Alex Hall 31 secs ago
@user692942 similar to my previous comment, happy to hear what you think would be useful. I'm not sure what helpful things I could do with the text of someone's question in English. The main idea is that just providing complete runnable code correctly indented seems to be a challenge for beginners. — Alex Hall 32 secs ago
@Gimby when the question has significant problems that it wouldn't have if it had gone through the wizard. Typically the kind of question where I would comment with the [mcve] link. — Alex Hall 16 secs ago
@klutt thanks, these are good points. I hope that (1) even without remembering the specifics, they gain some sense of the difference between a good question and a bad question, particularly complete runnable code, and (2) the site itself is seen as useful with its debuggers and such, so they might use or remember it for things other than the question wizard. — Alex Hall 1 min ago
2:22 PM
The term accessible is used everywhere over w3.org, the question has the accessibility tag, it mentions screen readers, and I finish by saying that there's nothing on the ad guidelines that talk about accessibility — iunfixit 5 secs ago
"You're putting too much value on the green checkmark, and misunderstanding its purpose" - Well yes but actually also no. A green checkmark has a very specific meaning, the counterpart to the red cross. Right and wrong. And now here we have a green checkmark which does not imply that... it just irks me. In a world of a million icons, they just had to pick the one that is the easiest to misinterpret. All you have to do is mean well so you don't ignore signals thrown at you. — Gimby 14 secs ago
2:50 PM
So Philippe, I've made an effort to revise the question to be more exact on what it is I'm looking for. Your current answer doesn't quite address my concerns, and I want to be sure that this doesn't turn into repeated history of engagements with Stack Overflow staff - community says something, staff replies once, and then that's it. I won't deny that I'm pretty scorned so far with Stack Overflow, but I'm trying to give this a chance. — Makoto 1 min ago
I heard they are going to rename them from collectives to garbagey (a new word too). — JonH 17 secs ago
@JonH: This isn't the place to do that. If you want to criticize the product, spin up your own question and give your own pointed feedback about it. I'm only asking about how they're going to continue to engage with us and take feedback in. — Makoto 55 secs ago
3:47 PM
What would you call it then? I would certainly say it is; it's an open source database development tool. IDE means "Integrated development environment" and you can most certainly develop in DBeaver. — Larnu 24 secs ago
I don't know much about the tech, but looking at it briefly, the tool does appear to be one programmers would use, and the linked question on main is asking for help with using it for a programming related task. It looks on-topic to me. — cigien 55 secs ago
Yeah well, I don't "study" the Content of 'w3.org' everyday, ah-ah...! As part of the "Discussion", Tag also used for this Thread, I just give the Feedback that I didn't connect "accessible" with "Accessibility", you do what you want with that Feedback... // And Win10 that I use as OS doesn't seem to know "accessible" at all either, a Win-Search doesn't retrieve any single relevant Hit on "accessible", while "Accessibility" finds 12 Apps and Setting Sections related to "Ease of Access"... — chivracq 11 secs ago
@Larnu - I would call it a SQL client. There is a DBeaver plugin for the the IDE Eclipse. — billynoah 44 secs ago
thanks I think this threw me because it looked like a SQL question but then turned out to be a usage problem. Your answer makes sense. — billynoah 21 secs ago
By your definition then, @billynoah , SSMS isn't a IDE; I can assure you it is. It seems, if I am honest, that the problem was your understanding of what DBeaver is was the problem as it's an IDE; and again questions about IDE are on topic. — Larnu 50 secs ago
Regarding your last sentence, I would be cautious about using the existence of questions as a justification for, or against, a particular question being allowed. There are, unfortunately, quite a lot of off-topic questions that are still open on the site, and that's often used as a reason for not closing some specific off-topic question. — cigien 1 min ago
Questions about SQL are on topic for Stack Overflow though, @billynoah , so what do you mean that the question was about SQL threw you? — Larnu 1 min ago
4:25 PM
@cigien yes I debated with myself weather to add examples I'm aware of but decided that due to quantity they could be included, the volume of questions I have seen regularly on these IDEs does strongly imply that IDEs themselves are not an issue. — Martin 27 secs ago
@Larnu - I mean if it was about sql it was off topic because it's bascially a typo (missing semi colon). As it turns out, the problem has nothing to do with the semi-colon but is in fact about how to use DBeaver. — billynoah 7 secs ago
4:52 PM
5:09 PM
I'm afraid you've posted this in the wrong place. This is Meta, for questions about Stack Overflow itself; you need to post this on the main site, — F1Krazy 45 secs ago
5:30 PM
@pkamb, can you add a link to the page that says Stack Overflow is explicitly designed for solving Syntax Errors? The first sentence of the tour is "Stack Overflow is a question and answer site for professional and enthusiast programmers.". It also says "Don't ask about Questions you haven't tried to find an answer for (show your work!)". This seems to contradict your statement, IMHO (of course this depends on your definition of "professionals" and "research"). — wovano 1 min ago
1 hour later…
6:45 PM
Please don't make a meta post accusing users of fraud. It's entirely unconstructive, as there's nothing the community can do. We have moderators who handle these things. Please raise a mod flag explaining the issue. I'd also suggest deleting this question. — cigien 24 secs ago
6:59 PM
You are asking this question on the wrong site. This is the "meta" site where site problems are discussed, and you should instead be asking this on the Stack Overflow main site. If you do re-ask this question over there, you will probably want to improve it quite a bit to avoid its being closed for being unclear or too broad. The help center and especially the How to Ask links can help you with this. — Hovercraft Full Of Eels 55 secs ago
Even if done on purpose, I think having a white background in what's supposed to be dark mode is a problem. The whole point of dark mode is to not blind people with bright, white light. — BSMP 15 secs ago
There's a pretty chance this will come up again, especially with Chinese. Here are a bunch of primarily single-country languages whose names match up but codes do not (besides Japan
ja-JP
): Albania sq-AL
, Armenia hy-AM
, Belarus be-BY
, China zh-CN
, Estonia et-EE
, Georgia ka-GE
, Kazakhstan kk-KZ
, Korea ko-KR
, Kyrgyzstan ky-KG
, Norway nb-NO
, Ukraine uk-UA
, and Vietnam vi-VN
. — Pluto 46 secs ago7:25 PM
You are asking this question on the wrong site. This is the "meta" site where site problems are discussed, and you should instead be asking this on the Stack Overflow main site. — Hovercraft Full Of Eels 7 secs ago
Please read the help center documentation on how to ask good questions prior to posting this on the main site. — EJoshuaS - Reinstate Monica 14 secs ago
7:49 PM
8:12 PM
@JonH "x is bad" isn't useful criticism. Create an answer on a question where it'd be on topic explaining why it's bad and it'll stand a greater chance of not being deleted with all the other useless comments. — Kevin B 24 secs ago
I agree. It's a good idea to make few very-asked question as "more visible". It will be also faster to have a clean Q&A because we will faster find the better answer. Finally, this issue appear in so much lang/question, specially JS or html... — Elikill58 10 secs ago
We really should have some good way to handle these provided by the site. Right now, the solution is just crowdsourced knowledge and initiative. Some tags like JS have listed some canonicals in the tag description. But it cannot really fit everything. — VLAZ 9 secs ago
8:59 PM
@Gimby You should she the one for undefined references in C++-land. Anything an asker could credibly ask is answered in that monster, but good luck to Joe Newb actually finding it or recognizing that they found it. — user4581301 20 secs ago
@user4581301 no easier than finding a question other than that one that would help such a user — Kevin B 16 secs ago
What do this icon even mean? Does it depend on tag (e.g. "gitlab"), or did someone pay to get more visibility for their question? — Eric Duminil 45 secs ago
@Larnu The duplicate is not similar. My question says, "my question is not similar to the question it was closed as a duplicate of." — Willtech 5 secs ago
@EricDuminil option #1 - each collective has a set of tags "associated" with them — Oleg Valter 1 min ago
I do imagine that people read the manual, but then I also imagine lands with heroic adventures exploring dungeons and fighting dragons. Sooner or later I wake up. — user4581301 22 secs ago
Simply saying something isn't something doesn't make it not that thing, @Willtech . Saying "this isn't a dupe" with no explanation isn't going to get a question closed as a dupe reopened. — Larnu 40 secs ago
Sure, you possibly realise the conversation was the reason for finding the solution, it was a necessary part of working out the answer, but it could also have been existing knowledge to someone if anybody actually bothered to take a serious interest. This demonstrates the answer you just need to click run for the output. phpsandbox.io/e/x/… — Willtech 14 secs ago
9:40 PM
10:34 PM
I'm not an SME for either of these areas, and I have no idea how well their cultivated, but there are [c++-faq and [r-faq] FAQ tags, ideally to band together FAQs for those two areas respectively. Should something like that become more common? (I'm not sure how I feel about it) — zcoop98 59 secs ago
Similar. If I can't I'll plug my nose and use it and leave a comment saying which answer they need to read. — user4581301 35 secs ago
From our perspective, how does 'My question says, "my question is not similar to the question it was closed as a duplicate of."' show to us how/why the question is not a duplicate? How informative do you imagine your statement to really be? — Hovercraft Full Of Eels 20 secs ago
11:04 PM
I'm not an SME for either of these areas, and I have no idea how well they're cultivated, but there are [c++-faq] and [r-faq] FAQ tags, ideally to band together FAQs for those two areas respectively. Should something like that become more common? (I'm not sure how I feel about it) — zcoop98 25 secs ago
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