12:09 AM
@akrun the 3 top voted mod answer on the issue say it's OK depending on the case, one of the most relevant is this this answer by Bill the Lizard. It's frequent for users to comment: "Perfect answer, solved my problem, thanks." and not bother to accept or voting (they might even have been around for years and be oblivious nevertheless). So in those cases a friendly reminder is OK (and there's strong consensus backing that assertion). — bad_coder 1 min ago
@akrun besides the FAQ and the Help Center also say users are supposed to accept and upvote answers that solve their problem perfectly (there's nothing wrong with reminding/pointing users to official SE guidelines). — bad_coder 1 min ago
@bad_coder Thanks, yes, I did go through some links and the consensus seems to be acceptable, though in some cases it says not to comment as OlegValter mentioned i.e. when there is a conflict of interest. I posted this because I was not sure if the response from moderators were exclusive for me or is in general. — akrun 1 min ago
@akrun you likely left them too often (or on your posts primarily as the msg seems to suggest) - they are certainly no crime, but they do add noise to posts and are of dubious effectiveness at best (I will do a query to substantiate or disprove when I have time, it's an interesting topic) — Oleg Valter 50 secs ago
12:40 AM
Maybe an overview of outcome stats instead of the avatars? Like how many: accepts, rejects, mod reviews (maybe a percentage as well), etc. There is a lot of real estate to fit some useful stats. There is a concern, though, that pulling those stats comes with a performance penalty. — Oleg Valter 13 secs ago
1:15 AM
I think you have really miss understood how Q&A websites work. You submit a question and receive an answer. Editing an answer and providing responses far exceeds the editing mechanism of SE communities. — Security Hound 1 min ago
Our migrated duplicate: meta.stackoverflow.com/q/251478/3648282 and our duplicate: elixir-lang.org github.com/guonaihong/coreutils — Rob 5 secs ago
1:47 AM
Yes, the reputation is lost. The most you could do if you really want to award them with the rep is start another bounty to award an existing answer. — Nick 40 secs ago
2:02 AM
My questions are about a web scraping problem with a particular website. I don't know what data I could post because the questions are about how to get data that I have not been able to find. If that sort of question is not suitable for SO, can you suggest a better place for it? I don't see a Stack Exchange site for web scraping. — NewSites 1 min ago
3:00 AM
@polfosolఠ_ఠ: I'd be very hesitant with a CAS. I would think that those could go on Math.SE but it's been over a decade since I cared enough about Mathematica to know if it's on topic there. I can't really think of examples where it'd be on topic here, though. — Makoto 52 secs ago
3:29 AM
3:54 AM
4:10 AM
Your first question is not self contained. It shows no example of what you are working with and it only links to external resources. It shows no example of what you would like to achieve. It shows no attempt at solving the problem (granted that is not necessarily needed, but still) nor any "starting point" for the code that you would like to use to accomplish the task. It's tagged HTML and web-scraping, without specifying a language of interest which clearly will greatly affect any answer. So yeah, there's that... — Marco Bonelli 1 min ago
The
padding-top
and padding-bottom
values on the /questions
page, questions with a specific tag pages, and search results pages, which all use the question-summary
class, are both 12px. The padding on the home page, which uses the s-post-summary
class, is 16px on all sides. Personally, I find 6px or 4px to be reasonable for those values. — Makyen ♦ 1 min ago4:40 AM
There is already a flag for typos or things that are can no longer be reproduced (it even has the subtext indicating these posts aren't useful for future visitors). — Nick 15 secs ago
I am sorry @Nick but could you elaborate on where I find those flags? I went to the flags and didn't find an option for typos or no longer be reproduced. The only sub-type I believed could had this would be on 'need improvement', but none of the options seem to suffice the type of situation I described. Do i have limited types of flags because I have low-rep? — Arson 0 1 min ago
Does this answer your question? Sunsetting Jobs & Developer Story — EJoshuaS - Reinstate Monica 13 secs ago
5:05 AM
Just adding some context, looks like the oldest visible question having this tag is this question posted in 2008 when SO was still in its infancy and meta tags have not yet been declared a problem ... and this tag indeed smells like a meta tag. — Andrew T. 1 min ago
Well, that's disappointing. I'll know for next time. Thanks for the response. — Arian Kulp 1 min ago
1 hour later…
6:12 AM
There is no better place to look for good software development jobs. The SO jobs feature lets me filter and look specifically for jobs using new and interesting technologies. Not only that, but imo the quality of job postings themselves on SO is much higher than other job sites I'm guessing because they're less likely to be written and/or misedited by someone who doesn't understand the content of the job posting. The jobs feature already has a competitive edge. It is a shame to see it go. — Jakotheshadows 34 secs ago
@khelwood i think it will be better to read cuz of how the human brain works usually we start at the top left then move to the right bottom so if we make the title the first thing then make its text bigger than the other stuff it will be much easier to look for a Q that matches the one you searched. my personal opinion the OP is correct it should be changed — DB_cont 37 secs ago
@GinoMempin: didn't know MSO could be used like that, and neither did I understand that almost-same FRs are considered the same (okay, so it's easier for the MODs and staff). I thought that it couldn't be because it's a Q&A site and the only thing that ran into my tiny brain was that answers should solve the questions and provide solutions to them (confused MSO with SO). I'll post my suggestion as an answer there too in some time. — The Amateur Coder 9 secs ago
What about this? Do you suggest I post my suggestion as an answer there too? It doesn't seem like a duplicate to me... the original is regarding clicking on images, and mine is about any interaction. I'll edit to specify that too. — The Amateur Coder 9 secs ago
6:52 AM
I have no problem identifying the question titles. I don’t really see this layout as a problem. — Sebastian Simon 31 secs ago
7:14 AM
Amazon's search is about as useful as SO's search, so that's at least a good example. — Cerbrus 49 secs ago
7:45 AM
The site search works perfectly if you know what you're looking for. If you're still in the I don't know how to even correctly spell the thing I'm looking for or what its synonyms or related subjects are named use a proper search engine like Duck Duck Go, Bing or Google. Based on those results, home in on better/correct search terms to be used on the SE search engine. — rene 1 min ago
7:57 AM
@rene you make a good point, I was just thinking about some stuff that might be useful to new devs or something but like you said they should use Google or DuckDuckGo to search for the proper word or spelling. also, spelling is a big issue on stackoverflow cuz it's a very popular site that's mainly in English and i see a lot of Arabic and Chinese speakers that fail at properly spelling stuff while posting. — DB_cont 1 min ago
2 hours later…
9:37 AM
I have created recurring reminders in Google Calendar and I get reminders daily once on my android so I login immediately. Although I do agree that I had missed even single day, it resets to 0. — Rajesh Swarnkar 1 min ago
10:35 AM
11:04 AM
@OlegValter I don't think it's super secret, it's just sorting in a dashboard anyway :p The base listing for posts the system otherwise considers "identical priority" or whatever is effectively FIFO, but it's still a list where you can just... pick the last item. I read through the last ones a lot to filter out bad and easy flags for instance. There's a lot of vague details though, it's not exactly listed what the sorting order is. Different types of flags may or may not weigh in, the count of flags weighs more than individual flags for comments at least — Zoe ♦ 31 secs ago
(2 NLN flags on two comments is less "important" than 2 NLN flags on one comment). This may or may not apply to regular posts, but because their sorting already is different, I don't really know. I do doubt it though. The 2 NLN flag in the screenshot outranked a few other posts with two individually flagged NLN comments, though, so it's at least confirmed for comments. From what I can tell, the bulk of the remaining rules just deal with edge-case management, for when the main rules fail — Zoe ♦ 30 secs ago
11:39 AM
Unfortunately there’s a high-ranking Stack Overflow LaTeX user who has some beef with the tex.SE site, and therefore answers questions on Stack Overflow instead of doing the correct thing, and voting to migrate questions. Since there’s also very little activity in this tag on Stack Overflow, the end result is that very few questions get migrated. — Konrad Rudolph 12 secs ago
Those who browse on desktop are complaining about the new design and those who browse on mobile are complaining about it too. Who is this design for then?! — 41686d6564 1 min ago
@DB_cont yeah, I'm not a native speaker myself so my search workflow always involves Google as it is amazing how well it copes with my incompetent spelling .... — rene 46 secs ago
1 hour later…
1:29 PM
This might be THE worst thing stack overflow decided to do. I would be so happy if they decided otherwise. — YamYamm 15 secs ago
Re "...but on SO in general": Rage quitting is an immature reaction. Please reconsider. — Peter Mortensen 55 secs ago
Re "...but on SO in general": Rage quitting is an immature reaction. Please reconsider. One way to try to preempt users only skimming a question is to put the meta information about a question not being duplicate in comments. That is where meta information belongs anyway. Prepare the comment in advance and post it seconds after posting the question. The comment should contain evidence (incl. links), not just a vague statement. — Peter Mortensen 24 secs ago
@DaveNewton Seems like your reason should actually be in your post. It is odd to assert "the question title should be the first content" without any justification at all. — khelwood 16 secs ago
1 hour later…
2:45 PM
@DB_cont Yeah, like "cuz" is actually spelled "because", "i" is actually spelled "I", and "stackoverflow" is actually spelled "Stack Overflow".... ;-P — Heretic Monkey 26 secs ago
2:59 PM
@khelwood Perhaps. I'm surprised anybody thinks it needs justification since that's kind of a principle of design and information architecture. I assumed my CSS hadn't loaded properly. That this was done on purpose blows my mind. — Dave Newton 1 min ago
If you read the Terms of Service of the site providing the data, you'll find, under "Restrictions on Use", the following: "The Services and the content of the Site may not be copied, displayed, distributed, licensed, modified, published, reposted, reproduced, reused, sold, transmitted, reverse engineered, used to create a derivative work or otherwise used for public or commercial purposes without the express written consent of Verivest in each instance." Now, I don't know if you have "express written consent" (I would think they would have informed you of their API in that case), but take care — Heretic Monkey 1 min ago
3:17 PM
I had a similar experience with an employer working in an area as I also did before. He therefore probably felt that I might know something more than what I already did at my previous employer (exactly what his coders did to his own project) he completely disregarded my CV, to say the least .... It was like, well, we repair cars here, but as time as you already master this craft, let's see if we can make together a plane instead. That was very awkward considering that I had already managed to work as a full stack at a project similar to his own — Eve 1 min ago
3:34 PM
@OlegValter the comments have (mostly) been purged, so let me save you the trouble: At least 4-8% of their total 82514 comments (at the time of writing, including all deleted) revolve around upvoting and/or accepting. A quick manual search on common terms, admittedly with some overlap, indicates at least 4-5000 (!) of these comments. A non-negligible amount also asks for upvotes. — Zoe ♦ 1 min ago
3:47 PM
@Zoe jeez, that's... quite a lot, thank you for the insight! I can totally see why that would be considered problematic. One thing I will still likely spend some time researching is how actually effective those are - one of the common defences for posting comments requesting upvotes/accepts is that they remind users of the functionality, so it got me thinking - do they really? — Oleg Valter 1 min ago
4:15 PM
Hope it will be just April fool news. we all really like this feature . Really going to miss job and developer story . — Ajay Mistry 38 secs ago
4:52 PM
I'm only an occasional user of [latex] or Tex.SE, so I don't know if your answer represents consensus in those groups, but if it does, perhaps the tag description for [latex] on SO should be updated to reflect it. — user2554330 1 min ago
5:40 PM
@Zoe But my question is about what is right or wrong. Is this only exclusive against me i.e. not to comment about upvotes, but others can still ask/request for acceptance when the question asked is a newbie. If that is the case, it is biased and wrong. The link in the question as Oleg mentioned had a conflict of interest. So, I flagged that as "No longer needed". — akrun 17 secs ago
@OlegValter if they are going by the statistics, I can only say that I also looked at the metaposts in the link which suggests that requesting to accept/voting when it is a newbie is ok. So, previously, I do comment in that way until I received the moderator message. — akrun 27 secs ago
@akrun just saying that I see how such a number of comments could be considered problematic by the mod team. Also, as I linked in my other comments, the "those are ok" is far from being the consensus amongst mods - if anything, there are more of those who consider them just noise to be removed on sight. That does not make the course you took a big issue (if it was, you would likely be suspended for some time in addition to the message), just that the team would like you to stop doing it as they view it as causing more trouble than it is worth. And you seem to be doing the right thing now - — Oleg Valter 38 secs ago
- flagging such comments as NLN. If you are concerned that the user whose comment you got deleted is upset and thinks they are in the right - don't, there are not (for the reasons I indicated above). There are some who hold the opinion that it is OK to remind about the rules, but it is not what the general policy about these comments is (as linked), it is more of a "well, there is a use case where they are probably not harmful" — Oleg Valter 19 secs ago
@OlegValter I would say that newbie case is just an excuse. Because if newbies know how to find SO, and posts a question, they would in time understand about upvoting/accepting. In the last couple of days, I found many newbies without even mentioning anything, accepted answer. Some people don't, but that includes experienced users as well. They just don't think it is important or have other reasons. — akrun 1 min ago
@OlegValter I flagged this specific case as NLN only because the question could be easily closed as a typo/duplicate (the
,
replaced by &
and it solves) and the exact issue was solved already in the comments. So, if someone writes an answer and then makes a request to accept, it is definitely a conflict of interest. — akrun 58 secs agoDoes this answer your question? What can I do when getting “We are no longer accepting questions/answers from this account”? — gnat 16 secs ago
@akrun yes, that was definitely a conflict of interest, and you did right in flagging it as NLN - not only the answerer went against the guidelines of treating typo/duplixate questions, they (regardless of the intent) went as far as requesting votes on their own post. — Oleg Valter 46 secs ago
No, it's just an automated system with an undisclosed algorithm that question-banned you. If a mod drops by, they can list your deleted posts that contributed to the ban (if any), and you now can find your deleted posts on the activity profile page. Also note that 0-score posts are considered as counting against you - they have negative weight, contrary to what you may have expected. — Oleg Valter 59 secs ago
No, that page does not answer my question. Here are some more background facts. About two days ago I asked a question. It was a very simple question. My question was answered within 24 hours with a very straghtforward answer. Neither I nor the highly experienced poster who answered my question could see any reason for the suspension. None of the scenarios listed in the "What can I do..." page apply to my situation. — gary 26 secs ago
@StephenRauch they say there's no need to post these lists anymore because since recently users can see all their deleted posts at respective pages in their profiles — gnat 19 secs ago
6:29 PM
Sorry for droning on and on. The "What can I do..." page offers no explanation for restoring my question privelege and then removing it upon any new question asked. Besides remaining silent on the the rule for temporal timing of appear-and-disappear question-asking-privlege, the "What can I do..." page does not specify the manner of bad-question-remediation. Presumably bad-question-deletion is not an acceptable remedy? Should I understand that bad-question-remediation is needed for all of my "eleted posts"? Sorry to be a pain. Just trying to understand. — gary 1 min ago
@gnat, thanks I'll blame not remembering on still working on my first cup of coffee. — Stephen Rauch ♦ 56 secs ago
When you're question banned, you get an opportunity every so often to get out of it. Your entire history, including and particularly the old questions Stephen linked, count towards the ban. — Zoe ♦ 17 secs ago
The dupe covers this: "Automatic bans never expire or "time out". This means that you cannot simply wait for a certain amount of time. If you do not take action, you will never be allowed to post again. [...] If you're unable to improve your existing questions, you'll get the chance to ask one new one six months after your last question. If that question is positively received, you may be able to continue asking questions; if not, then the ban will remain in effect, and you'll have to wait another six months to ask your next question." — Zoe ♦ 16 secs ago
6:49 PM
7:35 PM
You get a question every six months when you're question-banned. You were probably already question-banned before you posted yesterday and didn't realize it. — EJoshuaS - Reinstate Monica 7 secs ago
7:50 PM
8:02 PM
"page does not specify the manner of bad-question-remediation." - Yes; It actually does. You have had nearly 50% of your questions deleted. You have nearly zero upvotes on the reminder of your questions. The way you lift a question ban, is by improving your contributions, the only way to do that is by asking your single well received question every 6 months until the your question ban is lifted. You were warned before you submitted your question on Jan 24 that you were near a question ban. Based on the quality of your contribution history it sounds like you been question banned for awhile. — Security Hound 1 min ago
How do you know it’s to draw attention? It makes sense they would only edit posts they’ve answered, since they’d be familiar with the question and content, likely much more so than questions they didn’t answer. That seems natural. — user438383 25 secs ago
@user438383 it makes sense that if someone makes trivial and/or unnecessary edits to posts where they participated, then it is likely they do so for the purpose of bumping the post which is heavily frowned upon. Of course, without evidence presented we cannot say for sure, but if Gert believes they noticed a pattern of abuse of the privilege, they are well in their right to mod flag and make their case. The rest depends on whether it actually looks like abuse to the handling mod. — Oleg Valter 1 min ago
@user438383 Yes, of course I've been thinking about that aspect. But most edits are rather useless, like adding a far less specific tag that could apply to hundreds of questions in the more specific tag. — Gert Arnold 15 secs ago
8:44 PM
@GertArnold You could also include a link to this meta question in your flag, if you want to provide even more details. — Sylvester Kruin 26 secs ago
9:14 PM
@akrun I don't buy that mod message because I've pinged dozens of high rep users asking them why they didn't accept an excellent answer (in threads where I had no participation but enough expertise to know I was looking at the perfect unaccepted answer) and the OPs said: "Thanks for reminding me, I totally forgot about that!" (a recent case was a reminder to a 6 figure rep I know in real life). The site is made better by an answer being accept, because it reduces entropy and makes things more organized. — bad_coder 9 secs ago
@bad_coder I also had noticed similar instances regarding experienced users. With regards to newbies, often I get "Thank you, this solved perfectly" messages which prompt me to comment to the SO link for accept. I understand that this will in someway influence the users to accept and thereby I gain points. I totally agree with the moderators though - this is a forum and the persons who spend their time, energy, and their knowlege should do selflessly without even thinking about any reps at all! — akrun 28 secs ago
@akrun and the perfect counter-example are countless thousands of comments (that are not deleted) saying: *"This should be the accepted answer". — bad_coder 21 secs ago
People: Most things on meta are opinion based. We don't close them, and we shouldn't close this either. — Undo ♦ 49 secs ago
@akrun in truth, the overzealous claim "no comments about accepts/votes are permitted" is entirely false, it subverts (and perverts) fundamental system mechanics, it also goes against historical consensus and company guidelines. What's more, it should be put into the broader perspective of the +170 SE sites, being that on the vast majority of the network such comments are frowned upon (by mods or users) if they correspond to justice - of rewarding and recognizing the right solution and its author. (You'll notice arguments are made in bad faith and being simplistic lack valid elaboration.) — bad_coder 47 secs ago
Hello! My bad using the term "forum", when I was actually having a particular site (similar to this one) but I didn't want to drop names ;). I should have used the term "Q&A site" if that makes more sense to us ( — Mosca Pt 19 secs ago
@bad_coder It is not clear whether that is only applicable to me or not as the moderator message is in contradiction to the general consensus in many of the links — akrun 10 secs ago
9:47 PM
Hello! My bad using the term "forum", when I was actually having a simlar site in mind, as I wrote the question, but I didn't want to drop names ;). I should have used the term "Q&A site" if that makes more sense to us. My only intent was to speed up navigation, jumping to "the accepted answer" straight away. But if the top voted bubbles up to the top, that's perhaps pretty relevant, I would agree. I wasn't aware. If we call this a "Q&A" site, what actually answers the original poster's question, could be rewarded with a direct link, next to the original question. — Mosca Pt 54 secs ago
@akrun then let us try to clarify (using the classic terminology): Since it's inception SO's guidance has been not the letter of the law but its spirit; Shog9 synthesized it by saying: "We can't codify rules for every conduct". The argument made against you is statistical, and thus a gross approximation that doesn't care if your comments were warranted, justified and beneficial. This represent a rupture with previous moderation practices that cared to evaluate cases, it has also tones of database driven persecutory practices. — bad_coder 8 secs ago
10:45 PM
Even Yegor Bugayenko can't spell Stack Overflow correctly, so you are excused (but only with regard to Stack Overflow). — Peter Mortensen 30 secs ago
Even Yegor Bugayenko (96,728 reputation points) can't spell Stack Overflow correctly, so you are excused (but only with regard to Stack Overflow). — Peter Mortensen 1 min ago
11:07 PM
Currently, the Sites search depends completely on what you type. Yes, I expect exactly that from a search engine. — TGrif 57 secs ago
11:24 PM
There's also a chance that they are adding tags to gain score in those tags, working for tag badges. That would still be abusive in most cases, of course. — Andras Deak 19 secs ago
11:40 PM
Does this answer your question? How should we deal with users who edit questions that they don't own (repeatedly!) to boost their answers up? — Heretic Monkey 1 min ago
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