12:24 AM
"the first option will also work with strings"--What do you think
n*n
will do if n
is a string? — khelwood 50 secs ago12:59 AM
1:23 AM
This looks to be argument by the slippery slope logical fallacy. You may not like the logic used to curate questions on this site, but the concrete evidence is that this site has survived and thrived (else you wouldn't be here) where many other sites that have allowed such questions (think, Yahoo!Answers) have fallen by the wayside. — Hovercraft Full Of Eels 59 secs ago
Yes. It's a huge problem, but I'm not sure there's a good answer for "why" that's particularly productive to discuss here. Why writing skills are so poor is beyond SO's control (differing levels of native English skills/education/cultural expectations for effort when contributing to an online community, people hastily "texting" posts on phones, etc...). So it's not so simple to achieve as you may think. It's probably most pragmatic to insist on content quality. If a post is well-researched, informative and accurate, I can edit a few run-on sentences (but formatting and quality do correlate). — ggorlen 1 min ago
I acutally like "It's probably most pragmatic to insist on content quality." - currently, I just edit posts, but I have already told some people that I did and why. — Christian 47 secs ago
Standard are not possible, I know. I am not aiming for standards. Writing is pretty tough. "human autocorrect" is fantastic :) We had "human google translate" at work today. I will check out the link you have added. A reminder may be good though. — Christian 41 secs ago
I remember a situation where I edited/rewrote a complete post and the developer who posted it was really really thankful for my edits, see stackoverflow.com/questions/71534173/… (check before and after, far beyond fixing line breaks and commas though). — Christian 41 secs ago
I forgot to mention, welcome to meta @Christian and thanks for helping the community with your edits! That said, back to my "it's hopeless" tack, you might want to check out the "Thanks in advanced" saga that's been plaguing the community. TL;DR just getting people not only to not say "thanks", but also to spell it properly is virtually impossible. — ggorlen 52 secs ago
Good answer. Editor here. Just raised my first question on meta. And, I agree, editing posts and telling people about it, so that they can learn, may be the only way out English is tough but writing is tough as well. — Christian 14 secs ago
"If we just close the question due to low quality, no one will learn and benefit from it"--on the other hand, if we close the question due to low quality, no one will suffer from it. — ggorlen 10 secs ago
Different topic. But I felt bad when my question got closed when I started on SO. — Christian 20 secs ago
2:19 AM
@Christian: The system is Stack Overflow. The system already explains why editing and downvoting can happen in the Help Center, so you shouldn't have to repeat yourself. Also, I'm of the strong opinion that you don't learn anything from a low quality post. — Makoto 5 secs ago
So, linking to stackoverflow.com/help/why-vote and stackoverflow.com/help/editing will explain my edits. Thanks for you explanations. — Christian 54 secs ago
1 hour later…
3:59 AM
If it's really bad I just comment as follows - People are more likely to read your question/answer if you format it so it is not a wall of text. Please read Markdown help and edit your question to add paragraphs and bullet points ... — DavidPostill 47 secs ago
Sometimes I did get downvoted by others, just because they wanted to make their answer have a better score than mine. How do I know? From the downvote date and the new answer date, it is the same, and there are only 2 answers, my answer, and his answer. — Michael Harley 11 secs ago
So the review-needed indicator on the top bar isn't based exclusively on the threshold it's based on how long it's been since you have looked at the review status. Specifically the indicator appears under the condtions: "1. if any review queue has a red dot (explained below) and 2. if it’s been at least an hour since you clicked on the review icon." (emphasis added) from the initial announcement on MSE — Henry Ecker 1 min ago
This answer doesn't seem to address this question which is about the review-needed indicator appearing when there are no queues with red dots (as shown in the screenshot in the question all queues are grey). Your screenshots show quite clearly that there are several queues which are in the red. The indicator should appear given the specified conditions. — Henry Ecker 1 min ago
2 hours later…
5:59 AM
It was an attempt but given your 1st comment, it’s just a wrong one lol. — New England cottontail 46 secs ago
6:41 AM
@DavidPostill: That doesn't help a ton; it puts the target on your back for the person who thought they were coherent, and it makes you sound kinda pretentious, as if you're less interested in their question and more fixated on their grammar. Both are a nasty cocktail and you want nothing to do with it, trust me. — Makoto 1 min ago
7:08 AM
@DavidPostill: Super User gets a fraction of the traffic, attention and energy that Stack Overflow does, so it's not a balanced comparison. It has something to do with being toxic because they wrote a question asking about how to learn to code, we closed it, they complained on Twitter, etc, or whatever, I can't remember and CBA to pull up the initiative that put long-time curators on the outs with the company. But I tell you you're comparing apples to galaxies here. — Makoto 10 secs ago
As it stands most of the garbage is made up of questions that are extremely specific, and are garbage for that reason. That points to the opposite conclusion : we should encourage broader questions. — ticster 56 secs ago
The gorilla vs shark argument isn't wrong, it just doesn't apply to most of the garbage. There are very few "is Python better than Perl" questions around SO, but there is a tremendous amount of "I'm trying to do exactly this, have tried practically nothing so far, please do it for me". — ticster 55 secs ago
7:48 AM
@MichaelHarley I do it too. If I think the available answer is bad, I just downvote it and post my own answer. — Dharman ♦ 30 secs ago
8:24 AM
"I'm trying to do exactly this, have tried practically nothing so far, please do it for me" those questions need to be downvoted and closed after which those questions will be roomba-ed. That it doesn't happen (no downvoting, no close voting, no roomba) is because the few curators that care are wound up in discussion on Meta and the very few that didn't got sick of being called dishonest / doing counter productive things every other day. — rene 31 secs ago
8:54 AM
This is the question that spurred my post. It's a clear question about common things to look out for when receiving data dumps. It's somewhat broad for sure, but is more interesting than 80% of new questions these days. It still got closed, even it's basically just asking "what specifications are required for this type of task". — ticster 59 secs ago
related: meta.stackexchange.com/questions/109025 (and also read the Linked posts on that question) — rene 58 secs ago
9:18 AM
In other words, by all means close polls and pointless "is C++ better than Python" questions. But there is a broad consensus that anything that touches on best practices should be closed, and that's a bad idea. — ticster 34 secs ago
10:11 AM
Does this answer your question? Why opinion-based questions cannot be answered or implemented here? — gnat 14 secs ago
No, my point is that opinion based answers are in fact the norm, and the "opinion based" close reason is all too often used to shut down broad questions that are still perfectly relevant here. — ticster 41 secs ago
It is hilariously petty that some people got so mad at this post they went through my SO history to downvote my questions XD — ticster 17 secs ago
10:39 AM
The OP is still making the wrong conclusion though, @chivracq . "Your question is too elementary" isn't a closure reason. It might result in downvotes from users, as many "elementary" questions also fail to demonstrate evidence of research but downvotes and closure votes have different reasons with only some overlap. — Larnu 1 min ago
I don't see what's confusing about the community undoing vandalism, @Patzerfaust . Of course we don't want vandalism on the site, and of course we're going to undo any we find; that's good curation. — Larnu 30 secs ago
1 hour later…
11:58 AM
12:19 PM
12:36 PM
As much as we would like people to improve, we can't make other people do anything (unless there is sweet, sweet reputation points involved, of course). Most people are not interested in learning anything. For instance, native speakers are not interested in learning to avoid producing run-on sentences or distinguish between than and then. Just be thankful it is possible to change the content on Stack Overflow. — Peter Mortensen 57 secs ago
The question isn't asking how to write software to process the files. It just asks what file format to store information in. That's it. No programming involved. They just want to store a file on a server. — Dharman ♦ 57 secs ago
12:58 PM
No matter how I tried, there is no more than 500 results in search on any of requests. — Kos 27 secs ago
1:14 PM
Re "do not use line breaks and periods ... using commas": That is mild. Leaving out punctuation completely (in between sentences in a paragraph) is much much worse. The suffering experienced by readers is much higher. I wouldn't attribute sadistic motives to the writers, but there is a total lack of empathy for their readers. Sample 1 (starting from "so i need to align"). Sample 2. — Peter Mortensen 42 secs ago
1:41 PM
If you voted to close it recently, you can go to your profile > Votes > Closure and use the browser's CTRL+F feature. This only works for posts you voted to close recently though, otherwise it might not be on the first page. — Donald Duck 22 secs ago
Though it should be said there are sometimes internal separating newlines in the Markdown source (that don't render), but that is only the case for sample 6 and partly for one of the other samples. — Peter Mortensen 1 min ago
1:56 PM
@DonaldDuck Yes, currently i already do what you suggested. But the problem is that there are around thousands of questions that i've voted to close/delete etc. Note that i've mentioned in my question that currently i do this manually by going to profile>votes>closure. The
ctrl+f
trick isn't what i'm looking for, though i use it very frequently as expected. But that doesn't cut it. — Jason Liam 7 secs agoI mean really this is where we part ways. The general attitude at SO is to narrow what's acceptable as much as possible (like considering data storage in data engineering to be non programming related) as though that is what will increase quality. And I find the correlation, at least these days, to run the other way. Most of the garbage is hyper specific, and the few quality questions are broader in scope. — ticster 19 secs ago
2:34 PM
If it weren't for the fact it will get burned anyway I would have said fix the mistagged placement-new questions then analyze. — Joshua 41 secs ago
“As though that is what will increase quality”…I think it’s more “that is what will stem the tide”. SO is already overrun with crap, we need ways to stop it. If that means that some subjects which, in a perfect world, would otherwise have been viable for the site get sidelined, then so be it. If everyone played by the rules, I think you’d have a good point about this data processing question potentially being programming related, at least implicitly. But we don’t live in that world, SO needs a narrow scope just to survive these days IMO — Clive 42 secs ago
3:34 PM
A big part of the problem (although I'm probably not allowed to say this) is that many of our first-time posters are, for whatever reason, completely incompetent. They are as incapable of paying enough attention to markdown syntax to construct a coherent post as they are of solving (or even understanding our answers to) the programming problem they're trying to ask about. (And, sadly, no amount of encouragement will change that.) — Steve Summit 15 secs ago
people are interacting with you in the comment section so you are getting response — Temani Afif 1 min ago
3:46 PM
Which of your questions are you asking about here? If you're asking about your question that was initially titled New to C# and ZKTeco Devices then the title alone is going to likely attract downvotes; the title is to tell us about the question not how new you are to technologies. — Larnu 1 min ago
4:13 PM
Images of error/code/data etc are also often very poorly received. Have a read of the FAQ on why: Please do not upload images of code/data/errors when asking a question. — Larnu 9 secs ago
4:26 PM
Another way of reducing edits in the review queue would be to let the author of the post accept edits to his post. This would make that edits can be accepted by a lot more people. It would also not let pass any substantially bad edit or one that contradicts the users intent, because it is in the poster's own benefit that only good edits are accepted. — The_spider 53 secs ago
4:44 PM
5:01 PM
@The_spider I'm skeptical. Plenty of OPs write terrible stuff; why would they necessarily know whether an edit is any good? — Karl Knechtel 1 min ago
Your question was up for only 20 hours in a weekend, with 116 views. The majority of users have weekend now. On top of that your question is rather broad, asking for us to paint the whole picture for you while questions in general might get better reception and answers when you have already explored some options on your own. I'm sure both stripe-payments and firebase have documentation or prior questions and answers you can build from already? Or at a minimum informs us what topics you already researched so we won't go down the same path. — rene 58 secs ago
And you just re-posted a new version of your original question. Please don't do that, ever. Just edit the question to include more details. — rene 1 min ago
You can open the post in a new window, when you'll see the 'full' close banner - for such "guideline violations," you'll likely see more information than you are shown in the review queue. — Adrian Mole 12 secs ago
As to your latest revision that says I looked everywhere on Google are you really saying that not one of these questions have something that is close to or related /useful to what you need? — rene 30 secs ago
Some users use inexperience as a plea for tolerance / empathy. Anyway, what do you do on posts claiming inexperience? Do you give some guidance? — Rubén 24 secs ago
It is an example of the XY problem. You assumed the problem was caused by you being new to C#. Contributors took your word for it, re-inforced by a code snippet that is missing the code that did not compile. None of this helped them identify the real issue, a very poorly designed library that gives any programmer a throbbing headache. All the info necessary to arrive at an answer is actually present but cutting through that kind of clutter is just very hard to do. So not getting an answer is unsurprising. — Hans Passant 19 secs ago
@AlexeiLevenkov I find that, quite often, as much info as possible helps me with a review. IIRC, both "needs debugging details" and "caused by a typo" only shown the quoted summary in the review itself ... so I open the post in a new window, where I can see the specific reason more fully. — Adrian Mole 25 secs ago
Keeps getting downvoted? It's got 1 downvote and 1 upvote, that's not most people's definition of something that keeps happening. — Robert Longson 43 secs ago
What I usually do (on other websites, such as Statalist) is I redirect the OP to a question I asked which a) clearly asks my question, b) provides synthetic/the real dataset I'm working with, and c) provides the verbatim code that I used which reproduces the error I'm having. That way, the OP has a better idea of what kinds of questions get the best and most helpful responses and can reformat accordingly. @Rubén — Jared Greathouse 18 secs ago
I have to see the first question on SO that gets closed as a recommendation question that woud be suitable for Software Recommendations. Asking a good recommendation question is hard. Maybe even harder then asking a question on SO. Directing clueless users to another SE site is not doing the receiving end a big favor. — rene 1 min ago
Although I don't really disagree with your overall assessment, I think it can be very important to distinguish actual close reasons in some cases. One that springs to mind is whether it was closed for "needs debugging details" or "caused by a typo". That difference can often influence my decision on whether or not to reopen a question. — Adrian Mole 52 secs ago
"but don't even say what language you're using." You don't need to tell us what language you are asking about, that's what tags are for. — Larnu 34 secs ago
Thanks. It's a good idea to point first-time askers to good examples. I suggest you to mention that in your answer. P.S. On SO we have a vote to "close as duplicate". Ideally, the original question should work as good examples of how to ask a question but here the emphasis on pointing to an already available answer. — Rubén 36 secs ago
5:59 PM
I don't agree that it's just noise. But you are right, java was in the tags of the OP (at least as of now), so it was stated to begin with. — Jared Greathouse 1 min ago
[java] isn't in the tags in the linked question, [javascript] is, which isn't the same. — Larnu 15 secs ago
There should be enough explanation to make them know. Furthermore, I think that any user will notice that an edit really improves formatting and/or readability is good and one that does not fix any issues or worsens them is bad. — The_spider 1 min ago
Hi Jason, welcome to the Stack Overflow Meta site! I'm not sure which search brought you here but the problem you describe will not be answered on this specific site. To get an expert's answer for the topic of your question you'll have to find and then re-post on the proper site. Check How do I ask a good question and What is on topic on the target site to make sure your post is in good shape. Your question is definitely off-topic on Meta and is better deleted here. — rene 34 secs ago
7:03 PM
7:16 PM
If you are new to C# and getting stonewalled by this sort of error message, learn the fundamentals of C# first rather than trying to deal with someone else's library that is apparently not very well known. — Karl Knechtel 1 min ago
There are 2,697 questions with this tag and all of them deleted. It attracts a lot of off-topic and spam questions. I am in favour of blocking it, but first maybe let's see if it will get deleted and recreated. — Dharman ♦ 25 secs ago
"If we just close the question due to low quality, no one will learn and benefit from it." We are not even remotely suffering from a lack of questions. We are suffering from a surplus of nonsense camouflaged as questions, which clutters search results and in many cases makes it harder to find canonicals or even actively pulls searchers away from them. — Karl Knechtel 21 secs ago
"and the "opinion based" close reason is all too often used to shut down broad questions that are still perfectly relevant here." If this is your central claim, why did you write several paragraphs citing zero examples of this happening, talking about completely different and unrelated bad questions, and making an irrelevant argument about the subjective judgment of answers? — Karl Knechtel 38 secs ago
"Now, what distinguishes these approaches? Strictly speaking, all 3 of them fit the bill and answer the question. Yes, and that's fine, because this question did not ask for a subjective judgment. People who vote on the answers are offering their judgment, which may be subjective. That has nothing to do with inviting subjectivity by the nature of the question. If the question doesn't admit any answer that actually addresses the problem or task, then it must propose an objective metric. There is no contradiction here. — Karl Knechtel 13 secs ago
Sadly, this is one of the many stuck tags. It won't be deleted. The source of the bug has been identified, but when we'll get devtime, if any, is unclear — Zoe stands with Ukraine ♦ 35 secs ago
8:28 PM
If you're using
console.log
, make sure you know about browsers' lazy evaluation of what is being logged so that you are not confused about asynchronous behavior. — Heretic Monkey 52 secs agoAnd @chivracq points to the answer; give details in the question. You know what it does not do, so you should know where in the code it should be doing the thing it does not do it. Focus on that spot. Create a [mre] that reproduces the error without all the other code that is not necessary. Post that minimal amount of code, along with a detailed explanation of what you have researched and what attempts you've made based on that research (so that others don't bother suggesting things you've already tried). It takes work, yes. But that's why people come to SO for answers. — Heretic Monkey 10 secs ago
8:48 PM
9:13 PM
You don't seem to have asked software recommendations whether this is OK. If you did you'd almost certainly find they are not OK with your idea. — Robert Longson 1 min ago
9:29 PM
all answers (and therefore all questions) are necessarily opinion based answers That's just your opinion. — EJoshuaS - Stand with Ukraine 52 secs ago
9:49 PM
@PeterMortensen That user with 28k rep from your examples is weird. Can't understand how someone can ask almost eleven hundred questions. In possibly every existing technology currently available. — Lino 40 secs ago
10:03 PM
This is a pointless bit of mental gymnastics. So the question doesn't explicitely invite subjectivity, but we all know that good answers are necessarily subjectively measured as good. Again this is my whole point, whether you ask for it or not the subjectivity is implicitly there. — ticster 1 min ago
I think you maybe missing the question's point, which is whether or not it's OK to edit other people's mostly code-only answers to provide explanations for them. No one is arguing about whether explanations are valuable, but rather whether editing existing answers to provide one is OK. — Gino Mempin 11 secs ago
No I understood the question. I guess to directly answer the question then, I'd say "it depends how you edit it." So long as the edit doesn't change the code or intent of the author, then I don't care if you edit someone else's code only answer @GinoMempin — Jared Greathouse 1 min ago
I don't disagree with this, but since "original close reasons were not resolved" is the first option for why a question should remain closed, I feel forced to click through to the details to find the close reason - as a rule, not as an exception. I'm not entirely opposed to removing that menu option, but having the option and then not displaying the reasons for me to evaluate whether they were resolved feels weird. — Sasha Kondrashov 30 secs ago
This question belongs on the main site. meta.stackoverflow.com is for questions about the running of Stack Overflow. — snakecharmerb 1 min ago
It is largely because of the first menu item, "Original close reasons were not resolved", which I feel like I have to evaluate every time I choose to keep a question closed. It feels strange to either be forced never to choose that menu item for SO guideline violations, or to always click through to the details for them. — Sasha Kondrashov 50 secs ago
11:09 PM
"How can I ask a question about it?" Well, did you try reading How to Ask? — Karl Knechtel 31 secs ago
@snakecharmerb: why do you say that? The question title is asking about how to ask a question which may be off topic, and so this is in fact a meta topic, not a main topic. And regardless, if this question were asked, as-is, on the main site, it would be down-voted and close-voted into oblivion fairly quickly. — Hovercraft Full Of Eels 55 secs ago
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