12:56 AM
Looks hike that this only search for a single string instead of e.g. posts that contain both string A and string B? (by the way, for the purpose of this question, top 50 ordered by score is probably what the user want) — user202729 31 secs ago
1:52 AM
The revisions list says it's not there, despite it showing up on the question page. — Ryan M ♦ 1 min ago
What do people actually object to in this proposal, to merit the downvotes? — Karl Knechtel 43 secs ago
Well, that certainly justifies an inability to remove it. The bug, then, is that it shows up on the question page. — Karl Knechtel 1 min ago
@Larnu I am not even remotely surprised that people don't read that text, because it barely shows up in the first place. It won't persist after adding the tag unless you go out of your way to check it again, and there's no built-in motivation to do so. — Karl Knechtel 48 secs ago
We do have, for example, a [cs50] tag about a popular programming course. That one drew over 2500 questions and inspired a beta SE site. — Karl Knechtel 1 min ago
The network request made has the correct payload without
c#
and returns success too. Quite an oddity — Oleg Valter is with Ukraine 47 secs agoA successful attempt to edit also drops the attempt to edit tags and only saves the body. — Oleg Valter is with Ukraine 44 secs ago
However, you get a replacement bug! Now the edit history looks even weirder. — Oleg Valter is with Ukraine 1 min ago
The edit history looks normal to me, except that it doesn't show the
c#
tag anywhere. — Karl Knechtel 42 secs agoyeah, that's the bizarre part, @KarlKnechtel - apparently, c# was purged from the post completely (even the API returns as if it never even had the tag)! — Oleg Valter is with Ukraine 25 secs ago
Oof, I guess that's going to make it harder to convince the site maintainers that we aren't just making something up :) — Karl Knechtel 57 secs ago
I guess so :) Why did it not occur to me to take a screenshot before squashing it? — Oleg Valter is with Ukraine 1 min ago
2:31 AM
Error while calling API: `HTTP 503 fetching URL https://api.stackexchange.com/2.2/comments. Body is: <html>
<head>
<title>We are Offline</title>
<style type="text/css">
body { margin: 0; padding: 0; }
iframe { border: 0; }
</style>
</head>
<body>
<iframe width="100%" height="100%" id="pageFrame"></iframe>
<script>
setTimeout(function () { location.reload(true); }, 300000);
var hostName = window.location.hostname;
var directory = '';
</script>
<script src="https://cdn.sstatic.net/error-director.js"></script>
<head>
<title>We are Offline</title>
<style type="text/css">
body { margin: 0; padding: 0; }
iframe { border: 0; }
</style>
</head>
<body>
<iframe width="100%" height="100%" id="pageFrame"></iframe>
<script>
setTimeout(function () { location.reload(true); }, 300000);
var hostName = window.location.hostname;
var directory = '';
</script>
<script src="https://cdn.sstatic.net/error-director.js"></script>
1 hour later…
3:49 AM
Go with the Flow..., Accept the Tag..., Peace-Peace...!, Don't fight...!, Follow the Vibe...! And gloubs-spoink-abracadabra..., the Tag is gone...! [Yes we made it...!] — chivracq 24 secs ago
4:29 AM
"Are reviewers expected to research for internet-wide plagiarism in the First Answers review queue?" - When something is that obviously plagirized, I would say the answer to your question is, absolutely. — Security Hound 1 min ago
It's not cheating to view the question in another tab. Audits are designed to be passed. Viewing the question in a tab, and thus all answers, is part of successfully performing community moderation. — Security Hound 1 min ago
2 hours later…
6:22 AM
Close reasons were invented as the first set of being nicer, more "welcoming". They were intended to replace the endless pit of downvotes certain questions got. This is, after all, a peer review system; and without closure being concise and specific, a black hole of downvotes and comments explaining the downvotes can be a little rough. Overall it is fairly pleasant here, some people just have a certain level of anxiety associated with peer review in general. That plays out more and more when the closure system creates friction in places where it is confusing. — Travis J 34 secs ago
7:21 AM
7:56 AM
@KarlKnechtel I cannot say I am huge fan of that tag either. Imagine the chaos if all programming courses would get their tag. We should think about consequences if exceptions would be broadly applied. Of course, there are far worse tags, which really incentivize posting off topic questions. — Dalija Prasnikar 1 min ago
For any interested parties, ALL currently listed pages are now closed as dupe/signposts for "How to use return inside a recursive function in PHP". — mickmackusa 30 secs ago
With all due respect, I fail to see how these are linked issues, and how this is anything other than a rant. — user438383 1 min ago
8:21 AM
These issues are linked by the behavioral pattern, in case one is able to see the big picture.. — Martin Zeitler 58 secs ago
"As an autistic person, I've been suspended" - you were not suspended for being autistic. You were suspended for leaving a number of outright rude comments. "the whole "Autism Awareness April"" autism again has nothing to do with your suspension. You were suspended for a month because it was your third mod message involving precisely rude comments. — Zoe stands with Ukraine ♦ 44 secs ago
Oh yes, I remember you, you're the one that accused me of virtue signaling and said that because I'd only been on the site 8 years it was "unlikely my justifications provide any meaning" when all I did was tell you to look at a users profile to confirm they had no site activity rather than assuming they were suspended. — Nick stands with Ukraine 35 secs ago
To be abundantly clear, you were suspended for comments like "Readability? You must indeed be a special kind of stupid". The rest of the incomplete (but long) list is in the mod message, in case you need a reminder. Being autistic isn't an excuse for repeatedly leaving rude comments. Replying to rudeness with rudeness is also not okay, or an excuse. As all three mod messages also told you (it's part of the template), you don't engage with rude comments. You flag and move on with your life instead of escalating. You chose escalation in a number of cases, and rightfully got suspended — Zoe stands with Ukraine ♦ 44 secs ago
9:09 AM
Maybe it is related to Question page is not rendering latest edit? OP removed the tag within the grace period, hence it not showing up in the revision history, but for some reason the rendered post didn't update? — Ivar 1 min ago
@Ivar unlikely - the API returned the c# tag up until I found the way to remove the tag. At which point it started to claim it was never there in revision 1. Something's wrong in the database. — Oleg Valter is with Ukraine 1 min ago
9:31 AM
@CodyGray Yes the "high scores" currently should be 40 and 80 instead of 80 and 150. — jay.sf 38 secs ago
Oh, I see why I was confused. You thought that the redesigned profile pages were actually functional. No, not in any way whatsoever. They're now just for looks, and they don't even look good. — Cody Gray ♦ 17 secs ago
10:17 AM
Yes, this keeps happening, seemingly when I have new votes: i.stack.imgur.com/Xz1Ch.png i.stack.imgur.com/5RgQP.png — Ryan M ♦ 1 min ago
1 hour later…
11:44 AM
"This in general allows those with closure votes to "invest" them on active content, where they are better applied." That's where the problem is, and it's a technical one. New questions should be in a closed state by default, and if it gets blessed for opening, the score should be reset and comments up to that point removed. — Karl Knechtel 13 secs ago
12:01 PM
@MisterMiyagi 100% agreed. Commenting something along the lines of
Welcome to Stack Overflow. Please read [ask] and <lengthy, specific description of how to improve the post>
has become my primary way of interacting with the site. On a day that I decide to check in, I might do this dozens of times and get an upset OP maybe once. I shrug it off because I know that I am the established community member upholding community norms. I get thankful feedback much more often. Also, from personal experience it feels vastly worse to be downvoted without feedback, than with. — Karl Knechtel 1 min ago@KevinB there are many, many places where I would blame the site UI for poor communication with users. Users seeing
Please consider
and understanding Thou shalt
is absolutely not one of them. That's 100% on the users in question. That said, I strongly believe that comments on downvotes should happen more often, which is why I personally comment on all my downvotes (and sometimes even hold back the downvote) and put considerable effort into them. I strongly believe that telling people specifically how to behave better, correlates with them eventually actually behaving better. — Karl Knechtel 1 min ago@Makoto "Someone lashing out at us is seldom because they thought their question was downvotable - they've more than likely taken it as an attack on their own character." What I don't understand is how so many people apparently take it for granted that taking the opportunity to explain the problem with the question somehow makes it more likely that the downvote will be taken as a personal attack. I've lost count of the times I've gotten frustrated - across the entire Internet - because I couldn't get anyone to explain the negative feedback I was receiving. — Karl Knechtel 32 secs ago
It seems like people keep complaining about the duplicate meta posts asking why downvotes don't require an explanatory comment. What they seem to be missing is that people actively want the feedback. Those posts are being made by people who want the feedback, because they want the feedback, and it feels devastatingly awful not to get it and just see a negative number next to your content. Seriously, the emotion is so strong that it's a bit hard for me to type this all out. — Karl Knechtel 11 secs ago
@ZoestandswithUkraine Sorry, you are referring to the wrong question in one of the links. — Tigerware 47 secs ago
Nope, I just linked the first dupe and the repost of the deleted dupe, both of which matter for context. — Zoe stands with Ukraine ♦ just now
True. But it missed the link, I was referring to. I edited the question for completeness. — Tigerware 52 secs ago
Why the downvotes? I added the links. I am trying to solve this, but I feel driven out of the community. — Tigerware 31 secs ago
I guess. But they are phrased so differently, that most people would not notice that they are duplicates. — Tigerware 17 secs ago
That's a good thing. No matter how you search you find the one set of answers. — Robert Longson 40 secs ago
@Larnu What is missing for the answer to be sufficient in your opinion? I think the main problem is that one question's author did not know how to phrase his question. — Tigerware 29 secs ago
But it does answer the question in a new way. To me the questions are duplicates, but others might disagree. If they were actually marked as duplicates, I would understand that. But they are not, so it makes no sense to me, that we don't want another different correct answer for that question. — Tigerware 1 min ago
The duplication process links the questions so you're directed to the one set of answers whichever one you land on. Surely you don't want everyone to write dozens of identical answers to almost identical questions. That would be a waste of time, no? — Robert Longson 1 min ago
Sometimes that would be helpful. Like here, where the questions are phrased very differently. So - It depends. — Tigerware 13 secs ago
1:22 PM
1 hour later…
2:42 PM
3:24 PM
Question are duplicates if the answer is applicable to both questions. The phrasing of the question isn’t relevant if the community moderation is being performed properly. Your comment below suggested the questions were phrased differently, but you believed your answer was applicable to both, which makes them duplicates. Answering both questions with the same answer isn’t appropriate. — Security Hound 41 secs ago
@Oleg That doesn't exclude the fluke. It's very likely that an edit occurred at some point and the tags didn't get saved to Posts (where the system pulls from when rendering the question page) but did get saved to PostHistory (where the system pulls from for revision history and the editor). — animuson ♦ 59 secs ago
3:44 PM
@Scott Sauyet: Isn't it (effectively) only 3 levels? That is, H1, H2, and H3. — Peter Mortensen just now
@JohannesPertl This decision was made because allowing merges in the other direction causes weird side effects. Users could choose the direction in the past and we changed the code to start enforcing one direction because of the headaches it occasionally caused. It's not something we'd reconsider. — animuson ♦ 1 min ago
4:06 PM
@KarlKnechtel; If people want the feedback, petition the system to express it on our behalf, not us. If we act as stop-gaps to the system, then we will never achieve consistent and useful feedback to users in this situation which would entirely defeat the purpose you're so desperately yearning for. — Makoto 24 secs ago
@Peter: I think that answer only used two levels, but they were (Markdown equivalents of)
H2
and H3
. I usually use those ones -- and occasionally H4
-- thinking of the Question and Answers as the equivalents of H1
. I asked only because I was concerned that the discussion here was frowning on headers altogether, a concern not bourn our by the subsequent discussion. — Scott Sauyet 23 secs ago4:37 PM
@JohannesPertl What difference would it make? You can always change the name of the account after the merge to whatever you prefer. — samcarter_is_at_topanswers.xyz 1 min ago
5:17 PM
SymbolHound, referenced in We need to be able to search for punctuation (symbols), has been dead since April 2022. — Peter Mortensen 15 secs ago
@samcarter_is_at_topanswers.xyz The user ID changes which matters somewhat in a few scenarios. For example, tracking which user shared links to a specific post is tied to user ID, not the name. There are probably other examples as well I'm failing to think of. — Bender the Greatest 1 min ago
5:52 PM
6:07 PM
I like how Braiam clearly mention me being the user who added the "all", but fails to mention that it was removed in a previous edit, which I just added back. The original post had "all" meta.stackoverflow.com/revisions/324071/1 ... — Bhargav Rao 30 secs ago
6:21 PM
From my experience, the situations where VBA6/VBA7 are used correctly generally tend to be for host-agnostic questions diving deep where the host app really doesn't matter, so I don't but the argument about wasting the tag slot. python-3.x has in big bold writing USE ONLY IF YOUR QUESTION IS VERSION-SPECIFIC. Given modern and 99% of VBA is VBA7 (VBA7.1) I understand you may want to synonymise those. VBA6 is different and I think deserves its tag guidance to be modified, similar to python-3.x, with the additional stipulation that it must be used alongside vba for discoverability — Greedo 35 secs ago
6:49 PM
@RyanM yes, that is something that's nuce to prevent. It was more backend account-related issues that could sprout up in these situations. Things that required devs to keep fixing. Cosmetic issues are one thing, but spending time to manually fix accounts is another. The CreationDate issue can still occur via our migration system too. — animuson ♦ 1 min ago
7:47 PM
I tried to take the 2022 survey, but it has a issue at the first question. It does not provide me with a choice that suits my situation. (I do not remember all available options for the question.) I am not a programmer, i have not been one, i am not learning, it is not part of my job. However i do write code almost every day. As an almost part-time side thing. — Cornel Ciobanu 1 min ago
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