12:44 AM
Ah, @animuson, that's precisely what I call "something is wrong in the database" :) It does not imply that ya'll have grave problems but that the problem was not in the UI layer as suggested in comments above. — Oleg Valter is with Ukraine 1 min ago
I thought vanity was half of the point of Stack Overflow. It's not like I can buy dinner with my rep. — user4581301 11 secs ago
12:55 AM
1:14 AM
I suggest changing "software tools" to "software tool" in all three instances. "Software algorithm" and "programming problem" are both singular, so including a plural for the third item makes it flow badly. I realized that you probably chose this wording to exactly mirror the help center, but the help center could probably use the same update. It bothers me more when used in a single sentence like this than when used in a bulleted list in the help center. — Stephen Ostermiller 53 secs ago
Should the post owner guidance have an admonition against cross-posting on multiple other sites? I worry that directing users to a big list of other sites where they can ask is going to prompt some people to post on several of them at once. — Stephen Ostermiller 48 secs ago
1:34 AM
@KarlKnechtel Downvotes on the meta site often mean that people like another post better. — Stephen Ostermiller 1 min ago
I think there have been more than a few concerns about linking to /sites. I think the current proposal is to replace it with an MSO faq which can outline everything and give more useful guidance than just a big list of sites. Though nothing has been started (as far as I am aware) to make that a reality. @StephenOstermiller — Henry Ecker 18 secs ago
"when both parties would have been suspended, this would have been fine for me, but instead the perpetrator had been defended" Nobody has defended the perpetrator. They were, in actual fact, suspended as soon as it was pointed out that they had continued posting abusive comments. You have been told this at least two or three times now, depending on whether you count me saying "some action was taken against that user." Your continued insistence that moderators have defended the user is bordering on willful ignorance. — Ryan M ♦ 1 min ago
1 hour later…
2:39 AM
If your code is not working as expected, you can post on Stack Overflow, but you should make sure you include a minimal, reproducible example, not a wall of code. Hint: you're allowed to ask multiple questions, one for each individual problem that you might have with the code. — 41686d6564 stands w. Palestine 25 secs ago
Please note that we are not a help forum, but a knowledge repository (if you take the time to read tour, which you haven't so far, you will see it in bold letters). All posts are contributions to it and as such, huge code dumps have little to no value for us. You will need to reduce your code to an MRE (see comment above), or risk the question get closed for lacking debugging details. — Oleg Valter is with Ukraine 56 secs ago
3:14 AM
Does this answer your question? How much code is too much code to put into a question? — Andrew T. 1 min ago
"without using lots of individual lines of code" be sure to provide the reason and detail for this requirement. Otherwise, you might get answers ranging from Code Review to Code Golf quality. — Andrew T. just now
3:49 AM
4:00 AM
3 hours later…
6:32 AM
1 hour later…
7:52 AM
"You can paste your whole program.." This sounds like it is acceptable to post the whole program. While anyone certainly CAN post their whole program, or ask multiple questions in a post, that is definitely not something they SHOULD do. Questions that don't contain minimal reproducible example or ask multiple questions can be closed or downvoted as they don't follow the site rules. — Dalija Prasnikar 1 min ago
@PeterMortensen so votes are valued much as "Lies, Damn Lies and Statistics"... — Solar Mike 28 secs ago
8:47 AM
Re "multiple items to an arraylist without using lots of individual lines of code": It is very likely that this question has already been asked (and answered). It is just a matter of finding it among the existing 22,613,938 questions, though admittedly this may be easier said than done. You can narrow it down by using the programming language in the search queries (C#? 1,539,619 questions. Java? 1,848,203 questions). A candidate. — Peter Mortensen 28 secs ago
9:45 AM
Re "A tool or technology is often (not always) described best by its maintainers": I would argue that maintainers in most cases lousy at describing their own thing (they already know too much). The corresponding Wikipedia article is often much better (though Wikipedia can't keep up with the increased technology creation). — Peter Mortensen 38 secs ago
Re "A tool or technology is often (not always) described best by its maintainers": I would argue that maintainers are in most cases lousy at describing their own thing. They already know too much and assume everybody else are mind-readers (the curse of knowledge bias). The corresponding Wikipedia article is often much better (though Wikipedia can't keep up with the increased rate of technology creation). — Peter Mortensen 30 secs ago
Well, this is exactly what I have written in my answer. Stackoverflow does not impose a limit on the lines of code posted. Thus you can post as much code as you like. However, as I've written, it's neither good practice nor likely to gain a helpful answer. Please read my complete answer. — former_Epsilon 38 secs ago
10:09 AM
Your answer is not specific enough. It does not give clear guidance that posting more code than necessary or asking multiple questions violates the rules of the site. Even when you tell new users what is better, they will not follow those "better" guidelines because it is easier for them. There is too much ambiguity in your answer and new users need stronger guidance. — Dalija Prasnikar 1 min ago
10:47 AM
If you can't provide an MCVE the best we can do is guess. So all you get is 6 to 8 guesses. Maybe you're better of with some rubber duck debugging first, try a chatroom to see if someone wants to act like one. — rene 53 secs ago
You should never post real credentials on the site. Some API keys are an exception, but if it's sensitive, don't post it. If it's a public API/website (both collectively referred to as API from here on out), they can get their own api keys or whatever. Otherwise, there is indeed a problem. If the problem is limited to that private API that no one else can access or get access to, then no, you shouldn't really post the question on SO, if you can't also include enough to reproduce or answer the question, depending on the exact problem — Zoe stands with Ukraine ♦ 15 secs ago
My point being, if the problem boils down to interaction with your code and a black box, private API that no one can in any way test against, no one will be able to help you either — Zoe stands with Ukraine ♦ 1 min ago
You did not specify the difference between what you expected and what you see. Yes, you see messages about thread exits, but is there any behaviour that you do not expect otherwise? I am not a C# SME, but even a quickest of searches confirms those messages are nothing to worry about by themselves. This does not look like a question that needs access to the non-public resource to be debugged. — Oleg Valter is with Ukraine 50 secs ago
@ZoestandswithUkraine It's not a private API, but a website behind credentials; but that's a distinction without difference. But I can't be certain the problem "boils down to an interaction with your code and a private API"; perhaps I'm using the specific technologies (
async
/await
, HttpClient
) incorrectly. — Zev Spitz 43 secs ago@OlegValteriswithUkraine I would have expected the code to run all the asynchronous tasks to completion, and it doesn't. (Edited the question to reflect that.) There's nothing in the message itself that indicates a problem. But I think it significant that all the threads (presumably used by each async task) all exited together. — Zev Spitz 1 min ago
@VLAZ A valid answer from my perspective would be "This sounds like \<x> or \<y>. To rule out \<x> try \<x1>; to rule out \<y> try \<y1>." That would be useful for someone else who's trying something similar and comes across the same symptoms. — Zev Spitz 54 secs ago
@ZevSpitz quoting my first comment, "API/website (both collectively referred to as API from here on out)" - api was a simplification because comment length limits are annoying. Since you're unable to reproduce it on a public site, it's likely that it boils down to that specific website. In either case, the point holds: if it can't be reproduced elsewhere, and remains specific to a black box no one can access or replicate locally, no one can help you — Zoe stands with Ukraine ♦ 1 min ago
Unfortunately you haven't received a single upvote on any of your questions, so the community has implicitly decided they aren't useful enough for the site. I suspect you also may have negative score deleted questions. 'Unlocking' is hard, as your posts have to accumulate upvotes. — user438383 8 secs ago
@OlegValter is correct; those aren't even errors. That's completely normal behavior. There is no problem there to even be solved. — Cody Gray ♦ 59 secs ago
@ZevSpitz that's already better, thanks. Now, it starts to look like you might be having an X/Y problem with this question. The exception indicates that the thread exited normally, so you need to narrow down when it happens. After processing? After fetching? What about
if( retry == 10 )
rethrow? After HTML loading? Answering all those questions (use a debugger or sprinkle print statements - whatever) will help others understand what's happening. — Oleg Valter is with Ukraine 6 secs agoAre you sure there isn't an exception swallowed in
Task.Run(async () => { }
? If it "hangs" where does it hang? In other words: When you break into the debugger at which statement is each thread? You do get passed Task.WhenAll
, right? — rene 52 secs ago@rene The debugger doesn't show me a specific statement, just a pane with some possible actions, like opening the Tasks view. The UI is responsive, so
Task.WhenAll
is successfully returning a Task
, but I never see the debugger active statement past that line. — Zev Spitz 8 secs agoSo if you add a Debug.Print after Task.WhenAll that will output a string? if yes, your code works. technically. As we lack the functional requirements what it is supposed to do we can't tell what is wrong. — rene 32 secs ago
Can you diagnose if you have ThreadPool starvation: docs.microsoft.com/en-us/archive/blogs/vancem/… — rene 24 secs ago
12:29 PM
+ My 2cts, but from the nearly 9 years you've been using SO and the 9 Questions left "visible" (as I suppose you probably tried to delete as many Qt's as you could...), you only accepted 1 Answer while they all have Answers and for most Qt's, you didn't (really) follow up... Then that doesn't really help for your "future" Qt's to be "well received" by Advanced Users who'd be willing to help you / answer them... :idea: — chivracq 52 secs ago
You can also edit and improve your answer. I am not saying that you have to do that, if you feel that your answer is good enough. I cannot post an answer because question is closed. — Dalija Prasnikar 48 secs ago
12:44 PM
@rene Are you sure there isn't an exception swallowed I had set the HttpClient's Timeout to an hour. When I set it to something smaller, like 10 minutes, I get the following wrapped exception chain (outer to inner): TaskCanceledException -> TimeoutException -> TaskCanceledException -> IOException -> SocketException — Zev Spitz 39 secs ago
1:10 PM
@ZevSpitz well, that is something. So, the site you're crawling happily accepts all your connections but then takes its time to return a payload maybe because they notice you're scraping. How many connections do you have going at the same time? You're better of with failing early, backing off a bit and then retry and/or limit the maximum number of concurrent connections with for example a semaphore: docs.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/api/… — rene 1 min ago
1:45 PM
stackoverflow.com/review/first-answers/31745379 is part of the suspension, and it's purely link-only. The suspension was very much correct in that regard — Zoe stands with Ukraine ♦ 1 min ago
2:25 PM
2:55 PM
3:12 PM
3:30 PM
"On the main site, the question and answer editor now allows you to use TAB to indent (and SHIFT+TAB to de-indent)" I don't think it does. I have a userscript that adds this functionality (not sure which one, though). I just disabled all userscripts and lost the ability to indent/unindent in the main site. The userscript I have does indeed not work on the review queue, like you describe. — VLAZ 1 min ago
I do have a couple of user scripts installed. Perhaps this is something added by it I wasn't aware of. — Bender the Greatest 37 secs ago
Yeah, the indentation thing is part of one of the userscripts I have. That's why I'm not sure which one is it. — VLAZ 10 secs ago
@ArchitGargi This answer does not even meet your very weak criteria of " it’s formatted nicely and meets SO guidelines". It should use code blocks instead of bold text — samcarter_is_at_topanswers.xyz 1 min ago
... also you don't even have to check if the answer is unique, the comment pushes this information right in your face — samcarter_is_at_topanswers.xyz 45 secs ago
Commentary isn’t shown when it’s an audit. Doesn’t change the fact the incorrect review quality action was taken. There is no way a reasonable community reviewer should have voted “looks ok” on that answer — Security Hound 1 min ago
1 hour later…
4:55 PM
@Braiam well we have as much influence on how questions are tagged as we have on the weather. Because it's not really up to us. And reviewing every single question that comes in tagged JS + React + TS + Node.JS (or any sub-combination of these) then correcting the tags is a Sisyphean task. — VLAZ 1 min ago
5:07 PM
A sentence that's an actual question rather than just a statement seems better to me. It often makes it clearer what the issue is. — CertainPerformance 25 secs ago
5:35 PM
"Make a ripple loading effect with circles in Android" this isn't a question, it's a demand; if someone just posts that then they don't understand the site, as they are treating Stack Overflow like a free consultancy/coding service. Such questions are almost always very poorly received — Larnu 1 min ago
"in Android" is unlikely to be needed. In most situations, you can (and should) communicate that info using tags. — 41686d6564 stands w. Palestine 1 min ago
1 hour later…
6:55 PM
Does this answer your question? Is it considered a best practice to create question titles in the form of a question? — Donald Duck 30 secs ago
7:35 PM
7:49 PM
+1. Maybe specify more clearly that the referred question might not directly and verbatim relate to the one being closed. I especially like the reference to "all of the insights" - it could happen that the question itself, even if posing a different problem (so, not a "classic" duplicate), solves in passing the one the OP is asking. — LSerni 1 min ago
8:00 PM
2 hours later…
9:52 PM
On a related note from a fellow reviewer (and one of the watchers for bad reviews): please do not choose "looks ok" on posts that contain noise (thanks, greetings, meta commentary, etc), lack proper code formatting (both inline and code blocks), or are barely more than a link. These posts need at least an edit. — Oleg Valter is with Ukraine 35 secs ago
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