12:02 AM
interesting how this worked out. the bounty got some attention and a decent answer. wonder if people might spend a bit more time to answer these answerless questions after a certain period of time if there was reputation reward? — dangel 21 secs ago
1 hour later…
1:19 AM
This one is maybe a little bit "too complete"...: the "was was" is probably not needed... (You are all among Mods, I guess you can remove my Comment when that "Typo" has been corrected...) — chivracq 10 secs ago
1:49 AM
Mini-Feedback: The "No" in the Quote doesn't make sense in the Quote in relation with a "Why?" Question, => should be removed, or the "original" Question this "No" Answer was answering included... // Name of the Mod included in the same Link feels a bit "strange"... // "enough reputation" + "sufficient reputation" feel "vague", couldn't the Thresholds be added also...? => 5k/2k/20k, I don't know, no idea...! (And I've been on the Site for 7 years I think, the [1-50]-Rep Users this FAQ will apply to will have even less clue than me...!) // [Can remove my Comment once seen...] — chivracq 10 secs ago
2:02 AM
3:01 AM
3:46 AM
@CodyGray: We don't have and don't want separate tags for [haswell] vs. [nehalem] vs. [amd-zen], just [intel] or [amd-processor] + [x86]. And AFAIK it's very rare to program GPUs at any lower level than the portable PTX assembly language which works across all microarchitectures. — Peter Cordes 43 secs ago
@CodyGray: I guess the situation isn't exactly analogous because there is a software-visible assembly language that's specific to each generation of GPU, so in CPU terms they'd be different architectures? I don't know how much this differs between kepler/maxwell/pascal, but if we start getting enough Q&As that lumping them together into [nvidia][gpu] is a problem, we can make tags like [nvidia-pascal], which will be active for a few years until that generation of GPUs is obsolete. (That obsolescence is a factor in thinking it shouldn't have tags; but OTOH [c++11] has a tag.) — Peter Cordes 40 secs ago
If that's the audit (which it seems to be given the score and the small number of audits attempted), then that was in first answers queue not first questions. — Henry Ecker 15 secs ago
2 hours later…
5:34 AM
@Alexander Precisely. Well, more precisely I'm saying that I don't care whether SO updates its automatic removal features. But I believe the people who do care and want these kinds of questions to be deleted would be better served by SO updating its auto-cleanup heuristics than by trying to convince every single member of the community to go along with a policy of not answering these questions. — Ben 13 secs ago
5:56 AM
This is Meta Stack Overflow, for discussions about how Stack Overflow works. Your question is off-topic here and belongs on the main site. — greg-449 24 secs ago
I am unable to post on the main site. So StackOverflow recommended to post on meta — Ansh 18 secs ago
I highly doubt that the site recommended that you post an off-topic question on Meta... if a user did, that user is wrong — CertainPerformance 1 min ago
2 hours later…
7:59 AM
1 hour later…
9:22 AM
Food for thought: 1) How many users were participating on Stack Overflow before 2010? 2) How many questions were asked per day at that time? 3) How many total questions about any new subject existed at that time? — E_net4 the comment flagger 46 secs ago
9:37 AM
I wonder what kind of people have a reason to downvote this absolutely legit question. — Nikolas Charalambidis 39 secs ago
'However, if that question was to be asked today, it would get a flood of comments saying "Read the documentation".' That doesn't match my experience.
yield
's younger brethren is await
and related async for
etc. We do have some recent questions that are on par with the yield
question you linked and they are very well received despite obvious shortcomings. — MisterMiyagi 33 secs agoRe "flood of comments saying "Read the documentation".": Then they are misinformed. RTFM (in its various forms) has never ever been acceptable. They utterly failed to find the duplicate (or were too lazy). — Peter Mortensen 54 secs ago
Re "flood of comments saying "Read the documentation".": Then they are misinformed. RTFM (in its various forms) has never ever been acceptable. Flag such comments on sight. They utterly failed to find the (canonical) duplicate (or were too lazy). — Peter Mortensen 1 min ago
10:17 AM
Does this answer your question? Join our dedicated Meta Stack Overflow chat room! — Nimantha 1 min ago
I'm confused, your original question on main.SO should just have been closed/flagged to be migrated here to meta.SO, rather than you having to create a new question. — Gino Mempin 1 min ago
I'm going to delete the off-topic post on the main site, because it really should have been migrated here, but you've already asked it... — Ryan M ♦ 15 secs ago
11:37 AM
I can imagine, if I am honest, that for some new languages or features, that such questions might be downvoted as they lack evidence of research. Many languages do have very good online documentation (far better than what was available back when Stack Overflow was launched), so an equivalent question of "How do I write an
IF
in language y" could well receive downvotes because it appears that the OP didn't even try to search the problem (something we do expect a user to do). Even if the question doesn't already exist for a simple question, we still expect a user to research before posting. — Larnu 1 min agoThis isn't me saying that "Read the documentation" comments are correct though; but I don't necessarily blame people for downvoting a simple question where a simple search of "
IF
statement language y" in a search engine would have yielded the answer due to the documentation being found, regardless of if language y is a new or old language. — Larnu 1 min ago11:52 AM
Agreed, @Gimby . Honestly, for some old versions of products, Stack Overflow (and similar sites) are the only place to find useful information on how it worked back then, as the syntax has been long since deprecated and removed, and the documentation with it. That doesn't mean that it's "ok" to continue using those versions (as a user you should certainly be aiming to update), but because the answer is old is can be more valuable as it's the only place that still exists with the relevant information (without trying to drive through the internet archive or something). — Larnu 1 min ago
12:32 PM
"A similar example is Finding the index of an item in a list, with over 4000 upvotes. If you go to any Python list tutorial, it will tell you. I found some examples here: W3Schools; Programiz; GeeksForGeeks." something to note: the W3Schools article is from mid-2018; the Programiz article is from the beginning of 2019; the GeeksForGeeks article is from mid-2019. The Stack Overflow question is from 2008. I don't feel you're making a fair comparison or applying proper reasoning for how the situation is the same. — VLAZ 10 secs ago
Does this answer your question? My question never got answered. What can I do? — Abdul Aziz Barkat 1 min ago
Take rep from people who suggest edits to posts that are closed and/or deleted as one of the major problems is people editing unsalvageable posts. — Robert Longson 1 min ago
So are we asking for alternatives or other methods (In which case the duplicate should stand)? You basically say bounties and chat aren't effective, but then never ask anything or mention what the discussion is about exactly. — Abdul Aziz Barkat 7 secs ago
People do lose the rep earned from suggested edits when the post is deleted. (source) — Henry Ecker 54 secs ago
People suggest and accept the most awful edits (example), so the first focus should be on preventing people from clogging up the edit queue with such edits. — user438383 1 min ago
We get so many suggested edits that making the queue larger would only extend the review time and not keep it from getting too full. Though I do agree more incentives to genuinely and accurately review content would benefit most of the queues on the site. — Henry Ecker 14 secs ago
oh that is simple , change the hole rview system and so the so members, want to review again and are not turned away in disgust — nbk 54 secs ago
"Get additional reputation for "edit" task" do you mean reputation should be given for the review tasks? If so why only for the suggested edits queue? Why not all review queues? Also how would the problem of this solution incentivizing robo reviewers be solved? — Abdul Aziz Barkat 10 secs ago
1:12 PM
A workaround would be to press the escape button to close the search menu. — Abdul Aziz Barkat 1 min ago
"ask if someone is knowledgeable about XYZ" - Doesn't this kinda go against the "don't ask to ask, just ask" principle? I don't think "hey is anyone knowledgeable about winapi" would receive much help, but if the gist of the question is explained that could work better. — laundmo 54 secs ago
The review queue isn't the issue, in my opinion, it's the volume of low quality edits, and the ensuing demoralisation that the users who do review said edits suffer, combined with the volume of people who just accept these low quality edits. Rewarding reviewers aren't going to help the solve these issues; it'll probably make it worse. — Larnu 25 secs ago
Make it a priority queue. The tasks of good editors will rise to the top, bad editors - to the bottom, and often deleted. — George 25 secs ago
1:49 PM
I took more than 5 for the team now (incl. a review test one). Most were incomplete (e.g., formatting-only changes or tagging-only changes, leaving all other problems untouched) or had to be rejected (code changes). — Peter Mortensen 32 secs ago
2:01 PM
@dangel You're suggesting something like a low-level automatic bounty for answerless questions of some age? It's a neat thought, though I imagine it'd be a hard sell for the SO devs. — samuei 20 secs ago
Doesn't giving a reward when the queue is full make some users reluctant to do reviews until the queue is full? — Andrew T. 30 secs ago
@AndrewT. Maybe OP meant that the reward scales with the less items there are in the queue. Which means more people will review but would also be a problem with introducing even more false approvals. — VLAZ 15 secs ago
2:22 PM
2:34 PM
Downvotes are not dislikes. They are an assessment of quality, and particularly on Meta SO, they also reflect the sentiment and overall position towards the post. — E_net4 the comment flagger 1 min ago
You must be confused. The edit queue being full is not a bug which needs to be fixed as soon as possible, much less with the proposals made in this question. — E_net4 the comment flagger 1 min ago
3:07 PM
@KarlKnechtel: I've spent my fair share of time in the review queues with a couple of gold badges to show for it. I imagine that it'll be like that except with more than double the amount of time required to establish context and how good the question is, and I also have full-time hobbies now (when I did the queues I didn't). There's also no guarantee that this would actually help people ask better questions. Fundamentally people just want to get their question answered and they don't really care about our site or what the point is when we moderate content. — Makoto 1 min ago
This is not a "tooltip". It's a complete pop-up, essentially a non-modal dialog. But, yes, it should go away when the search textbox is no longer focused. — Cody Gray ♦ just now
3:57 PM
4:26 PM
"And why creators doesn't fix it???" - Fix what? What edit is so vital that it must be summitted for approval immediately? There isn't anything to fix. — Security Hound 1 min ago
4:44 PM
Perhaps a better title and/or explanation would be "Icons within community menu are oddly misaligned". I noticed it on the Featured area myself. — Heretic Monkey 17 secs ago
Could just be a change to the sprite sheet without a corresponding change to the CSS. — Heretic Monkey 1 min ago
Already reported on the main Meta: Favicon sprites are offset in site list dropdown — Ryan M ♦ 59 secs ago
Never said it wasn't a bug... Just speculated on the source of the problem, which would indeed be with the "graphics" (a sprite sheet is an image file containing all of the logos for the sites; CSS is needed to position that image correctly so that the correct logo is displayed; see this article for more). — Heretic Monkey 1 min ago
5:22 PM
The earth is grossly overpopulated by humans and can easily function with 1% of the current population, so we can afford a simpler solution: Execute people who make poor edits. This will reduce the load on the system from repeat offenders and act as a deterrent against trivial and poorly thought out edits. — user4581301 11 secs ago
Can't speak for Python , but Geeks For Geeks doesn't have a particularly stellar reputation when it comes to its C and C++ content. Some days it feels like a quarter of the questions I see are cleaning up after Geeks for Geeks. — user4581301 1 min ago
5:47 PM
6:16 PM
6:32 PM
Eh... Btw, the diagrams are linked from a Teams instance, so they fail to load. — Oleg Valter is with Ukraine just now
Off topic is not a status. Closed is. Please, keep the concepts clear, since off topic for everyone that knows english, means "this is not relevant to the topic at hand", which isn't the same as closed question which means "this question can not receive further answers". — Braiam 26 secs ago
Is there an inconsistency here? "Posts will be flagged as Inactive when they are in the Minor edits or Major changes statuses and the original Author has not taken an Action on the post within 36 hours. By default, Inactive posts will be filtered out of the main post listing for the Staging Ground. If Authors return to the post and take an Action on it, the Inactive label is removed." In the table at the top, it notes posts that need minor edits will be published, not made inactive, after a period of inactivity — Kevin B 50 secs ago
More on point, wouldn't "Require Minor edits" make more sense than "Approve pending Minor edits"? It would be consistent with the "Require Major edits" action. With the current wording, I have trouble understanding how "Approve minor" ends up in moving a post into the "Minor edits" status. — Oleg Valter is with Ukraine 25 secs ago
@KevinB They'll be marked inactive after 36 hours, then published "a certain number of hours" after that. — Heretic Monkey 1 min ago
@OlegValteriswithUkraine I think "Require" is a misnomer if the Author can publish without making any edits. — Heretic Monkey 1 min ago
@NotX: 1. tag subscriptions. 2. Review queues - look at Triage and First Questions specifically. — einpoklum 57 secs ago
@HereticMonkey "Request Minor edits" then, probably? That said, I feel like the UI is sending mixed signals: if it can be published right away, why does it say "the author ... after an update"? — Oleg Valter is with Ukraine 1 min ago
Perhaps even a more general question of is there a limit on the number of staging ground actions per day. — Henry Ecker 1 min ago
7:27 PM
sure, will delete the question if duplicate but didn't get
mod flag
sorry never tried that. if you could please help. — Harsh Manvar 55 secs agowell, it's a case of there's nothing us regular users can do about this. If a user is repeatedly deleting questions after receiving satisfactory answers, that's certainly some form of abuse of the system... but also, it's one that will eventually lead to the user no longer being able to ask questions.... so there may not be anything that needs to actually be done. — Kevin B 1 min ago
got that, cool...! Thankyou will take care mostly of that specific user nothing much can do, or stop answering and wasting time :). User deleted question twice or thrice after getting answers from others too. — Harsh Manvar 1 min ago
7:52 PM
@DavidPostill Windows 7?!? I think the "two versions previous" only applies to the browser, but maybe we should apply it to the OS too... ;-P — Heretic Monkey 1 min ago
I was going to make a joke about "what's next, a water bear framework?", but... — Heretic Monkey 44 secs ago
@Gimby there's a deleted answer (due to it being flagged as rude) from the OP stating they were deleting their account and creating a new one. The deletion of their account has gone through, but I can confirm it was escalated to a CM; obviously I have no insight to what happens after that. — Larnu 22 secs ago
Second one you should have rejected because people shouldn't transcribe images of data. First one doesn't seem too bad to me unless the SQL formatting was broken somehow. — user438383 1 min ago
That link was mostly a reply to user438383 to clarify the primary intent in adding the first review. For the second one, meta.stackoverflow.com/q/415040/6296561 — Zoe stands with Ukraine ♦ 1 min ago
8:39 PM
Moderators can review your other reviews when they note one that shouldn't have gone through, so I suspect that you were giving the ban to alert you of those 2 particular ones as they aren't edits we (as a community) want approved. Also a mod can't unapprove an edit on a post that had had further edits to it; which the latter review has had. — Larnu 38 secs ago
9:04 PM
At launch, it will be up to mods to determine when behavior is acceptable and when it is abuse or spam and requires moderator action. If we see particular patterns once the Staging Ground launches, we can build guidelines or automation to handle them at that point. Reviewers will be able to flag Staging Ground posts and post timeline will be visible to catch activity like the example provided. More generally, we are currently investigating what tools mods will need to integrate Staging Ground activity into their existing workflows and that includes tools to help surface potential abuse. — Brendan 1 min ago
Strictly speaking because the image is hosted on imgur (original imgur, not Stack's imgur), the data in the image additionally shouldn't be embedded directly in the question without including a citation of the source because OP has licensed the image only to imgur, not to Stack. — Nick stands with Ukraine 30 secs ago
9:31 PM
@Nick Even to the extent there are legal concerns here, they are not within the purview of either the editor or reviewer(s). Also, that argument doesn't apply, because the image wasn't literally transcribed. Instead, the reviewer created a minimal, reproducible example, based on the image. — Cody Gray ♦ 46 secs ago
@Rob Why in the world would a table be preferable to actual code that demonstrates/reproduces the problem? — Cody Gray ♦ 14 secs ago
@CodyGray "they are not within the purview of either the editor or reviewer(s)." - Of course they are, otherwise we shouldn't care less about plagiarism, but we do. --- "Also, that argument doesn't apply, because the image wasn't literally transcribed. Instead, the reviewer created a minimal, reproducible example, based on the image." - Oh, so I can copy any dataset I like as long as I don't use it exactly as originally formatted, good to know. — Nick stands with Ukraine 1 min ago
Frankly I don't get why there is a limit on reviews. If people want to clear out the queues and have demonstrated the ability to do so, let them. — user4581301 1 min ago
10:02 PM
@Nick That's a pretty clear misrepresentation of what Cody said. It's not the same dataset. It's similar, but they changed the actual data in several ways while preserving its utility as an example of the question. — Ryan M ♦ 56 secs ago
11:04 PM
Would you suggest using a similar wording for the [visual-studio] tag warning as well? — V2Blast ♦ 56 secs ago
11:34 PM
Does anyone have suggestions on similar wording to use for the [visual-studio] tag warning as well? (I figure I can use essentially the same wording as in @CodyGray 's comment for the first part of the tag warning – but I wouldn't know how to word the second part of the tag warning, or which other tag to point them to, if any.) — V2Blast ♦ 1 min ago
11:56 PM
@Cody, switch from the default view to see the link that the four of us are looking at, a correct edit would have that written as a table. — Rob 16 secs ago
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