12:04 AM
1 hour later…
1:06 AM
@IanCampbell I do those, because I'm trying to participate in burns. Often a question only needs a quick tidy up of the title, some code block editing and removing/replacing the tag in question. Should I be punished/ignored for submitting those kinds of edits? — Graham Reynolds 17 secs ago
1:52 AM
The primary issue I have the voting system on Stackoverflow is not that it provides feedback and ranking, in that it can have utility. It's the fact that it can take only only a few voted-down questions to get you banned--it penalizes the user. In addition, downvoting can be easily abused on this site, particularly in the Meta forum. From my observation, people downvote an inquiry when they disagree with the content--e.g., they think it is a bad idea--not just when the question itself is poorly constructed. Every critique of the voting system in this forum I've read so far has been downvoted. — Sam Miller 51 secs ago
The issue I have with Stackoverflow's voting system is not that it provides feedback and ranking, in that it can have utility. It's the fact that it can take only only a few voted-down questions to get you banned--it penalizes the user. In addition, from my observation, people downvote an inquiry when they disagree with the content--e.g., they think it is a bad idea--not just when the question itself is poorly constructed. Every critique of the voting system in this forum I've read so far has been downvoted. Where is it safe to debate policy and process? — Sam Miller 1 min ago
2:19 AM
One of the benefits of waiting 7 years to get this implemented is that the 25-character limit is no more. Tag renamed and synonymized with the old one. :-) — Cody Gray ♦ 1 min ago
@41686d6564standsw.Palestine No, this is open-source, so you can fix it yourself! :-) — Cody Gray ♦ just now
Personally, I'm not in favor of only requiring a single reject vote because of how rejected suggested edits feed into the automated ban system, and I wouldn't want a griefing user to go through a user's activity and reject all a user's pending edits. My personal choice is to require three approvals and two rejections to review an edit, as well as reinstating the old "suggested edit was helpful" checkbox in the Improve form. — gparyani 27 secs ago
That sort of malicious behavior could be easily handled by moderators, far more easily than the current problem where bad edits waste everyone's time and far too often get approved when they should be rejected. — Cody Gray ♦ 1 min ago
^^ That is one of the main reasons why we do not give options for questions to be migrated to any arbitrary site: the existence of a site that covers a question's topic is not sufficient cause to migrate it away. The question must be off-topic on the site where it is asked before you should even consider migrating it anywhere. This is why "migrate" is a subset of "close". You first decide to close the question as off-topic, then you optionally decide if it would be reasonable to migrate it elsewhere. Too many get this wrong. I'd prefer not having any migration, or it be mod-only. — Cody Gray ♦ 44 secs ago
Have you ever tried to write a pun, @philipxy? It's quite a difficult pun-dertaking! (Although the creation of a good pun is its own reword.) I know our puns have groan on you, but making these kinds of demands is just pun-reasonable. I tried writing ten different puns hoping one would get a laugh, but no pun in ten did. — Cody Gray ♦ 24 secs ago
3:51 AM
Quick question that isnt related to this question @CodyGray, how do you have the legendary badge on Meta? — DialFrost 46 secs ago
Meta does have reputation, @DialFrost, it's just not shown and periodically synced with the main site. One can earn all of the rep badges on Meta. — Oleg Valter is with Ukraine 22 secs ago
4:12 AM
Hot take: queue privledges should be based on flagging. Currently, I have 737 flagged posts on SO. Of those posts, three of those flags have been declined. I know what is and isn't allowed on SO. So if the queue rep requirement was lowered a bit if you have a large number of helpful flags (and a decent amont of flags), that could help. Even lowering it to 400 if you've been good at flagging could attract a decent amount of reviewers. IDK how many, but I'd like review queue privledge threasholds to be lowered for lots of helpful flagging. — cocomac 1 min ago
4:51 AM
@cocomac I'm not sure how the privilege to review suggested edits should be based upon a user's flagging history. Also, there's already an incentive to have high helpful flags: you get more flags to use per day. — gparyani 27 secs ago
5:11 AM
Ok for the not spam and being a bad answer worthy to downvote. But why it is not a link-only answer? There is no context and how to use it. What is creation for a such a post? — Vega 31 secs ago
It's not a link-only answer. The FAQ explains why. It recommends a specific package to use. That's an answer. The FAQ even gives the specific example of an answer "where the link text is a function/API and the link target is the associated documentation" as not being a "link-only answer". A link-only answer is one where there is no answer. This has an answer. — Cody Gray ♦ just now
There's a bit of survivorship bias here - the poorly-received questions aren't around anymore to show up in your search results. — EJoshuaS - Stand with Ukraine 54 secs ago
The link to a package is not documentation! If it was a link to Array.revers(), for example, then I could be comprehensible, but that package is a third party library and in no way a reference — Vega 10 secs ago
We keep having this same discussion about what is and is not a "link-only answer". It seems clear to me. I don't know how to make it any more clear. How is linking to the official page for the package any different from linking to documentation? The answer tells you the name of the package you should use. Even if the link weren't there, it'd still contain the name of the package that could be used to solve the exact problem being asked about. Again, not the world's greatest answer, and in need of improvement, but we don't delete answers for those reasons. — Cody Gray ♦ 37 secs ago
@Vega Even if the link is unreachable, the name of the package is part of it. It would be slightly clearer if it said "use <package name> URL: npmjs.com/package/<package name>" but the package can still be discerned without this clarification. The alternative to avoid the link is to just list the package name without "npmjs.com/package" in front of it. If that transformation makes it not link-only then the URL was never really the only information in the answer. — VLAZ 12 secs ago
6:26 AM
@Vega It's always been my understanding that the defining feature of a link only answer is that if the text wasn't actually a hyperlink, it would contain no information; all of the relevant information is in the link target. (The rationale being that the link may die in future, and the text with no link is effectively what would be left) Your criteria that the answer suggests using a particular method without providing any further explanation suggests that it's a poor answer, not that it's a link-only answer. — Ben 39 secs ago
7:16 AM
Lengthening questions often makes them worse. Especially in cases where OP feels compelled to contribute a broken, off-track attempt at solving the problem, rather than simply explaining a thought process and indicating where the sticking point is. — Karl Knechtel 1 min ago
7:42 AM
@Nick I refreshed twice and the first time I got R questions, the second time I got Python questions, now I seem to get C# questions as expected. It seems like someone broke something ever so briefly. — DiplomacyNotWar 36 secs ago
Does this answer your question? When to flag an answer as "not an answer" — Bill Tür stands with Ukraine 39 secs ago
Question to the point is always good, nut at the same time question with additional info is not appriciated — Hari 12 secs ago
That screenshot looks like everything is zoomed, is this correct? If so it is kind of a flaw in the layout, but it'd be pretty gnarly to have to test the entire site layout at all common zoom levels too... — Gimby 48 secs ago
"I did not because in my opinion this is a better way of learning." - but that is not what Stack Overflow is for, Stack Overflow is not a schooling environment. Don't use Stack Overflow as you please, use it as intended. So write factually correct and complete answers. Whether someone learns something or not is entirely the responsibility of the reader, not yours. — Gimby 1 min ago
I think the author of that answer is very well aware of what makes an answer link-only, so in their mission to do as little effort as possible they added a reference to a function call to it. If you now strip away the link, the answer becomes "You can useclickOutside() method from ng-click-outside package". That IS an answer. Not one I would be proud of. — Gimby 32 secs ago
Might be related to "Questions tagged X" shows questions without tag X — Abdul Aziz Barkat 1 min ago
Repro - and the worst of it: one gets to see office questions in the latex tag -- shudder! i.stack.imgur.com/myTku.png — samcarter_is_at_topanswers.xyz 1 min ago
Pardon. "It looks like the zoom function of the browser is used". To 150%, if I have to make a guess. — Gimby 43 secs ago
Note: high quality is better. But good quality is good enough. A short question might fall in the good quality category. But probably not. — Gimby 43 secs ago
I personally don't think it is even easy to distinguish a high quality question from a good quality one since some subjective factors might have to be taken into account. — S. Dre 58 secs ago
9:11 AM
9:22 AM
Agreed with reject votes, sometimes reviewer reject suggested edit. But then OP approve bad edits. WCYD — Mukyuu 28 secs ago
Stack Developer here: there was a separate change deployed yesterday relating to tag list caching but I can't envisage how it could have caused this but I'll keep an eye on it. I can't deny that it seems suspicious, though! There was a deployment two hours ago that I'll look into as well in case that could have caused a temporary blip. I'm trying various things to reproduce on the live site and locally. I'll report back when progress is made. — Dan Roberts ♦ 13 secs ago
10:07 AM
I suspect that the issue that @DiplomacyNotWar has linked has a different root cause. I'll be commenting on there if anyone wants more details. — Dan Roberts ♦ 1 min ago
I've got a hypothesis that I hope to confirm and roll out a fix for at the start of next week. In the meantime, I've disabled the new caching format so that this shouldn't be seen again. — Dan Roberts ♦ 33 secs ago
1 hour later…
11:09 AM
11:31 AM
maybe the link should've been changed to
[ng-click-outside](https://www.npmjs.com/package/ng-click-outside)
— user16320675 1 min ago12:07 PM
another approach to tame this issue would be to enhance question list pages with some special indicators shown to 2K+ users to mark questions where it or its answers has pending edit lacking a single vote to complete. Similar feature, along with reasoning in its favor, was suggested a while ago for close/reopen votes and 3K users at MSE here. "I would suggest to address this from a bit different angle, namely - make it easier for users engaged in other ways help curators..." — gnat 52 secs ago
This seems like a lot of work to try and "educate" users considering that 99% of new users just make an account to ask a single question and then disappear from existence... — Marco Bonelli 1 min ago
12:26 PM
1:09 PM
Well... how is all other software installed and has been installed for decades? Through an installer generator, of which there are several choices. Other very common tools for rolling out software stacks and configuration are Ansible, Puppet, Chef, etc. etc. What works for servers also works for work machines. So asking "Is there a better way?" sounds very, very unresearched. Yes. Plenty. So even if it would not be closeworthy... I don't see this question fairing well in the quality voting department. But it isn't a programming question, so it is hard to predict what it would do. — Gimby 43 secs ago
You could wait a few days, weeks, or months. After they have got their answer and moved on they are far less attached to the question. Copy editing is for the long term. — Peter Mortensen 7 secs ago
1:32 PM
I fail to see how it is blatantly off-topic and pure mathematics when it's asking about an algorithm to do a specific task. — Nick stands with Ukraine 1 min ago
I really want to find an algorithm that finds.... Does something like this already exist? If so which algorithm would I use?
sounds too broad / asking for libraries/software recommendations to me. — user438383 36 secs agoThe simple answer to your question is that this was automatically chosen by the system as an audit because no one had voted to close it. In fact, the opposite: several users had upvoted it, suggesting that it was a good fit here. The system doesn't have any intelligence, it just picks audits based on what hasn't been closed and has been upvoted. As for whether the question is actually on-topic, to me, that's a bit of a gray area. We do allow questions about algorithms, but it's arguable whether this particular question is on-topic. — Cody Gray ♦ 1 min ago
That makes it a bad audit, but this a rather useful and interesting Meta discussion. Fortunately, your review privileges weren't suspended for failing this audit (failing a single audit doesn't cause a suspension, though "failing" multiple audits does, so you'll need to be extra careful going forward), so there's no harm done. — Cody Gray ♦ 1 min ago
I think you are right about this being a very low-effort answer, not one that anyone should be proud of, @Gimby, but I really don't see the evidence for (and don't agree with) the assertion that the user who posted it knew exactly what they were doing. It was a brand-new user. There's no reason to suppose they were familiar with Stack Overflow's expectations and deliberately skirting them. That just isn't reasonable, and it isn't consistent with our general presumption of good faith. To me, it's clear that the author of the answer was trying to be helpful and provide a relevant solution. — Cody Gray ♦ 20 secs ago
"This is a first time that a I see this kind of package recommending post not be deleted." This is horrifying. What this says to me is that there are a ton of reviewers out there who are reviewing incorrectly, and that we are systematically destroying answers that add value to this site. If that's the case, it's really great that we were able to have this discussion, and that you and others who read Meta can learn what types of answers should not be deleted. I suppose the already-overworked moderator team will have to work harder in handing out suspensions for incorrect reviews. — Cody Gray ♦ 15 secs ago
@user16320675 How would that help anything? Is the name of the package not already clear from reading the answer? It seems to me that it is, and I don't even know the first thing about Javascript or NPM packages. Reviewing shouldn't be a process of pattern-matching; if that's all it was, then it could be trivially automated and done by machine. Triggering on superficial formatting is precisely what we don't want when it comes to deleting content from the site. I cannot see any way in which your proposed edit would materially change, much less improve, the answer. — Cody Gray ♦ 1 min ago
More specifically, we delete posts that are incoherent and/or are not even an attempt to answer the question that was asked. We do not delete answers that are low-quality or answers that are wrong. We never have. Our policies surrounding this have been remarkably consistent going back for a decade on Stack Overflow. It is exceptionally concerning to me that at least one active reviewer is unaware of these policies, and, more importantly, that they have been reviewing this way for years, managing to get valid answers removed from the site and developing such egregious misunderstandings. — Cody Gray ♦ 1 min ago
Reopening a question doesn't require moderator intervention. See the Help Center article to find out what you should do if you disagree with the closure of a question and feel that it should be re-opened. Notice that the first step is to edit the question. When doing so, you should take into account the reason(s) given for why the question was closed, and try to address those (even if you disagree with them, make it clear that they don't apply). When you submit the edit, you can nominate the question for review for re-opening. — Cody Gray ♦ 11 secs ago
Too many of the comments here imply that you are misusing Stack Overflow and/or that there is something wrong with your answer. I disagree with that. Your answer is fine, answers do not need to contain copy-pasta-ready snippets, and it's a perfectly valid position and/or use of Stack Overflow to assume that askers/researchers want to learn and understand why. Now, that doesn't mean that also including code snippets along with an explanation is bad. Whether you do that is up to you, and should really be decided on a case-by-case basis. — Cody Gray ♦ 1 min ago
Given that Teams have the Articles feature as well, it seems to be working as intended that you're unable to add an article-only tag to a question... (Technically, the article creation flow just has you choose the article type, which automatically marks the article with the corresponding tag in the system.) Or am I misunderstanding your bug report?? — V2Blast ♦ 13 secs ago
Even if that's all true, @V2Blast, why should the Articles feature be so opinionated that the tags it has arbitrarily chosen are blocked from ever being used on questions? Why should admins not be able to choose the tags they want to use on their own Team based on what they think is clear and helpful to their users? More broadly, why do Articles and Collectives have to keep breaking things that used to work well? — Cody Gray ♦ 40 secs ago
@CodyGray: I mean, folks are welcome to make that feature request (if someone hasn't already); it just wouldn't be a bug. I just wanted to confirm whether there was actually a bug in this case, or if the system was behaving as intended. — V2Blast ♦ 41 secs ago
We're just using the Basic version which doesn't have access to Articles, @V2Blast (I believe that starts at the Business tier or something like that?) Though I suppose I can understand how this would be difficult to dissemble between Teams that are of a specific tier that don't have access to Articles and ones that do, and the ability to block/unblock tags based on that... But I back what Cody said - We quite like our [policy] tag, thank you very much! ;) — Spevacus 37 secs ago
@CodyGray I'll try editing the Q when the 'suggested edit' queue is no longer full. — Darren Parker 37 secs ago
2:31 PM
Hrm, yeah, that's a separate issue... And unfortunately not one that is likely to have gotten you much traction, even if you had mentioned it explicitly in the flag message as a reason why moderator intervention was required. — Cody Gray ♦ 1 min ago
2:52 PM
@V2Blast In addition, it's a change in how the Team works without any real notice, consideration for existing content, or explanation. The only information we had was a small notice that said "The 'policy' tag is not allowed", which doesn't explain anything as to what's going on or why something that used to work fine is no longer working. If the restriction had been in place from the beginning, then teams would have established tags which work around it, but it's confusing to impose such a restriction years into using the Teams product (even if it was just limited to Teams with Articles). — Makyen ♦ 6 secs ago
@V2Blast In other words, yes, it's definitely a bug for the restriction to be there in Teams without Articles, but I strongly hope that SE did a much better job of communicating with Teams instances with access to Articles about the restriction. For instance, even something like showing ""The 'policy' tag can only be used in Articles" would be better, even though that is more code than reusing what's displayed for a normal blocklist hit. — Makyen ♦ 1 min ago
Yeah, I agree that I hope this restriction was clearly communicated to Teams at the time it was implemented. (I don't think I was even working here at the time, though.) And yeah, I agree that it'd be nice if the message was more informative; I think that's just the base message shown for blocklisted tags (if no additional guidance is provided). — V2Blast ♦ 1 min ago
Another possible solution to this problem is turning the lights on. Using a computer screen in the dark, regardless of whether the screen is mostly light or mostly dark, is unergonomic and bad for your eyes. This argument that switching applications moves you in and out of dark mode is also weird. Yes, why should it be surprising that changing contexts would also change what you see on the screen? — Cody Gray ♦ 1 min ago
"and suddenly be hit by bright white light" - sentences like this make me believe more of these products shouldn't support dark mode at all, if dark mode's existence results in the majority of people using it being (or at least acting like they are) incapable of seeing anything even slightly bright — Zoe stands with Ukraine ♦ 1 min ago
While I don't support having dark mode be the default, so don't support this particular feature-request, I would like to see dark mode supported as an option on more SE sites than just SO. I also think it might be reasonable, at some point, to consider having the "System setting" selection be the default, as that is likely to be the closest to what the user is wanting when they haven't explicitly set the mode to one or the other. I would, however, want to at least do a matrix of compatibility testing for the "System setting" selection prior to having it as the default. — Makyen ♦ 1 min ago
Why does it need to be default? What do you gain by that other than annoying people who don't like dark mode? — user438383 26 secs ago
There's just no good technical reason why tags used by Articles need to be blocked from being used on questions... This is a pointless, arbitrary restriction. If a Teams admin wants to post an Article tagged [policy], and then allow questions about that [policy], that is a perfectly valid and reasonable use-case. It's not about improving the error message; it's about fixing the software so that it doesn't arbitrary block valid use-cases. — Cody Gray ♦ 1 min ago
3:46 PM
3:57 PM
@Cody what? that "You can the useclickOutside() method from the ng-click-outside package" does look less than a link-only answer as before ( I did not mention anything about pattern-matching or automation or whatever) — user16320675 1 min ago
@Cody what? that "You can the useclickOutside() method from the ng-click-outside package" does look less than a link-only answer as before ( I did not mention anything about pattern-matching or automation or deletion of content - it was more like a suggestion for OP to do in theirs head (or imagination) and eventually recognize that it is not just a link-only answer - it was not intended to be a materially change) — user16320675 just now
@user438383 IMO, asking for an algorithm is different from asking for library/software recommendations because it is asking for information that can be included entirely within the answer rather than an outside resource. There may be links to supporting papers/documentation, but an algorithm can be described in sufficient detail within the answer itself. — beaker 42 secs ago
Paste the code, select it, press the 'Code sample' button
{}
or Ctrl-K ? — Thierry Lathuille 17 secs agomy question will be soon blocked by administrators as not useful etc. I take time to redact precisely the case and i'm not probably the unique guy that see 'code icon' in the editor and think this must work... — pirela 27 secs ago
I don't really get what your problem is. Did you press the code sample button before pasting your code? There is no reference in your question to pressing this button. — Thierry Lathuille 1 min ago
@CodyGray Thanks for clarifying but I was already aware of that. I just wanted to test the 30 chars threshold - that's it.. — iLuvLogix 47 secs ago
Well, I had never tried to press it before, but I find the behaviour in this case misleading, and problematic regarding indentation. Maybe it would be better if it did nothing in this case... — Thierry Lathuille 7 secs ago
4:49 PM
Reasonable counter arguments, but for lootboxes I say the move the limit earlier in the process. I'm not a big fan of folks preying on gambling addictions. — user4581301 15 secs ago
5:01 PM
@CodyGray: The question that this OP links to looks to have been closed by a moderator. Please correct me if I'm wrong, but I thought that mod-closed questions cannot be re-opened by non-mod site members. — Hovercraft Full Of Eels 1 min ago
If I understood Makyen correctly, I think that's a good suggestion. Similar to how many GUI's give an option to go with the operating system's native look, I guess if for example, Ubuntu has dark mode theme enabled, then any app or website that can detect and automatically switch to dark mode would be a great idea! — Nav 1 min ago
5:21 PM
@AJM I should have clarified that by code block changes I mean changing indentation code block formatting to three backtick formatting. — Ian Campbell 1 min ago
5:31 PM
@HovercraftFullOfEels I thought that only applied to deleted questions? At least, the question seems to give me the option to reopen it, though I didn't go all the way through the process so I can't be sure. — John Montgomery 6 secs ago
6:11 PM
@HopefullyHelpful If the code has multiple files, you can simulate that by putting them in separate code blocks (and for the specific case of HTML/JS/CSS, Stack Snippets can do that for you anyway). There's no situation where it's acceptable to provide necessary code only via links. — John Montgomery 15 secs ago
6:58 PM
@ZoestandswithUkraine We must respect the challenges of our Morlock brothers. — user4581301 19 secs ago
7:09 PM
@NickCox People disagreeing with you or pointing out that your suggestions about using the site are incorrect is not "hostile", "uncalled for", or "mocking". Please set aside the notion that this is personal or about you, just like posts and their scores are not about the people posting them or their reputation. That seems to be the root of the misunderstanding at play here: it's the content, not the person behind it, that matters on Stack Overflow. Separate the idea from the person, whether it's an answer on main or a discussion here on Meta. — TylerH 35 secs ago
7:29 PM
1 hour later…
8:56 PM
9:19 PM
10:06 PM
10:21 PM
You already can see the source. Just go to the revisions page and click on the "Source" button of the revision you want to see the source of. If there is no link to the revisions page, you can also navigate to it manually. (For instance first go to the timeline, then in the URL change "timeline" to "revisions".) — Ivar 55 secs ago
Pressing the button first is designed for the case where you are going to immediately thereafter type in a single line of code. It's not meant for when you are going to copy-paste in a block of code. For what it's worth, we did recently have a discussion about this: meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/419468/… @ThierryLathuille — Cody Gray ♦ 1 min ago
From Morlock: "Morlocks are a fictional species created by H. G. Wells for his 1895 novel, The Time Machine, and are the main antagonists. Since their creation by H. G. Wells, the Morlocks have appeared in many other works such as sequels, films, television shows, and works by other authors, many of which have deviated from the original description. ". But what does it mean? What is the message? — Peter Mortensen 1 min ago
no, but it's a duplicate of this question: meta.stackexchange.com/questions/131513/… — Jakob Lovern 54 secs ago
I'm marking the feature request to show the suggested-edit queue to users without reviewing privileges as [status-declined] because that's simply not useful (why show users unactionable information?). But to address your actual problem, I've marked this as a duplicate of two earlier questions that explain exactly how to see the source (raw Markdown) even without having edit privileges. That works on Meta (where there are no suggested edits), when the suggested-edit queue is full (so submission is blocked), and even if your account has been banned from submitting suggested edits. — Cody Gray ♦ 19 secs ago
11:06 PM
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