12:26 AM
how long it will be before I am allowed to post again. Probably six months after the last question. And if it's not deemed good enough to overcome enough of the posts that got you banned, you're right back in the ban list for another six months. Pick that next question carefully and loath as I am to suggest this, game the system to maximize the upvote potential. Research carefully so that you do NOT ask a trivial question or a duplicate question as they'll make the situation worse. — user4581301 1 min ago
Based on what you've written here, where you applied inline code formatting to the phrase "code formatting", I am afraid you might be trying to use inline code formatting for emphasis. That is an utterly inappropriate application of code formatting, which should only be applied to code. Code does not belong in titles of questions. — Cody Gray ♦ 1 min ago
2 hours later…
1:59 AM
There's also similar behavior for the "People asked" element in Teams. If you click the "Add People" button (or the "Edit" button, if others on the Team have already been pinged on the question in this way), then an inline editor appears for just that element, and it displays "Ask team members" just below the existing "People asked" heading. (But at least in that case, it's not just showing you the same word twice in a row :P) — V2Blast ♦ 1 min ago
2:48 AM
The fact that more than 200 people upvoted this positively bizarre viewpoint is possibly even more saddening than the fact that earlier today I had to explain to a 14-year user of the site not to answer blatant typo questions, and got push-back for doing so. How can we say "we're working together to build a library of detailed, high-quality answers to every question about programming" if, rather than actually make an answer better, we assume that a lack of explanation shows a desire not to explain that must be respected? What is even the point of Creative Commons licensing then? — Karl Knechtel 1 min ago
@mickmackusa I have in mind a proposal to simply stop counting reputation past 25k. People who keep doing anti-library-of-detailed-high-quality-answers things because they get reputation points evidently treat the number as a reward in itself; and the system gives them those points for things that are explicitly counter to the site goals; and people who want to correct them get much less weight by design (-2 rep downvoted, +10 upvoted, +15 accepted). I can't see a way to stop them that doesn't include refusing to acknowledge them with the imaginary internet point total. — Karl Knechtel 21 secs ago
@CodyGray "Code does not belong in titles of questions." I disagree. Questions are commonly about e.g. built-in methods and how they work. Even referring to one's own code, sometimes the most succinct title for a question is going to be along the lines of "why did
foo('bar')
return an integer rather than a string?". — Karl Knechtel 1 min ago
2 hours later…
4:38 AM
Does this answer your question? What can I do when getting “We are no longer accepting questions/answers from this account”? — JK. 1 min ago
Looking at the total score from visible/non-deleted questions, I think you have some deleted questions that affect the question ban worse. The community can't see your deleted questions without the link (until a mod provides them), so they can't give feedback. — Andrew T. 12 secs ago
it was deleted by one of the mods just beacuse my question had a code with a typo error — Kyoko Chidori 1 min ago
5:29 AM
The expectation is not writing the most succinct title, but rather the most descriptive title... one that can be understood without having read the question. Markdown and other formatting doesn't render in titles, certainly not off-site where we have no control (e.g., browser window/tab titles, search results pages, etc.), so it doesn't make sense to rely on it as a crutch. Not to mention the very practical concerns that people already massively abuse formatting in post bodies, so there's just no benefit in giving them another avenue to misuse formatting. — Cody Gray ♦ 1 min ago
6:03 AM
Just because you're currently question banned doesn't mean you can post a programming question on meta. — Andrew T. 1 min ago
If you're unable to improve your existing questions, you'll get the chance to ask one new one six months after your last question. If that question is positively received, you may be able to continue asking questions; if not, then the ban will remain in effect, and you'll have to wait another six months to ask your next question. found in meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/255583 — rene just now
1 hour later…
7:11 AM
I found some smart people they don't have work. If any one posted any question without reading it they just do down vote. — Rakesh Thakre 1 min ago
@πάνταῥεῖ ῥεῖ Its according to you its wrong question but its scenario going on with me. Before doing vote read question properly. — Rakesh Thakre 38 secs ago
3 hours later…
10:03 AM
Re "I had spelt Array with a lowercase a": Do you mean a typo in the code? — Peter Mortensen 1 min ago
10:23 AM
Your questions are very well presented (not much to complain about), but, as indirectly noted in many comments, the next level is full MCVE (see e.g. the Help Center's How do I ask a good question? and Jon Skeet's Writing the perfect question). Also, titles are important. If they are too generic and vague (e.g., not specific enough), they may look like beginner-level questions that have asked many times over. — Peter Mortensen 1 min ago
From the MRE page: "Describe the problem. "It doesn't work" isn't descriptive enough to help people understand your problem. Instead, tell other readers what the expected behavior should be. Tell other readers what the exact wording of the error message is, and which line of code is producing it. Use a brief but descriptive summary of your problem as the title of your question." — Peter Mortensen 1 min ago
Your questions are very well presented (not much to complain about), but, as indirectly noted in many comments, the next level is full MRE (see e.g. the Help Center's How do I ask a good question? and Jon Skeet's Writing the perfect question). Also, titles are important. If they are too generic and vague (e.g., not specific enough), they may look like beginner-level questions that have asked many times over. — Peter Mortensen 29 secs ago
From the MRE page: "Describe the problem. "It doesn't work" isn't descriptive enough to help people understand your problem. Instead, tell other readers what the expected behavior should be. Tell other readers what the exact wording of the error message is, and which line of code is producing it. Use a brief but descriptive summary of your problem as the title of your question." — Peter Mortensen 22 secs ago
10:46 AM
Do you mean why the comments are not threaded? There has been some talk about that from official sources (Stack Overflow staff)? From Staging Ground Workflow: Question Details & Actions: "we are expanding comment functionality from what is offered on the regular site" — Peter Mortensen 27 secs ago
Do you mean why the comments are not threaded? There has been some talk about that from official sources (Stack Overflow staff)? From Staging Ground Workflow: Question Details & Actions: "we are expanding comment functionality from what is offered on the regular site" and "nested comments is something that we have been thinking about for a while, and we would love to see them someday on the main site.". — Peter Mortensen 57 secs ago
Or resorted when there are too many comments? E.g. "Show 13 more comments" — Peter Mortensen 46 secs ago
11:11 AM
@Cody Gray: MathJax does render in titles (if JavaScript is allowed from cloudflare.com). Sample. Though it is not enabled on Stack Overflow. — Peter Mortensen 20 secs ago
@Cody Gray: MathJax does render in titles (if JavaScript is allowed from cloudflare.com). Sample 1 and sample 2 (that overrides right click - what???). Though MathJax is not enabled on Stack Overflow. — Peter Mortensen 14 secs ago
11:59 AM
"I had spelt Array with a lowercase a" probably refer to the code line "
const bigImgExists = new array(18).fill(false);
" in this question. — Peter Mortensen 1 min ago12:23 PM
Make sure to write 'posts' in the URL I once wrote somthing like /questions/id/revisions instead of /posts/id/revisions — Samuel Muldoon 55 secs ago
@PeterMortensen - I was convinced that they were resorted. I am looking for an example. Perhaps I was confused. — Rohit Gupta 53 secs ago
1:38 PM
I have to say, I actually agree with @OP, I also find the Auto-Hiding for Comments a complete "Nuisance", ... to find out after reading/scrolling for 2 Screens that there is some "Show x more comments" Link at the Bottom, that will re-insert x Comments completely randomly in the middle of the flow, and just flashing the "new ones" for about 1 sec. I don't mind the extra Click, but that Link should be placed just before the very 1st Comment, not at the Bottom...! — chivracq 20 secs ago
2:14 PM
This is sad typical s.o. (or actually general s.e.) behavior when a question, unlike maybe the author‘s, is very specific and by that very long, then the voter can only have had the title or first sentence as reference and when this is not badly formulated and the question has not been asked before and is an entirely legit question, nonetheless i’ve seen the described situation many times already, and i‘m not even on s.o. for thaaat long. Well, same old problem i would say, which is a real pity given what s.e. is made for. — LuckyLuke Skywalker 5 secs ago
Well yes but ‚more than 2 sentences‘ has really no part in the quality of every question! — LuckyLuke Skywalker 1 min ago
2:34 PM
Does this answer your question? How can I propose a new Stack Exchange community? — jonrsharpe 1 min ago
Why would such questions not just be asked on Stack Overflow, with an appropriate tag? — Cody Gray ♦ just now
2:49 PM
You may not have realized, but we also have Android Enthusiasts, though it would be great if more users from XDA Devs would also participate there. — Andrew T. 40 secs ago
@CodyGray XDA Developers has very little to do with actual development, AFAIK. It's heavily centered around rooting and general device usage, which is blatantly off-topic here. — Zoe stands with Ukraine ♦ 1 min ago
The thing you cited "To clarify the meaning of the post" is reason enough to make an edit like this. Only the OP can decide if it changes their intent and they are always free to roll back such edits. — Eaten by a Grue 1 min ago
While I'm also not a fan of how the contracted comment section has "gaps", I'm not really sure what the feature request is here. What is being proposed? What should change? — VLAZ 27 secs ago
3:21 PM
It was closed because you hadn't included your code. If you had done, it likely never would've been closed. — Nick stands with Ukraine 49 secs ago
That is the key point. Closing workflow is too easy, while the reopening is too hard. — Mystic 45 secs ago
It's weird that they call them "developers", then, eh? From what I saw online, it was "mobile software development". Very misleading advertising. — Cody Gray ♦ 1 min ago
@Mystic That's, unfortunately, true and there isn't much we can do about it (no, we shouldn't make closing harder because it'll increase the number of poor-quality questions). This is why you should make sure your question is well-written from the start (or at least as soon as you get feedback in the comments) to avoid having to wait for it to be reopened after being closed. — 41686d6564 stands w. Palestine 56 secs ago
2 hours later…
5:31 PM
They are ranked on when they were awarded: meta.stackoverflow.com/help/badges/76/marshal . Helpful flags is not in SEDE. At best you can rank them by rep or by days it took the user to get that badge. That is about it. — rene 5 secs ago
Dharman made this site flaggers.dharman.net to track people with a most helpful flags. — Ethan 1 min ago
@ZoestandswithUkraine some of them also develop/port custom ROMs and related images, so I guess the development part is on-topic on SO (it's off-topic on Android.SE) — Andrew T. 34 secs ago
Perfect! I had concluded scraping was the only way to get the data. I’m glad you have done the dirty work ;-) — James Risner 42 secs ago
5:54 PM
@CodyGray their forum has a lot of general questions unrelated to development. Dunno what to tell you, but their forum does far more than just development — Zoe stands with Ukraine ♦ 46 secs ago
@AndrewT. "very little" does not exclude the existence of questions that are on-topic on SO — Zoe stands with Ukraine ♦ 1 min ago
6:39 PM
7:19 PM
“That is the key point. Closing workflow is too easy, while the reopening is too hard.” - Had you provided an MRE originally your question wouldn’t have been closed for NOT providing an MRE. In the future submit a question that meets the minimum quality requirements and your question won’t be closed (due to quality reasons) — Security Hound 16 secs ago
7:58 PM
excited for this to come back to bite us in 4.0 (jk... sort of) but definitely in favor of this migration as a python watcher — Michael Delgado 23 secs ago
"Closing workflow is too easy, while the reopening is too hard." No; closing is much too hard. Questions should start closed, and not become open until it has been verified that the question meets standards. — Karl Knechtel 1 min ago
I would propose Not to skip comments and show the last one. Just truncate it. So that there is no insertion. The link at the top is also an excellent idea. I am either going to read them or I am not. The decision is made at the start. — Rohit Gupta 27 secs ago
1 hour later…
9:14 PM
@Tomerikoo a redirect like that can absolutely be made harmful. For example, it could redirect to a phishing site trying to convince people to "log back in" to Stack Overflow. — Karl Knechtel 10 secs ago
9:26 PM
Does this answer your question? What can I do when getting “We are no longer accepting questions/answers from this account”? — Bill Tür stands with Ukraine 1 min ago
@ZoestandswithUkraine - Are you saying that there is a threshold on questions with a score of zero (or less), after which one will automatically get banned? — caveman 46 secs ago
yes, and deleting questions makes it all worse i.e. gets you closer to that threshold. — Robert Longson 1 min ago
It is, yes. Do read the question/answer this has been duplicated to, it already answers that. You cannot see this threshold, it's not public information. — Robert Longson 1 min ago
"I don't see any violation from that list." One of your deleted questions is literally "can you please help me find a symbol in Unicode that looks similar to this other one?" That is blatantly off topic: it has nothing to do with programming in itself (no programming language is relevant to the question, and people can just as easily want to find a Unicode character in order to insert it into text they're writing), and it is asking people to do basic research for you. — Karl Knechtel 44 secs ago
In another one, I see a comment: "Please don't vandalize your posts. By posting on the Stack Exchange network, you've granted a non-revocable right, under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license, for Stack Exchange to distribute that content (i.e. regardless of your future choices). By Stack Exchange policy, the non-vandalized version of the post is the one which is distributed, and thus, any vandalism will be reverted. If you want to know more about deleting a post please see: How does deleting work?" This comment accurately reflects policy. — Karl Knechtel 1 min ago
Another question is "how do I embed a web browser in my application?", which is way too broad. It comes across as if you simply want to know what engine to embed in order to get Firefox-like behaviour, analogous to
QtWebEngine
for Chrome. But in that case it is again a matter of research. — Karl Knechtel 1 min agoOf the 15 deleted questions shown, I count 7 that were closed, and most of the rest should be. When your question is closed, please read the message in the light blue shaded window in order to understand why it was closed. Please also read the comments in case anyone offered feedback on the question. In summary, multiple "violations" are readily apparent in the deleted questions. People here are really honestly not in the habit of downvoting questions for fun. Most questions on Stack Overflow are terrible, per the site standards. — Karl Knechtel 57 secs ago
A question about a typo is not likely to help future readers and is therefore worthy of a downvote. The criteria for downvotes is whether the question is useful or not, not whether it's an understandable mistake. — EJoshuaS - Stand with Ukraine 50 secs ago
Also: I don’t see anything giving an indication of how long it will be before I am allowed to post again. Question bans don't time out, so unless you improve your existing posts, unfortunately the answer is "never." — EJoshuaS - Stand with Ukraine 28 secs ago
10:41 PM
Even moderators don't know the exact algorithm the system uses to impose question and answer bans. The best information and advice we have is in the question to which this was closed/proposed as a duplicate. Putting the best information there is why we have that question and why questions such as yours are usually closed as a duplicate of it. It's not that we're refusing to help you, it's that the best information/advice we have is already in What can I do when getting “We are no longer accepting questions/answers from this account”? — Makyen ♦ 57 secs ago
10:59 PM
Side note: For a lot of good reasons, using images of text is one of the easiest ways to close a question. In general save images for when the question is about the image, you have a graphics programming problem, or when the picture is literally worth a thousand words like a screenshot of a GUI configuration pane so that people can see exactly how the tool is configured. — user4581301 1 min ago
11:28 PM
@chivracq I thought OP was asking about the status of their suggested edits and edited to that effect; but then I saw that the accepted answer is about their reviews on the suggested edit queue, so I rolled back my edit. — New England cottontail 49 secs ago
11:53 PM
@KarlKnechtel - The asking for unicode symbols is asked previously by others, and there is even a tag for it, which is why I asked it. As for vandalism, I don't get your point; give me a link. As for embedding a web browser in an app, are you saying that one must not ask an engine/backend-agnostic question? — caveman 36 secs ago
As for "don't get", I think that you've now gotten all the information that anyone here can give you. Hopefully, if you review it further, it will make sense. If not, if you have more specific questions about information in the duplicate link, then ask here. — Hovercraft Full Of Eels 16 secs ago
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