12:18 AM
12:32 AM
1:04 AM
@Shog9 May I have permission to mess around with the [featured] tag on this question? I want to see how it works. — JL2210 53 secs ago
stackoverflow.com/posts/57650886/timeline You can see this is EXACTLY what happened. Your edit bumped your question to the reopen queue, the new content wasn't "enough" to invalidate the on-hold reasoning.... so it kicked negatively and your subsequent edits didn't make it so you were looked at by the reopen queu — Patrice 49 secs ago
1:52 AM
2:16 AM
Well the sad part is that Stack isn't the place to help you isolate your issue. Once you have isolated it, Stack is the place to help you fix it. — Patrice 49 secs ago
I honestly don't know how to isolate this particular issue to its most basic blocks (or else I'd probably have found the cause myself by now - I have been working on my CMS for over 10 years without ever needing to ask a question here before, after all), so that's the area where I need assistance. Evidently this does not come across in my question :-( — willherzog 1 min ago
2:32 AM
1 hour later…
3:44 AM
Excellent thank you. I was expecting to see them as specific routes, but you helped me understand they are sort options. — 5eleven7 34 secs ago
Are 'close' people more aggressive than 'open' people? My sense is that most questions which are closed are closed by a very vocal minority who want to keep SO "pure", and many people (such as myself) see lots of closed questions which are useful, but don't have the energy, experience, reputation, etc. to do anything about it. So it may not make sense to actually have a "symmetric" close/open process and something like 5 to close, but 3 to re-open may better align the vocal minority with the silent majority. — Casey 1 min ago
4:10 AM
1 hour later…
5:16 AM
Enharmonic, I, too, would have rejected the edit. If you feel the list of options should be more complete, I would feel better if you would either 1) Add the additional options as a comment 2) Notify the author in a comment (these could be combined - it's what I do if I feel as you did or 3) write your own answer. If the question is relatively new (the author may still be around) 1+2 is usually a very good way to resolve it. The author either agrees with you, or not. If not, feel free to write your own answer :-) — Cindy Meister 10 secs ago
An election runs in three phases: candidates nominate themselves by posting answers on an election announcement "question" in meta. They also post answers to another "question" with a list of questions for the candidates. People can UV/DV the candidates - call it a primary. Depending on how many are running for a given number of seats, one or two actual elections will be held. Elections are held as often as the number of moderators is too small to fulfill moderator duties. Only new moderators are elected. There is no "renewal" election for current moderators. — Cindy Meister 37 secs ago
6:02 AM
The two problematic posts are not borderline cases, where moderators can reasonably be expected to have a difference of opinion. One of them was a me too comment in Spanish: unsalvageable. The other a link only answer that the moderator did not attempt to salvage themselves. — Raedwald 25 secs ago
6:22 AM
@DougRichardson well, the answer itself is at +13/-8 controversial I would say and I'm not kind to the suggestion of the OP. So it is understandable that this answer didn't help them, in which case it is fine to not accept the answer. I wouldn't call that ironic, just a prime example of the SE system at work. — rene 2 mins ago
"Just because X follows Y, it doesn't mean X caused Y" If X follows Y, i.e. Y happens first, shouldn't that be "...doesn't mean Y caused X"? — walen 15 secs ago
No userscripts running? You had no account yet when you clicked that ad, right? Do you know if you had a valid authenticated session on any .stackexchange.com domain? — rene 19 secs ago
@rene No special scripts. Ad blockers disabled on StackExchange. I likely did have a valid authenticated session since I sometimes browse the "Hot Network Questions" and I'm a member of a number of exchange sites. I had no account on CraftCMS when I clicked it, that's correct. — John 28 secs ago
Okay, can you edit that info into the question? The SE dev might need that context and we don't want to risk the comment being deleted in case it insults the software ... — rene 24 secs ago
I don't know. I've seen now enough bug reports where only a few users experience and report the bug. They might not have enough context to understand the root cause. That is why I asked you to add some of the data points I could think of that could contribute. Allow for 6 to 8 weeks to have this solved .... — rene 13 secs ago
I'm not sure how I feel about clicking "that solved my problem" when the possible duplicate doesn't have an answer and has just been ignored for 2 years. It won't solve my problem, or answer my question. — John 31 secs ago
How does afblock handle stuff if that gets loaded in an iframe? If you have disabled adblock for Stack Exchange does that mean adblock doesn't run for stuff inside iframes that are loaded from a Stack Exchange domain? I use adblock but I never really checked what disabling does. — rene 8 secs ago
It fails if there two or more carriage return between the code lines. Any solution for that? — Amit Joshi 1 min ago
Can you downvote a candidate? No, but we throw insults at them in comments and then check if they keep their cool ... — rene 25 secs ago
7:36 AM
8:00 AM
8:14 AM
When the current issue is about the friction between the community and the company, I don't know how payment to moderate will solve the issue — Andrew T. 12 secs ago
Will 'inducements' be allowed? How much, (USD), would it cost to have the PHP room suspended? — Martin James 7 secs ago
@yivi, I don't know if it matters. The point is that as long as there are people cleaning up the sh*t for free, the company has no incentive to fix the problem. So I guess this suggestion is a corollary of the moderator strike. The company should pay its employees to be welcoming. — Benjol 52 secs ago
I believe it does matter, because those would be very different proposals IMO. I think you should clarify what you mean in any case, and how would this overlap with the work of current volunteers (both moderators and regular users working as curators by flagging, editing, voting, etc). — yivi 1 min ago
That's was review strike. By moderators we usually mean community elected moderators. Users with shiny diamonds by their usernames and mighty powers. — yivi 7 secs ago
@yivi meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/385023/…, sorry I was sloppy and said moderator instead of reviewer. Corrected in title and body of question. — Benjol 1 min ago
I appreciate your efforts here to make an faq. Usually it is better to keep the question more focused and have an answer prepared if you're intending it for the faq. — Yvette Colomb ♦ 51 secs ago
For anyone downvoting this request, please share your opinion in comments or as an answer. I see no reason to decline this request. — Vadim Kotov 48 secs ago
9:30 AM
An old quote: Most of the professionals who are here come here to contribute and to help others, not to spend all of their time sweeping the floor. Requiring less floor-sweeping by experts could go a long way towards improving relations. — CertainPerformance 1 min ago
Can't be more agree with: "So basically, make sure your questions are good and do not delete questions where you just got an answer for." I've just found my recent deleted answer which solved the question :) — Shinjo 16 secs ago
10:00 AM
Since declining the flag was a wrong action it would be nice if the mod that declined it would change the affected flags from
declined
to disputed
. (Sorry to bother you, @BaummitAugen, but said mod hasn't an answer or comment here to ping them directly). — Thomas Schremser 1 min ago10:38 AM
10:56 AM
I have just realized that someone has changed the tag from discussion to support, but my intent was to discuss with fellows that have struggle with the same issue. I understand that such a change is quite big and it does not make any sense to do in the foreseeable future. Thanks. — Alexei 10 secs ago
11:44 AM
12:02 PM
I was one of the reviewers and I rejected it for 2 reasons. First was that it was editing a 3+ year old answer. The second was the fact that the code in the answer was changed. As a matter of fact the changes you made to the code were already present in the 4th comment to that answer. — Dave 1 min ago
12:32 PM
SO is free and volunteer based. If you want to pay someone, you'll need to find a consultant or a site dedicated to offering paid programming support. — NathanOliver 1 min ago
There are other sites for this. Someone mentioned "codementor.io" the other day. No idea how they work or if they are any good. — yivi 50 secs ago
I mean the mobile app. If Stack Exchange open their API, I think lots people would like to develop 3rd party app for SO. BTW, why there is no a PWA version for substitution at least. — Alex 59 secs ago
It's very hard to think of an example of a question like this that would be a good fit for this site. — yivi 27 secs ago
see also: Gorilla vs. Shark -- "if you... don't want your question to get instantly closed... - try to keep Gorilla vs. Shark in mind." — gnat 30 secs ago
Possible duplicate of Has there been any discussion for allowing urgent bounties? — gnat 50 secs ago
see also: Under what circumstances may I add “urgent” or other similar phrases to my question, in order to obtain faster answers? "Nobody is going to see that you need an answer ASAP and then drop everything they're doing in order to help you. Your emergencies are your own.." — gnat 1 min ago
1:22 PM
@RobertHarvey re "are not required to demonstrate effort", the first point in the downvote tooltip is "doesn't show any research effort", so I'd argue that askers are required to at least drop a line at what they searched, even just so we may understand where they come from to write a better answer. — Tensibai 1 min ago
There are existing examples of this, both closed with a very high number of votes and views: stackoverflow.com/questions/10213009/solr-vs-elasticsearch and open questions: stackoverflow.com/questions/15704644/…. Those were just the first two I could think of. — Druckles 1 min ago
1:42 PM
1:52 PM
Note that both of those are really old, @Druckles. I suspect now that the second's been brought to attention, it, too, will be closed. Standards tend to get tightened up as time goes on. — fbueckert 2 mins ago
@tensibai that’s a reason to downvote, not close. Hence why we don’t have a close reason for “no research effort”. “Required” == “criteria for post to stay open”. No research effort is not a valid reason to close a question. — George Stocker ♦ 55 secs ago
You could try asking a really interesting and well-researched question. People will generally respond to those quickly and enthusiastically. — Don't Panic 27 secs ago
2:42 PM
IMO there are other, also important, issues with the current close/open system, such as not being able to change the reason for voting to close a question, even after it has been edited. Anyone "experimenting" with that? — martineau 43 secs ago
I see no reason to close and to downvote this question. The answer is clear (review works also as community control, i.e. it helps to create such a site what is liked by the programmers of the world around. It can be done correctly if also the content is decided by the programmers of the world around.) Making the concepts of it is a good idea, the closure/downvote and likely deletion of this question is... well... maybe a little bit suboptimal. — peterh 1 min ago
3:18 PM
RE the declining close votes, anecdotally, I've seen some (read: a lot of) dreadful questions last couple days in
php
and so many of them had no close votes but 10-25 views. It's a little crushing especially since the required close votes have been reduced down to 3 yet closures don't seem to be taking place. — Script47 25 secs ago3:40 PM
September is coming and the experiment ends in a week. We are in for a rude awakening, @Script. — yivi 55 secs ago
4:06 PM
4:30 PM
@Cerbrus yes you can assume communications are under way. Watch this space — Yvette Colomb ♦ 8 secs ago
4:52 PM
1 hour later…
5:56 PM
Possible duplicate of What is the best way to get response for unanswered questions? — πάντα ῥεῖ 15 secs ago
6:22 PM
Downvote it. Code only answers aren't 'very low quality', and if it attempts to address the question it's an answer. Downvote it. — George Stocker ♦ 32 secs ago
I agree if it is code-only, but still an attempt then yes. However, this example here I am not even sure what was meant to be. Is is plagiarised from comment section in php.net? Why is the code commented out? What is THE SOLUTION? — Dharman 12 secs ago
Possible duplicate of Is there a Webservices API for the Stack Overflow Jobs CV Profile? — Brock Adams 1 min ago
"What can I do about very low quality answers?" Weep for the future of programming? That's about it. You could do a search for one of the lines of code using a site-specific search like "site:php.net echo ..." or whatever to see if it's plagiarized. You could also stop looking at PHP questions, but I digress ;-P (hey, I frequent
javascript
-- I lost faith a long time ago). — Heretic Monkey 1 min ago@peterh downvotes on
feature-request
s mean something different, as you know by now. I agree that there's no reason to close or delete the question. — Heretic Monkey 1 min agoThis is exactly why I said: "I believe such issues should not be handled by moderators". — Dharman 10 secs ago
@Dharman all good questions and all the more reason for you to downvote it if that's how you feel about it. The problem with asking moderators to intercede is that you're asking people who aren't experts in PHP to determine whether an answer that is in PHP should stay around. We can't make those sorts of judgments on answers (unless a particular moderator happens to have PHP experience). — George Stocker ♦ 1 min ago
Agreed with George here, this answer doesn't adds any meaningful information to the question and is a code only answer. Flagging it for VLQ is not optimal, instead, leave a comment — weegee 25 secs ago
@Dharman you cannot reach out to everyone and make them read the comment you just did, what most can you do it to leave a comment and tell the user to do "this" the very next time, If they don't learn, you cannot do anything. — weegee 36 secs ago
IANAL, but the stackoverflow.com/legal/terms-of-service does not seem to forbid scraping the job data as long as it is only for personal and non commercial use. Also, everything remains copyrighted by either Stack Exchange or by the author(s) of a given post. — Brock Adams 1 min ago
Conclusione downvoted, get to 20k, delete vote and if it's really really bad post del-pls request in SOCVR — Petter Friberg 31 secs ago
@JL2210 roomba only gets question with all it's answers but 20k users can surely delete it, since it's downvoted. — Petter Friberg 1 min ago
7:34 PM
This seems to be plagiarized from somewhere (the first portion of the code is identical to one of the other answers. — JL2210 48 secs ago
@JL2210 you can do that without 20k but yeah need to have a particolare good reason and it needs the be downvoted (hence possible to delete) — Petter Friberg 1 min ago
8:12 PM
Overall however remember that main problem of SO is bad question a downvoted answer amongst other upvoted once does not do damage (it only shows how not to do :) — Petter Friberg 39 secs ago
As this experiment comes to an end next week, and data begins to be interpreted, please consider the difference between the proficiency of "organic" closure (that which was done outside of the queue) versus those from the queue. As there is now a lower threshold for closure, the set of viewers in the wild closing questions should outweigh that of the more random oversight that the queue provides. It would be very interesting to see if there was an increase of accuracy for closure (all using the same close reason) from the group now closing it from the post (and not from review). — Travis J 16 secs ago
@HereticMonkey but disagreement with proposals is clearly non welcoming :) — Alexei Levenkov 54 secs ago
I don't think answer actually relates to the question - hiring random people to do reviews is very different than forcing your company to dogfood own product... — Alexei Levenkov 8 secs ago
9:18 PM
Backing up George's statement: meta.stackoverflow.com/q/256359/6296561 - That being said, "I got this solution from php.net" could point to possible plagiarism (the full source isn't listed if the code is copy-pasta) — Zoe just now
9:40 PM
@GeorgeStocker By that train of thought I could say: "I got it off the internet" and get away with plagiarism. Even when cited the domain, we still are wondering where he got this piece of code from. — Dharman 5 secs ago
thanks @ChrisF. The issue came up in chat and I'm wanting a canonical for MSO. I've put out a call to get someone to write up a tops good answer :) — Yvette Colomb ♦ 1 min ago
If no one else pipes up, I'll write up an answer. Be sure to include having separate accounts for asking and answering (some people like this). Not approving suggested edits, no bounties, no interaction that having only one account can do. — Yvette Colomb ♦ 1 min ago
@walen he's pre-disagreeing with the declination of this particular flag, since it's not expected. — Braiam 9 secs ago
I see you have accepted not the most voted answer. Does this mean we wont be implementing the HMP ourselves? If so, is there a reason for this, since it goes against top voted answer. — NathanOliver 1 min ago
@Cerbrus As Yvette said, this has been discussed. Of course I cannot make any promises about the future actions of other moderators. — Baum mit Augen ♦ 1 min ago
10:42 PM
11:30 PM
What prompted you to ask this question? Did you have a question with the above-mentioned criteria that was closed? — Samuel Liew ♦ 1 min ago
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