12:12 AM
What I think is harmful about downvotes is their anonymity. If you downvote something, your identity should be known and you should be prepared to justify your downvote. — Ray 33 secs ago
12:38 AM
This is BS. It is practical to compare the safety and fundamental efficiency of various implementations for similar tasks. StackOverflow is just a toxic community. — okovko 39 secs ago
@deceze I've read a lot of really high quality Q/As on StackOverflow where questions and answers were very long and discussed tradeoffs. These are the highest quality and most useful answers on StackOverflow. I don't know why or when SO decided to become Twitter, but this is lame, and I will be finding a new community. — okovko 1 min ago
@DougR. Nice try shifting the blame, but no. Only the person who is asking a question is responsible for the question. Period. If that question is of poor quality (e.g. b/c it's lacking essential information to the point of being unanswerable, or is flat-out asking "give me da codez"), then nobody but the person writing the question is to blame for that. We're already helping out as best we can, but SO (at least up to now) was never a place to teach people basic troubleshooting or problem analysis skills, b/c it simply doesn't have the tools for that kind of thing. — Ansgar Wiechers 1 min ago
Having a reward for it in the software has a systemic implication, @SecurityHound. It's marked very very clearly as desirable behavior. If done right, this could be a new tool for helping folks understand the reasons duplicate closure exists and why, when used properly, it is a helpful action (instead of being the hostile reflex of a power-mad elite noob-hating moderator). — jscs 1 min ago
1:40 AM
@jscs - I see far to many invalid edits (by low reputation users) that seem to be proposed for the 2 reputation that provides. I guess I might just be cynical. — Security Hound 50 secs ago
1:52 AM
As this is a duplicate question, delete your answer, or delete my question for me. — okovko 26 secs ago
@YorSubs: Without reading the original transcript and from puzzling things together from here and there over time, my understanding is that Monica argued that writing in a gender neutral way should be allowed (i.e., not using any pronouns by default). The first version of the CoC explicitly did not allow for this which is why this was discussed. In the revised CoC, gender neutral writing is accepted but this revision came first after Monica was fired and the events that followed. At that point in time, there were already a lot of other issues, e.g. how SE handled the whole situation. — Shaido - Reinstate Monica 25 secs ago
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3:22 AM
3:40 AM
Then it’s unclear to me why we need this. What problem does it solve? Also, I have a great idea! Let’s build a new standard that integrates the features from both OAuth and WebAuth! — Cody Gray ♦ 1 min ago
4:04 AM
@tkruse Excellent point. Agreed. And if the letters "monica" are too messy to touch, this could be "ModeratorGate2019" or something that is narrow enough to specify the concrete eruption, yet broad enough to capture the broad scale and impact of the event. — Jonesome Reinstate Monica 15 secs ago
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5:08 AM
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7:24 AM
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8:36 AM
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10:04 AM
Because comments are second class citizens. If it was edited while you were asking for more information in your comment then your comment will likely just end up being flagged as NLN and deleted anyway — Nick A 10 secs ago
10:28 AM
The websocket is already open and will notify you about changes to the question. It probably wouldn't be a significant change to also push events about edited comments through the same open socket. On the backend that's just one more trigger. (Obviously I'm armchair sys-adminning here…) — deceze ♦ 1 min ago
@deceze: slightly updated my answer. It was mostly the added traffic / calls / triggers that make me think it might be too much load. — Cerbrus 38 secs ago
@TheWanderer thanks for reply i am aware about that i am just asking about tag should wen include that or not? — ArunPratap just now
ASP.NET is a framework written in C#. It'd be weird to see answers about it written in another language. — TheWanderer 1 min ago
Isn't VB.NET supported for both .NET Core and .NET Standard class libraries? — xdtTransform 24 secs ago
@xdtTransform ya that's why i am asking that if accepted answer is related to c# should we add c# tag in that question? — ArunPratap 15 secs ago
@ArunPratap Tags should be used for what the question is about (asp.NET), not what it contains (C#). (See the Irrelevant Tags suggested edit rejection reason: "This edit introduces tags that do not help to define the topic of the question. Tags should help to describe what the question is about, not just what it contains.") — Nick A 1 min ago
If it's anything like the relationship between Android and Java, I don't really think it needs the language tag. A lot of ways to do something in pure Java can either be done better in Android because of additional APIs, or can't be done in the same way, because Android strips certain Java APIs. — TheWanderer 1 min ago
I think it would be more efficient if the OAuth providers implements Webauthn in their authentication flows. Probably some already have at least as a second factor choice to add support for usb keys and fingerprint readers. — Gimby 24 secs ago
thanks @NickA i got it but as i can see on stack overflow A tag is a keyword or label that categorizes your question with other, similar questions. Using the right tags makes it easier for others to find and answer your question and as i know C#, Visual Basic, and F# languages can be used to write applications and libraries for .NET Core. that's why i wanted to know that. — ArunPratap 29 secs ago
11:20 AM
Agreed on the process being ill-defined at the moment, @Machavity — what we hope to be able to accomplish is that it is clarified, and simplified, from start to finish. — JNat ♦ 34 secs ago
Me, I hate images-of-code with a passion. It can only mean that the OP has the utmost contempt for those willing to help strangers out if OP doesn't even bother to post something we can copy. The latest development does not bode well for the next gen of programmers: literal screenshots, a phone-taken photo of what the OP is looking at. — usr2564301 19 secs ago
Without wanting to self-incriminate, a lot (though of course not all) of the first questions are such rubbish that it's hard not to react (inappropriately?) to what looks just like that kind of 'contempt'! Or one can assume good faith (which is probably true, even in 90% of the cases that look rubbish), and have a hard life that way. Or, perhaps, stay away from the review queues! — MikeBeaton 36 secs ago
1 hour later…
12:38 PM
It is a big enough tag by itself, 41.5k questions and 14.3k users that favored it. The [c#] tag does get used on existing questions, but less than half of all questions have it. Technically it can be used in any language that supports generics, practically only C# is ever used. No, it doesn't need [c#]. — Hans Passant 1 min ago
1:02 PM
Given the short amount of time a comment is allowed to be edited before it locks... how often does this happen to you? — Cindy Meister 22 secs ago
1:24 PM
@AnsgarWiechers - I agree that the person asking the question is responsible for the question. But users don't learn how to ask quality question by being told that their questions are lacking, they learn how to ask quality questions by being educated. It's like handing somebody a gun without teaching any gun safety alongside. — Doug R. 1 min ago
2:16 PM
Is it just me or does this survey feel alot like its pointed to info stack overflow need for the teams* ? Feels like a promotion — Tinus Jackson 2 mins ago
2:28 PM
"Our policy is that if it is paid, we still permit it" is not a policy at all. There must be some sort of standards for job ads. One would think that a company that cares so much about pronouns might also care about slave labor, minimum wages, or clearly unethical enterprises. The problem with these ads is not necessarily that they are unethical, it is that they violate the spirit of a job site. Why should I wade through a bunch of ads that don't have anything to do with finding a real job? — Robert Harvey 1 min ago
That said, the problem with these particular ads is not necessarily that they are unethical, it is that they violate the spirit of a job site. Why should I wade through a bunch of ads that don't have anything to do with finding a real job? — Robert Harvey 27 secs ago
"Our policy is that if it is paid, we still permit it" is not a policy at all. There must be some sort of standards for job ads. One would think that a company that cares so much about pronouns might also care about slave labor, minimum wages, or clearly unethical enterprises. — Robert Harvey 32 secs ago
I don't see any particularly urgent mandate here. The OP didn't ask for C# and answers could potentially be in another language like VB.NET. — Robert Harvey 1 min ago
Does this answer your question? How do I format my code blocks? (It even has a gif to show you how! :D) — Nick A 55 secs ago
We used to have standards here. Folks knew when something was hinky, and so did the company. I see those standards being gradually eroded over time. — Robert Harvey 31 secs ago
3:08 PM
This seems like a very solvable problem, just like "What if people do reviews but get it wrong?" was solvable. The few users who sign up and are then rude will likely get flags or feedback from other users who sign up to this. Most "rudeness" comes from tired users who dislike hand-holding and want a higher ratio of advanced-level content: those users will avoid this feature, and will have a better time because users who do like helping newbies took that slack. — user56reinstatemonica8 1 min ago
3:22 PM
The strangest thing about the negative reaction is, it would immediately take some questions that need work off the homepage, away from users fed up of such questions, for opt-in users to fix (I'd have opted in, it's much like what I did on other SE sites). Those questions would only hit the homepage if/when they become high quality. But that's still a bad thing, because conscientious new users who want to ask questions right so much they explicitly ask for help might succeed? It honestly looks like a knee-jerk "New users, boo!", or even "Keep failing, we enjoy the rage!" — user56reinstatemonica8 1 min ago
1) could be solved through design. 2)-3) could have some natural equilibrium if the current average response time is posted on ticking the box ("3 days? Yikes, I'll just take my chances"). 4) is no worse than the current situation, and might lessen the damage of lazy users assuming people who opt-in are more patient than the average user. 5) is one to see how it goes, there's no harm in good duplicates being posted then duped because they catch more searches. 6) again can be solved through design and labelling — user56reinstatemonica8 1 min ago
3:44 PM
Whoa! Giving someone a place for asking questions and handing someone a gun are two different things entirely. Let's be very clear about that, m'kay? — Ansgar Wiechers 1 min ago
@trilarion yes, the Oneboxes are a snapshot and captured the moment they are rendered. Toggling the live version is possible by editing the original question or answer, which captures another snapshot. — Geoff Dalgas ♦ 36 secs ago
Also, I continually fail to see what's so un-common-sense-ish about "read a tutorial when starting with a new language", or "google the error message before asking a question", or "tell people what you've tried before, so they don't waste their (and everyone else's) time suggesting the same thing again". Even I was able to see basic things like that myself when I started, and I'm certainly not some kind of genius. [2/2] — Ansgar Wiechers 1 min ago
As mentioned before, curators were already providing guidance (NB: I'm talking about the tags I was active in, I can't speak for the entirety of SO). However, guidance takes time, and unless the number of curators increases with the number of people asking questions (which I don't see happening), you can either provide guidance to a limited number of askers and none to the rest, or provide less guidance to everyone. Pick your poison. [1/2] — Ansgar Wiechers 1 min ago
4:24 PM
@KevinB IMO it wants to be both. But I don't see how that's relevant here--I'm not discussing asking v. finding, I'm discussing answering dupes. — Dave Newton 1 min ago
Right. and, if we want people to come here to ask questions, we have to be able to allow people to answer them, even in cases like this, if we want them to keep coming back. but that's diametrically opposed to being the place where people want to find answers if no cleanup is done after the fact to stop this dupe + answer from further cluttering search. — Kevin B 1 min ago
@KevinB That's whether or not we want the site to be a place where people go to answer questions--and obviously we do. But not pell-mell; there's a convention not to add answers that add no value, which answering a clear dupe would fall under. — Dave Newton 34 secs ago
What i'm saying is the problem is bigger than that. It's long been rather standard that duplicates and their answers shouldn't be downvoted simply because they're duplicates. Your definition here fits that description, other than the answer being a duplicate, it's a correct, useful answer. but this answer isn't as good or complete as existing answers, should we do anything about that? The standing answer to that is no, hence the dupes shouldn't be downvoted policy. — Kevin B 23 secs ago
What i'm getting at is the why this question was asked in the first place. How did we get here. Why did the asker get past the "Does this answer your question?" phase of asking a question, when there's clearly a well known well written duplicate for this question. It's because search failed on multiple levels. — Kevin B 19 secs ago
@KevinB I'm guessing the search succeeded, or was at least close--it's either UX or PEBKAC. — Dave Newton 1 min ago
@KevinB And I'm saying that adding additional, pointless, distracting answers to clear dupes adds zero value at best, is detrimental at medium, and is harmful at worst. — Dave Newton 1 min ago
5:06 PM
"we have to be able to allow people to answer them" So if a question is a duplicate, @KevinB , and a user wants to add a new spin to that duplicate, then they should answer on the flagged dupe. Having different information on different questions, that ask the same question, makes the "right" answer harder to find, not easier. Answers on (very) duplicate answers doesn't help things over all, it actually makes finding information harder. if all the information is in one place, then it's there for all to see and contribute to. — Larnu 34 secs ago
@Larnu I absolutely agree, I'm more in the boat of duplicates being deleted, along with their answers, after a short period of time rather than the current situation where they live forever. — Kevin B 58 secs ago
Encourage answerers to find duplicates maybe? Give them those shiny internetpoints ... — Jonas Wilms 30 secs ago
@JonasWilms Interesting idea, although I think the dupe hunt should begin w/ the OP. — Dave Newton 1 min ago
"although I think the dupe hunt should begin w/ the OP" I cannot agree more, however, my opinion of many (new) user's attitude is "ask first, get duplicate answer later, look never"; and then you get the (not uncommon, but not rare) "Ask first, get dupe flag, not read dupe, ask again." >_< — Larnu 1 min ago
I'd prefer a solution that works for both camps. Make duplication not a closure, and auto-delete any duplicates that don't rise above a certain threshold after 30 days. say, a score of 2-3. answers can keep answering, askers get their specific answers, and the pearls can be merged over to the target dupe in edge cases as they do now. — Kevin B 1 min ago
The OP has to read through the dupe and apply it to the exact usecase. That takes time. Time for answerers ... — Jonas Wilms 1 min ago
@Larnu Then the site needs to do a better job of surfacing dupes and making them actionable. I'm not sure what else can be done there, though. — Dave Newton 36 secs ago
@KevinB One approach (which may already be done on an ad hoc basis) would be to tune the dupe reference (uh I mean the earlier question that the new question is a dupe of) title and/or content. Identifying question "cohorts" could be automated to a degree; it already is via the existing lookup. Modifying titles/content might be semi-automatable, not sure. — Dave Newton 18 secs ago
I concur with @S.S.Anne. If there's a post that someone viewing feels should be changed, the "edit" link is right there, and presumably the new behavior will kick in. — Michael - Where's Clay Shirky 7 secs ago
5:58 PM
@Alex, I teach our department's Design course, and am often looking for the right tool. We have a loosely organized group of faculty that lead all the departmental programs in Engineering, and the Assistant Dean of Engineering participates. I'd be interested in investigating Teams, but I'm not sure the "per-user" billing model (generous though it is for non-profits) will work in our environment. Perfectly willing to chat about it, if you want. — Scott Seidman 1 min ago
6:20 PM
Maybe we need a privilege to "fuse" duplicates into one post with all the relevant information of both? — LLSv2.0 9 secs ago
@Larnu You forgot the "Ask first, get answer/dup answer, delete account" sequence. — 1201ProgramAlarm 18 secs ago
Let me fix that slightly for you, @1201ProgramAlarm "Ask homework question, get answer, delete before any upvotes and without accepting so teacher doesn't find it when you hand in homework." ;)
</cynicism>
— Larnu 21 secs ago6:48 PM
Somebody was talking at one point about making an "answer as dupe" functionality. Where you can essentially change the dupe vote with an answer that points to another question. This can work alleviate some of the problems around dupes because people just don't like them, even when we do dupe closure with the best of intentions - to help them find an answer. It's still stigmatised as it's a closure. So, if re-framed as an "answer" and "accepting" it will fly a lot better with people who receive that. — VLAZ 1 min ago
With that said, the duplicate finding and linking is one of the worst experiences for me. Sometimes finding a dupe is hard because everything is scattered. Or even if it isn't, it still relies on the search functionality which isn't very accurate a lot of times. The whole process of finding the correct target often feels like a slog. And it's even worse when it's a research OP should have done. Not always the case though - sometimes the asker lacks vocabulary or knowledge to search for the right thing. That's fine. But often it's something that can be found. — VLAZ 45 secs ago
Daily dose of irony: a "too many comments" flag on a question asking how to "reduce the noise". The conversation that was here has been moved to chat. :-) — Cody Gray ♦ 1 min ago
7:14 PM
7:24 PM
8:12 PM
@Gimby you are right. If for example OpenId would support it, all is done. The only disadvantage is that OpenId can track you. — Florian Hilfenhaus 5 secs ago
8:24 PM
I get 5. I hardly use them, though. Mainly only old stuff or really bad crap. — S.S. Anne 19 secs ago
I shall humbly distribute my downvote :P -- just kidding. I need a TL;DR for this whole thing so I can read later and understand. — S.S. Anne 50 secs ago
8:38 PM
I would like to see some stats on how many comments get edited in the 5 minute grace period to get an idea how often comments are edited overall. I assume a smaller percentage would benefit from this feature. — rene 21 secs ago
Does this answer your question? Strict five minute comment editing window not in line with reality - improvement suggestion — John Montgomery 1 min ago
@BSMP: Which is why I followed up that comment with the one right below it. — Robert Harvey 6 secs ago
I don't think it's too bad but the reply from SO is also not very satisfactory. If jobs search on Jobs doesn't work well because of spam it's not our problem, it's their problem and they should solve it. — Trilarion 2 mins ago
It's not noise for visitors, which are not logged in. They are directly forwarded to the duplicate target by the system. — Trilarion 52 secs ago
@JohnMontgomery the possible dupe answer (which was not accepted) states
If there was no other activity on the post, then there is an existing solution - just delete your comment and repost the edited version. There is no need for a more complicated solution.
Actually, the process of copy, delete, comment, paste, amend, submit
is more complicated than edit, amend, submit
so no, it doesn't answer my question :) — djv 29 secs agoIt looks like the problem has been resolved. You may wish to delete this question as it no longer appears to have relevance. — Hovercraft Full Of Eels 38 secs ago
@Trilarion yes that's possible but 1. It adds to the comment count and 2. I personally would prefer one large comment of one stream of consciousness over two or more related comments. If this is enabled, one would have the option to do either. — djv 14 secs ago
To the downvoters, does your vote represent unwillingness to make this change, or an actual dislike of this feature, or both? Could you explain? — djv 36 secs ago
@djv The core of that feature request seems to be same as yours, and it's status-declined so that seems like an answer to me. — John Montgomery just now
@Trilarion it's only the case if the question has no answer. The issue is to have the duplicate answers, not the duplicate questions — Temani Afif 14 secs ago
Given that comments aren't supposed to be for extended discussions if one wants to add to a comment the delete and re-post method seems like a perfectly reasonable solution. There are a LOT more things that could use developers attention. I have no data but it seems that this situation is not very common. — Dave 56 secs ago
I guess people just think that there is a sufficiently good solution and the additional effort is not worth it. There may be better uses of the existing resources. — Trilarion 56 secs ago
9:28 PM
@HereticMonkey
"The clarification should be edited into the post, and the comment deleted."
that's news to me. Where is this documented? — djv 59 secs agoComments are for clarification of a question or answer. The clarification should be edited into the post, and the comment deleted. Within this view of the utility of comments how does this feature request make sense? — Heretic Monkey 1 min ago
9:52 PM
Comments could then also be edited to totally change the meaning. That makes it harder to follow, and to moderate. — Jonas Wilms 9 secs ago
Comments are temporary "Post-It" notes left on a question or answer. You should not expect them to be around forever. Once a clarification has been made, an edit added to the post to include new information, or the issue in the comment is otherwise resolved, it is subject to deletion. I guess that comes from a FAQ from comments on Meta SO though. The first sentence, however, is straight from the privilege page for commenting — Heretic Monkey 35 secs ago
@CindyMeister So what? I felt that it wasn't in violation of the site rules. The fact that I answered it or not makes no difference whatsoever. Either it's in violation or it's not. Also, having someone else's question closed makes no difference for me as an answerer, including reputation. It only made a difference for me in the sense that I wanted to help improve SO. And I don't think it's too broad. I answered because as soon as I saw it I remembered how my coworkers had asked that question themselves for a long time. The question, however, have since been deleted... Ludicrous. — andre_ss6 1 min ago
@JonasWilms I think
1. Allow edits to comments indefinitely as long as it is the last comment on a post.
handles that. If a comment is already replied to then you shouldn't be able to change it. Currently, you can still change it in this case, as long as you are within 5 minutes. My request wouldn't mess with that. — djv just nowQuestions on entropy are on topic at CrossValidated (stats.SE) and they have a notation tag. — SecretAgentMan 19 secs ago
@HereticMonkey thanks. The word temporary there is interesting. However, there are innumerable comments out there which add so much to a question that nobody should ever delete. I don't think they are always treated as temporary in practice. Also a comment with a suggestion to edit an answer may not be honored. Should it be deleted after some time in that case? (hypothetical situation) — djv 1 min ago
There have been a few posts about that; see Should we stop commenting altogether? for instance. — Heretic Monkey 1 min ago
Maybe we should follow a statistical approach. If there are already sufficient duplicates of a question we start deleting a few of them - those with lowest amount of visitors or lowest amount of combined answer scores. — Trilarion 41 secs ago
10:22 PM
@EdekiOkoh: why would this hinge on refunding the bounty or not? Bounties are an investment to attract attention to questions. If that question is off-topic, it should not have received a bounty in the first place – but, "oops I didn't realize" is not an excuse for asking an off-topic question, and neither is it for putting a bounty on one. — usr2564301 1 min ago
I'd personally avoid it. It might be closed as or Unclear or Needs Focus if you don't define the problem well enough. And even if you do, you might be stuck with Opinion Based. The "best way to X" questions tend to be problematic as there is no one "best" and even if you define it different people might go for different approaches. You might get better reception if you narrow it to few choices something along the lines of "Given characteristics X, Y, and Z, should I go for option A or option B" or otherwise have a defined list of possibilities. — VLAZ 57 secs ago
It does not hinge on refunding a bounty. The question is why I cannot raise a flag on bountied questions and Makoto stated why - I can but I need to make it a moderator flag and not a normal off topic flag. since its bountied — Edeki Okoh 1 min ago
10:42 PM
Thanks! I like how you said it. If I don't specify enough and give options it might not be taken as a good question. I will think about posting it. Thanks for your input — M.O. 38 secs ago
A good way to phrase these types of questions would be to identify a few different ways to do it, provide some examples and ask about the benefits and drawbacks of each technique. Then users can be informed while avoiding the issue of "which is best" — Dave S 44 secs ago
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