12:34 AM
There are. How many of that person's answers are you downvoting? For the automated systems to kick in (bans and such), there needs to be some signal for the system to know it should act. — Patrice 49 secs ago
Realistically the only option for person with so many posts is to flag for moderator interventions... While downvoting as @Patrice said indeed is a good idea but for case you describe you may easily run into "serial downvotes" land... — Alexei Levenkov 52 secs ago
What in the world would be the purpose of this? There are zillions of APIs, and plenty of other technologies that one could argue should be classified as APIs. Are you perhaps just interested in the most popular tags? — Cody Gray ♦ 1 min ago
12:50 AM
@Patrice Oh, I didn't know downvoting has this effect. Anyways, I very rarely downvote answers, I kinda don't have this habit to downvote, except bad questions to get them closed fast. When I see something wrong in an answer I just try to leave a constructive comment. I should be more aware of downvoting in future ... — akuzminykh 1 min ago
Use your votes. If an answer is not helpful, vote it down. If it is useful, vote it up. If you feel you can write a better answer, write that better answer! No, moderators will not intervene in cases like these because the user is doing nothing wrong. They are just not doing it right either. — Martijn Pieters ♦ 43 secs ago
However, if there is a pattern of plagiarism, copying the work of others, please flag those posts. That is something moderators do act on! — Martijn Pieters ♦ 1 min ago
@Patrice Unless someone's average answer score is in danger of being negative, or some of their answers get deleted from review (which sounds quite unlikely to be happening in this situation), I don't think there's any chance of an automatic low-quality ban - which makes sense. Here, downvoting such posts will help inform the poster and others that it isn't useful, but it won't lead to more consequences. — CertainPerformance 43 secs ago
1:16 AM
Since @MartijnPieters said flagging is wrong here than really nothing going to happen... Downvote a day may make you feel doing your part. — Alexei Levenkov 1 min ago
2:02 AM
I'd strongly recommend skipping any trackable interaction (like comment) if one plans to downvote... — Alexei Levenkov 1 min ago
1 hour later…
3:08 AM
@TemaniAfif There are a lot of things that we can test for when checking the content of edits... your example is one - finding places where the only content is "This isn't a duplicate" (or similar) vs "This isn't a duplicate [and here's an explanation of how it's different]". Similarly, we can check for edits that are merely "The moderators here are all terrible people who just don't understand what they're doing. This is a perfect question and there's no reason to close it." :) It doesn't have to be a completely dumb check. — Catija ♦ 1 min ago
How we define it is exactly what we're going to figure out. There's a lot of work to do and learning to gain before we will know what the best solution here is. Heck, there's always the chance that we'll try it, iterate on it a few times to see if we can make improvements, and it'll be a bust... but we want to work with y'all to find solutions that don't make the situation worse while also helping users not feel like a question being closed is permanent and unfixable. Yes, SF and SU questions are never on topic, regardless of editing... maybe we base reopen process on the close reason... — Catija ♦ 1 min ago
There's a lot of thinking yet to do and a lot of work going into this. The post here is not a final plan. It says that we're going to iterate and that's the plan. We're not assuming that we know the one best solution and we're going to do it and walk away. I've been working pretty closely with Des the last few weeks and it's been great to talk about my concerns and what we're working on that may have better/different solutions to meet the same need. Closing is something that needs help. 5k questions in the queue here isn't sustainable... there's a lot of interesting thinking we're doing. :) — Catija ♦ 9 secs ago
3:28 AM
The floor to the displayed score was already tested and considered ... not helpful. It wasn't in any way "successful". It was confusing and a bad UX - meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/393907/…. If a closed question is automatically deleted after n days, why does the score matter? Why do you need to add more downvotes if the closure is enough to get it deleted? — Catija ♦ 1 min ago
With the editing of very old posts - are they open? If they're closed, they'd be deleted, no? We're not sure how we'll address currently closed posts yet, so there may be a window where a very old closed post isn't deleted but is still on site but it seems like checking for an edit window would be a way to prevent that sort of abuse. :) — Catija ♦ 1 min ago
3:52 AM
Closed - the hope is they can get one more question and maybe get it reopened — Journeyman Geek 16 secs ago
@Catija to trigger rate limiting, IP level blocks and impact triage heuristics maybe? — gnat 55 secs ago
4:56 AM
2 hours later…
7:04 AM
I think these steps are really good experiments to figure out what askers and curators need. But I don't expect these experiments to be particularly successful, for the reasons outlined in all the answers. Please don't activate automatic reopening unless the other components indicate an increase in edit quality. But nevertheless, thank you for engaging the Meta community early on. — amon 1 min ago
1 hour later…
8:12 AM
even if it's not a dumb check, a system cannot evaluate (based on OP's edit) that a question is no more a dupe and should be reopened (even the most advanced AI cannot). I usually close question with canonical target having 20 answers and OP always comment the same thing that answer is using X but I am asking for something different because he simply look at the accepted answer and never take the needed time to check ALL the answers, test them, understand them. I am already facing issues with blind vote (meta.stackoverflow.com/q/393400) and this automatic reopening will make it worse — Temani Afif 1 min ago
8:30 AM
That wording is already present in some post close notices today but I managed to get a small change in: meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/394552/… — rene 48 secs ago
There is never a good reason to allow a single edit by the original author to automatically re-open the question without any community review. There is a major conflict of interest here, not to mention a near guarantee of failure. No amount of added "smarts" are going to make it a good idea. It'll always be a "dumb check" because it's being done by a machine. — Cody Gray ♦ 55 secs ago
9:08 AM
Sorry, I just wanted to know how many posts an Api has example: Java Swing has many Google Driver has few My goal is to use the stackoverflow website as a dataset to generate documentation with natural language processing and machine learning Am just a student is a job for college — clovishn 43 secs ago
@Makyen Well, I agree that something has to be done. I want to stress this: for myself, it would be useful to decouple the votes. Because for me personally, I don't want to juggle how exactly to divide my close votes. Upping the overall limit also works to an extent but it still requires each user to "divide" the close votes as they see fit. Which is a valid solution, but it's not something I myself want to bother with. Does that clarify the paradox? There is no paradox - it's just my own preference to have a split vs having a single pool of votes. — VLAZ 14 secs ago
9:26 AM
Use the data explorer and take it from there: data.stackexchange.com/stackoverflow/query/1215204 see also: meta.stackexchange.com/questions/2677/… — rene 31 secs ago
"At which point, the link dumps them onto the main help page and expect them to figure out what to do from there. I mention all this because your #1 commits the same mistake. You have this massive EDIT button but you offer the user no guidance what to do with it." I agree with the entire post here, but I want to piggyback on this - I'm also very irritated at this. Hence my suggestion to allow people to set out actionable things for the OP. Instead of a blanket "something is wrong with the post", we should be able to specify what is wrong. — VLAZ 51 secs ago
1 hour later…
10:40 AM
@AlexeiLevenkov It doesn't bother me enough to do something like that but I will definitely downvote him when I see the next garbage posts from him. — akuzminykh 21 secs ago
11:00 AM
"How about every question starts in closed state and gets reopened once it receives positives score?" Not a practical approach for low-traffic tags. And there are questions I'd answer as I understand them, without feeling enough effort has been put in (whether research, formatting or language) that I feel they need upvoting. — Cindy Meister 1 min ago
Not necessarily anonymously. Whether it's identified who asked for the improvement or not is irrelevant - it's a way to add more guidance for the question asker when they are editing the question. Because you've explained it wekk - the current guidance is not specific enough. And yes, we do have comments but they are not always followed. And sometimes that's the fault of the question asker, sometimes it's the fault of the comment not being clear enough. Linking to "here is everything that MIGHT be wrong with your post" help page is not helpful guidance, "you're missing relevant code" is. — VLAZ 45 secs ago
I also thought the Requires Editing sent the question back to the OP for further improvement. Going through the Triage Guide noe @SamuelLiew thanks for the info. — santamanno 1 min ago
12:02 PM
"Would getting a notification that a question you cast a close vote on had been edited encourage you to review the edited question, and thereby improve the reopen rate?" it would improve the reopen rate. Because now I'd be VERY reluctant to cast close votes. Less close votes = less questions closed. Less questions closed overall = more reopened ones, since I would assume the reopen number would stay about the same, it's just a bigger proportion of the shrunken total pool. Some questions I'd like reopened. Others are hopeless and I wouldn't want to revisit. — VLAZ 1 min ago
12:18 PM
"There's no penalty for asking more questions" - question bans tho. Asking a sufficient amount of bad questions actually does come with a penalty. Unless that's being removed, in which case we have even more problems — Zoe 38 secs ago
12:32 PM
@Catija If the reopen queue allows some way for the OP to enable pushing to the reopen queue once (instead of auto-reopen or first edit), questions might have a better chance of being reopened. However, a large part of this is probably just post owners not wanting to put effort into their questions and then going on rants when their questions are closed. — S.S. Anne 1 min ago
1:22 PM
1:36 PM
I'm not sure I follow "Community editing has always been a critical part of the reopening cycle." Certainly community editing is a big thing generally, but I'm not aware of it routinely being part of the reopening process, much less a critical part. Community commentary, yes, but I haven't seen (or at least recognized) community editing being used in this role. — John Bollinger 1 min ago
Well - if its possible to edit a post that has clear intent, but is badly worded, people do. You can neither comment, nor edit if a post is invisible. And I've seen folks (rarely but rather gloriously) work wonders in copy editing on a post — Journeyman Geek 7 secs ago
2:00 PM
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I'm not liking this very much, to be honest. Comments are fine, but they can be misleading. I don't see how double the amount of lines in a code-block makes things easier. I like it when someone explains what the code is suppose to do in text prior to the code block and use comments to indicate special things, not
int i = 0; // this is an int
. Truth is that there's just noway to validate the usefulness of comments in code. — Scratte 1 min ago3:04 PM
@FunkFortyNiner The post linked from that answer mentions a four hour grace period. — Ivar 8 secs ago
@Ivar It does not. I am aware of the grace period. This happened after an hour, I don't call that a grace period lol! — Funk Forty Niner 58 secs ago
Does this answer your question? This answer was posted *after* the question was closed, how is that possible? — Ivar 1 min ago
@Zera Yes, I noticed that also. Maybe something was reset somehow, hard to say. Let's see what the staff have to say. It's rather odd I found. — Funk Forty Niner 1 min ago
@Ivar I have to wonder why that is and why last week when someone closed the question while I was writing an answer that took me the better part of 5 minutes to write, wasn't saved as a draft or was able to submit it. I don't know, it's too unstable/strange. — Funk Forty Niner 1 min ago
@FunkFortyNiner There are client side checks as well, aren't there? Isn't that why you couldn't post an answer? — Zera 8 secs ago
@Zera I don't know. This has always been the case for me. I think this happened after I gained a certain amount of (high) rep. — Funk Forty Niner 1 min ago
@MartijnPieters Really? What about what I said in this comment earlier? And what I responded in this comment? I don't get that. This is the first time I see this type of behaviour. — Funk Forty Niner 1 min ago
The front-end javascript usually blocks the submit button and fades out the post, when the websocket connection detects the post was closed, but the server still accepts “in flight” posts, Funk. — Martijn Pieters ♦ 1 min ago
That’s explicitly mentioned in Oded’s answer on h the duplicate, by the way. — Martijn Pieters ♦ 1 min ago
3:56 PM
“Closing is something that needs help. 5k questions in the queue here isn't sustainable” Yes, exactly. And you are drawing exactly the wrong conclusion from that fact. Closing needs to be easier to do, and it needs to cause the question-asking bar to get much higher for that questioner, immediately. — matt 51 secs ago
4:22 PM
5:12 PM
If I told you that the real problem was that people just ask questions here without having done their own homework (e.g. research), or give us a requirements dump, or give us incomplete code or problems to work with, would you then think that the problems are going to be at least somewhat redressed in this proposal? People may not like getting off on the wrong foot with asking questions, but the reality is any other approach that deals with one-on-one interaction with an OP will not scale. This solution at least scales to deal with the volume of questions we get daily. — Makoto 33 secs ago
5:40 PM
@Makoto I'm suggesting to make it much easier to find relevant information for everyone's benefit. I don't see where I propose something that doesn't scale. The easier it is to find information and get training, the more reviewers will join in and curate. — Scratte 38 secs ago
Wrong site. This is the meta site, and you're looking to ask this question on the main Stack Overflow site. You may want to read the How to Ask link to improve the question as well if you are going to ask it there — Hovercraft Full Of Eels 25 secs ago
.... unless you're blocked from asking on the main Stack Overflow site, in which case you'll want to read What can I do when getting “We are no longer accepting questions/answers from this account”? — Hovercraft Full Of Eels 1 min ago
6:00 PM
Am I really seeing another "this is what we're going to do, whether you like it or not" announcement? Another "our staff thought about it, but we didn't discuss any details with the community until it was a fait accompli"? If so, then this is an unsatisfying flavor of transparency. — John Bollinger 1 min ago
6:32 PM
6:50 PM
Are you suggesting that we encourage the comment-anti-pattern? Myself, I prefer to read code without any comments, but instead with a full and complete description in the body of the question. — Hovercraft Full Of Eels 1 min ago
7:04 PM
7:54 PM
You're wrong here and before you just go to the main to re-ask this question there: do some research first. Then you could find questions like Lombok annotations do not compile under Intellij idea — Tom 1 min ago
8:40 PM
@Zoe not only that, there's a good chance the new question will end up being closed as a self-dupe - and downvoted just for the exact behavior that's being encouraged here. — John Dvorak 1 min ago
9:04 PM
Never mind the downvotes; thank you for putting some thought into this and sharing your ideas thus far. The regular visitors of meta are not your target audience – "bad" questions are our arch-nemeses, and out of sight is out of mind – but I can see how this may be able to turn a Bad Question into a (Reasonably) Good one. Is there objective evidence that this would be a good investment of your time? Can a significant number of quite obviously "bad" questions be salvaged this way? — usr2564301 24 secs ago
Like others, I have issues with what is "substantial editing". Since this needs to be clearly defined before implementing it, could you, um, edit your question to at least give us an idea of when Phase 2 is likely being rolled out? Finally, why not automatically route "substantially" edited dups to the review queue instead? I've found that many dups have comments arguing that it isn't one from the OP. (FYI, I didn't want to downvote your question, but your system "automatically" told me it's been a while since I voted on a question, so I felt compelled! — dfd 25 secs ago
9:52 PM
Oy, Windows 7? The one that just went kaput? Windows 8 was released in 2012, a full 8 years ago, plenty ancient ;-) — Heretic Monkey 11 secs ago
I don't see how guessing the motives of the users helps the conversation any. Why does it matter why the user answers in the way they do? What matters is the content of the answers. As others have said, vote on the usefulness of the content. — Heretic Monkey 1 min ago
10:26 PM
just don't downvote all the posts from this person, or you'll be the one violating the rules. — Jean-François Fabre ♦ 11 secs ago
10:52 PM
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