12:04 AM
@SamuelLiew Right, I explained that bit in my question, the idea on the overflow forum is that if a question is bad, you downvote it / close it / delete it. Why wouldn't I delete it straight away if it is indeed bad ? But I wasn't aware of that before someone pointed it out to me — Marine Galantin 36 secs ago
12:26 AM
Side note: the body of the question has far better question than title "Is there a software converter out there that can automatically convert this PHP code to python?" - so clearly OP can write readable English sentences... So I don't think any specific education is necessary in this particular case. — Alexei Levenkov 30 secs ago
1:04 AM
"regex" is the answer, the rest should be removed from the answer as not correct :) - see the regex in meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/373415/… — Alexei Levenkov 1 min ago
1:20 AM
1:42 AM
I hope your observational experiment is observing me desperately trying to get this unwanted junk out of my way. — matt 15 secs ago
I guess Shog decided that it was super-low-impact one... It is counterproductive to pick bad title to own post - so knowing the validation regex is unlikely to cause really bad behavior - I really don't see one maliciously picking bad title to own post (stupidly bad is normal so) . That's opposite why one would like to know comments regexes - knowing what considered insulting would definitely help to write ninja offensive messages. — Alexei Levenkov 37 secs ago
"I really hope that they haven't been banned for 1 month as well" me too. I hope they are banned for a longer period. — Aruna Herath 1 min ago
Stack Overflow is not a forum. If you treat it as a forum, downvotes are likely to follow. — Robert Columbia 23 secs ago
Looks like you may be using the site for the wrong purposes, based on your questions that I've seen, both open and deleted — Hovercraft Full Of Eels 25 secs ago
2:46 AM
1 hour later…
3:56 AM
I don't really agree with this assessment fwiw. I learnt quite a lot of useful stuff about JavaScript on that site a while back. Lots of weird language features that are mostly useful in a code golf context, but occasionally useful (or at least, occasionally witnessed) outside that. — Steve Bennett 14 secs ago
2 hours later…
5:42 AM
It looks like
jason
is correct for this question: stackoverflow.com/questions/58902106/…, it is not related to json
. — user000001 1 min ago@Cody Gray. Not it isn't a joke. I've tested many inputs. Did you test my algorithm as long as I did? I mean I could be wrong, but I'm not claiming it to be. — Travis Wells 18 secs ago
Is this a joke? How would your solution to an exact cover by 3 sets (X3C) problem ever solve P vs. NP? Anyway, no, the question I'm imagining you'd ask would be off-topic for Stack Overflow. If you asked about the algorithm (rather than your Python code), it might be on-topic for either Computer Science or Theoretical Computer Science. I would recommend asking on their Meta sites. — Cody Gray ♦ 1 min ago
Yes these are about Jason/AgentSpeak. Someone should either write a tag-wiki, or replace the
jason
tag to something that people won't use incorrectly. — user000001 just nowI didn't test it. That isn't the point. The question is, how does your algorithm that solves the X3C problem have anything to do with P vs. NP? — Cody Gray ♦ 5 secs ago
Is it possible to be removed from said test group? I'm not a huge fan of the primary page i use to navigate this site and find useful content with to be modified in this way. I have HNQ hidden because I don't care about any other stack. i'm not interested. this just shoves it in my face. Yea, i can collapse it. it's still there. — Kevin B 17 secs ago
Exceptional claims require exceptional proof. When you have that proof, Theoretical Computer Science could be a good place to discuss it. However, the code you've shown falls short of a polynomial X3C solver. Note that your function is unused, and that it amounts to checking whether the union of C is a subset of X – it does not find an exact cover. A proof would also have to formally prove that your algorithm works for all inputs, not just for an example. — amon 24 secs ago
@amon I would like to see an example of how nested loops aren't polynomial. Perhaps its at least a special-case solver. I don't see the exponential time. Finding an exact cover is a function problem and not a decision problem — Travis Wells 1 min ago
@amon Can you give an example of how my function isn't being used? Perhaps this can be productive. — Travis Wells 1 min ago
6:32 AM
@Travis of course nested loops are polynomial. And you're right that X3C doesn't require an exact cover to be found, but only to decide whether one exists. But your algorithm ends up deciding a completely different problem. Your code indicates that you are confused, e.g. because you use regexes instead of set operations. More importantly, the function
checkIfDuplicates_3()
is never called. I Ctrl-F through the code and its name only appears in the function definition. But this is not the place for a detailed code review. — amon 56 secs ago@KevinB Removing people from ongoing experiments risks skewing the results. It's only one week. Maybe there should be a general possibility to opt out of all future experiments. After some thinking about, I think that this experiment may not be optimal to show that people want better integration between technical SEs. Maybe it should be done more subtle than C, with a common search functionality and maybe overlap only in some tags to start with. The HNQ questions aren't so interesting really. — Trilarion 1 min ago
6:49 AM
@rene , thanks! I checked that I gave more information and now post the problem solution from the point of view on the html page content. — Nick Veld 32 secs ago
7:00 AM
Thanks for digging in! You're right that
.s-btn__primary
is misbehaving there, but the core issue seems to be that we're missing our design library on the page. Once we have that included, both the approve and reject buttons should have correct styling - that white button with a border looks intentionally styled, but it isn't. :) I'll get this fixed up tomorrow. — Adam Lear ♦ 1 min ago7:26 AM
@trilarion yes, and there are also many other interesting things to test here, and other possibilities, especially when it comes to trying to show you content from other sites that you might find interesting based on your other activity. Unfortunately, that type of stuff was out of scope time wise for this round, and hnq gives an easy to draw on a flow of good quality questions from across the network. Hoping to learn what we can and figure out ways to improve. — Yaakov Ellis ♦ 41 secs ago
8:04 AM
@double-beep I don't see how that would be the OP's job. If they'd seen the other answer you had in mind, then they wouldn't have posted a duplicate. On the contrary, if you're going to make the claim that the answer is a duplicate of an existing answer, then you should provide some evidence. Think of it this way: if I have proof that the answer is a duplicate, it makes it easier for me to prune. — Cody Gray ♦ just now
None of that is even remotely "interesting", @YaakovEllis, any more than the spam I get daily in my inbox is "interesting". If I wanted to see content from other sites, I'd go visit other sites. I came here for a reason. Please respect it. — Cody Gray ♦ 1 min ago
I would simply edit it out. It's just noise. Asking op to accept the answer after they already confirmed the the answer solved their problem sounds fine (as long as it's just done once and in a non-aggressive way) — BDL 36 secs ago
@codygray please click on the collapse button in the upper right corner of it is bothering you so much. One of the things that we will be looking at is to see what something like this does to user retention. Thanks. — Yaakov Ellis ♦ 1 min ago
Annoying works, too. :-) The only reason I chose to call out "ethical" is that some people apparently think that it's unethical to accept your own answer. It isn't. The site is designed to allow you to do that. — Cody Gray ♦ 1 min ago
ah, great. I was worried new users would have no feedback, but since they get the link upon closure that saves us a lot of work. — TamaMcGlinn 39 secs ago
Yup. Here's an arbitrary example of a question closed as "needs more focus". Note that you do not yet have privileges to cast close votes. However, you can flag questions to recommend closure, putting them into a close vote review queue that users with close vote privileges can and do monitor. — Cody Gray ♦ 15 secs ago
8:46 AM
@CodyGray the issue is that there is far more significance put on the accepted answer than it needs to be. It's the answer that most helped the OP not necessarily the most correct answer. There might be a very exhaustive and thorough answer by somebody yet OP posts what worked for them. Self-accepting seems fine in that case - it's by definition what most helped the OP if that's what they went with. With that said, sometimes blatantly wrong answers are also chosen which...is not very nice. — VLAZ 39 secs ago
Looks like a habit the answerer has just picked up and applied to all 4 of their answers today — Martin Smith 43 secs ago
@YaakovEllis I think somehow there's a mixed message in this. It's sort of noisy and irrelevant which is opposite of what's required to post anything here. Of course people learn how to mentally filter things out or use scripts to help, but maybe we shouldn't have to. Assuming your experiment is a "success" because people click on those other sites, then what? — Scratte 1 min ago
9:10 AM
I see a loophole in Skipping questions that written in poor English that can be understood, but still is broken. If all of us stick to the rule, I feel that the post will never exit triage. Thus, Skipping is just procrastinate, until someone will finally say Looks Ok to broken English, or Requires Editing, again for broken English. Doesn't this loophole defy the purpose of community driven reviews, putting work on the shoulders of experienced reviewers, as newcomers are guided towards Skip 'em all? Shouldn't Broken English default to Requires Editing? — Daemon Painter 34 secs ago
9:24 AM
Wouldn't this specific subset of "Too broad" questions deserve a specific flag reason? I'm usually against harsh closures, especially for people that are honestly trying to do their best, but in this case probably a specific "SO is not a free coding service" message would be useful. — Roberto Caboni 50 secs ago
@HereticMonkey: I would like to complain to MS, but it's useless. Some users have already done that on GitHub, but all that MS says is "we added some redirects, but you have to life with the rest being broken". Microsoft, like all big companies, has an efficent way of ignoring the needs of its own users... So either we're stuck with the current situation or we do our best to improve it ourselves and do the stupid work of fixing the links (again). — Tobias Knauss 7 secs ago
9:36 AM
9:50 AM
Does this answer your question? How flag questions like "please do my job for me"? — gnat 39 secs ago
1 hour later…
10:52 AM
Does this answer your question? Why stackoverflow's website is not optimized to big screen? — ivarni 1 min ago
@PeterCordes given how many trash questions I've seen getting upvoted over the years (e.g. unreadable rants, uncommented code dumps, or even plain old spam), I'd say the threshold would need to be somewhere around +5 to even be remotely useful. But as I think the potential negative effects of automatic reopening are far worse than its benefits, I simply don't think any question should be automatically reopened at all. — l4mpi 41 secs ago
I don't either, but as a compromise if someone insists on doing this, to make it less bad during a hypothetical trial period. After the trial period it will hopefully be obvious to everyone that it didn't work (or else we're both wrong and it could work given sufficiently-good natural language heuristics that magically can detect good edits). — Peter Cordes 11 secs ago
12:04 PM
This is a major one. My eyes started hurting after skipping 3 or 4 posts. — Ahmed Abdelhameed 45 secs ago
12:22 PM
Actually, I'd have suggested the Computer Science SE. I can never be sure since I can't speak for the community (and honestly am not that active in CS SE), but I've myself taught the topic of that specific question in a second-year CS course. So I think it would have been appropriate in cs.SE. Edit: I saw that I wrote "maths SE" in the original question. Sorry, my mistake. — Lukas Barth 1 min ago
12:34 PM
@Servy no, to make an answer community wiki privilege is "Awarded at: 10 reputation" stackoverflow.com/help/privileges/community-wiki — Yaroslav Nikitenko 1 min ago
This really should be a user-configured feature, not a SO, Inc. forced one. What good is collapsing this if it's only good for a week? As for user retention? Wow... I fail to see how this helps. Follow your own creed - be nice. This sure doesn't feel nice to me. — dfd 30 secs ago
As of today, documentation is shut down. meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/354217/… — Yaroslav Nikitenko 1 min ago
That's cause the experiment runs for a week @dfd. After that, I suspect collapsing a box would be pointless unless that's the choice they go far. — Journeyman Geek 1 min ago
I don't think anybody does. That's not the point of the site, nor the point I was making. — Steve Bennett 1 min ago
1:02 PM
The ongoing confusion related to this flag is evidence that it needs to be removed. My recent "very low quality" flag on this question got declined, and I struggle to think of a more perfect example of what should be flagged as VLQ stackoverflow.com/questions/61086610/… — Sean 13 secs ago
@Dharman The description text for "Should be closed" and "VLQ" both note that the question is unlikely to be salvaged via editing. If you believe it can be saved with more detail, then it seems neither of those should apply. — Sean 55 secs ago
@jpmc26 "auto-flagging" isn't really an accurate description of my request at all. As for the questions, almost all the ones I come across are literally just zero-effort requests for someone to suggest a rewrite of their code the 'best' way or the 'most idiomatic way for language x' which are just POB. What's most idiomatic for a language can also change one day. A warning banner prompting askers to request objective reasoning would go a long way toward reducing that large, large pile of bad questions. — TylerH 21 secs ago
@Luuklag also, tags are supposed to be used so that experts can find questions they can answer. It's reasonable for someone to know a lot about dice and how to model them for role playing games and whatnot, but less reasonable for someone to be an expert in terminating threads. That last one is arguably a meta tag too, as the nuances of terminating a thread in Java may be rather different than terminating one in Win32. — Robert Columbia 1 min ago
1:32 PM
I support 🐋✔️ the efforts of the community to deal with 🔔🚽💩 noise on the site 😎🐈. — Robert Columbia just now
@JoeW That site isn't great, it incorrectly determines my screen size, so for all I know all the results could be incorrect — Nick 23 secs ago
I think it a matter of ethics, actually, because the user is trying to suggest to others that their answer is the solution that OP marked. Even if OP marks another answer, confusion can be introduced to those who aren't very familiar with the site (which is most visitors and a fair amount of registered users). — TylerH 1 min ago
2:12 PM
2:28 PM
Does this answer your question? Scrolling through "similar questions" resulted in visual tearing/overlap — Laurel 10 secs ago
2:54 PM
3:10 PM
@alex no, we won't register this on our data. We will see it shown and never clicked. If you collapse it before blocking it we will see that (and can infer from this that the feature doesn't interest you). — Yaakov Ellis ♦ 44 secs ago
When you say you can't post a question, do you mean you are banned from asking questions on the main site? — Robert Columbia 1 min ago
3:34 PM
Yes I also already saw it there. I commented. So should I close this question? — Sunburst275 1 min ago
4:06 PM
Those are links to different answers to the same question. If you want only questions, include
is:q
in your search. — user4642212 37 secs ago4:18 PM
1 hour later…
5:24 PM
I don't see Least Votes in the Sort By list of available items. Basically, visit that page in desktop, use the UI to configure the query the way you want, select Apply filter, copy/bookmark the URL. — Heretic Monkey 1 min ago
@Catija I do now. Back when HNQ was introduced, SO adamantly refused to provide any option to remove it. You'll come around on this new garbage as well. — Kevin Krumwiede 10 secs ago
My experience with the "review step" so far: "Weird, the site scrolled up instead of posting. I'll try the button again." — Fabian Röling 1 min ago
The UI prototype says "read the comments", but there's no way to do that from there. — Fabian Röling 1 min ago
5:52 PM
Protip: you’re not going to solve P=NP by writing code. I realize you will resist and ignore this advice, but it’ll be here in a few years when the light dawns and you’ll have it to look back on. — Dan Bron 41 secs ago
6:12 PM
Martijn, I'm sorry, but you do not understand. I do not ask questions that can be answered by a Web search because of course I search the Web first. But if this website is not meant to answer questions that are on-topic, like mine, that where should I ask a question like dba.stackexchange.com/questions/264177/… ? I have asked for a more appropriate forum often, but no one ever answers. My questions are not generally useful for others because they are hard questions, and specific to my work. — David Spector 40 secs ago
But no, I'm not looking for a discussion forum. Strangely, the few questions of mine that have not been downvoted have provoked interesting discussions1 — David Spector 1 min ago
Please report problems here if they haven't been reported before: Dark Mode Beta - help us root out low-contrast and un-converted bits — Mat 1 min ago
I hate dark mode. Not that anyone cares, but if it ever becomes mandatory, I will stop using SO. — Ross Presser 1 min ago
Would it be worth it to retag the current Jason questions as
jason-lang
or something in that vein, and then make jason
a synonym of json
? Note that I had not heard of Jason until today, so if I'm grievously offending a horde of Jason users, I apologize. — Andrew Myers 55 secs ago6:58 PM
#5 is explained in the OP: "For now, this is Stack Overflow in English only at this point - it doesn’t even work on MSO currently." It's a beta, relax :). Many of the other items in your list have already been mentioned in other answers. Please search for those an remove the duplicate entries. — Heretic Monkey 33 secs ago
7:24 PM
seems eminently sensible. People that like it can see it and everyone else just go about their day, — Martin Smith 15 secs ago
Can't speak for those who voted on this Meta question, but the content on Stack Overflow only improves iteratively because it is edited. That action would lift the lock. — E_net4 is cleaning up 45 secs ago
7:44 PM
8:26 PM
I think there is an indication in your answer that this situation was related to "accepting your own answer", however, that is not the case here. The question asker was a different user than the one who introduced the green checkmark. — Travis J 32 secs ago
9:12 PM
@Pac0 My productivity definitely increased when I turned off HNQ. For some reason, I turned it back on a while ago. I'll have to look into why after I finish browsing HNQ... — TylerH 25 secs ago
Yep, I'm interested in some content from that site and I see that content when I visit that site and have my "interesting" tags applied. I have no interest whatsoever in the specific Postgres administration question in that screenshot though — Martin Smith 54 secs ago
It is much more difficult to read very long lines. That's why newspapers put text into columns. The same principles are true here. — Cody Gray ♦ 53 secs ago
Yep, I'm interested in some content from that site and I see that content anyway when I visit that site and have my "watched" tags applied. I don't work with Postgres though and have no interest whatsoever in the specific Postgres administration question in that screenshot. So at best it is just going to show me content I would already have seen anyway and at worst it is going to show me something irrelevant to my interests — Martin Smith 1 min ago
I would like to point out that clicking on this post from Dark Mode Stack Overflow, coming to Light Mode Meta Stack Overflow really makes my eyes bleed. — Bender the Greatest 1 min ago
"This project was not on any roadmap, and was never discussed anywhere." Maybe not this particular project but the subject was. See management gobbledygook Scripting the Future of Stack Overflow: "We are experimenting to improve in areas we know need work: encouraging more question asking ... and creating a more integrated experience between Stack Overflow and other technical sites on Stack Exchange. The results of all of this work is being shared publicly through our new Loop series...". — Trilarion 47 secs ago
@Roberto No, because many questions that request code are perfectly on-topic for Stack Overflow, so that alone should not be a close reason. These questions should only be closed if they are actually too broad for our Q&A format. I have no idea what a "harsh closure" is. Closure is never harsh. By definition, it's a quality control mechanism indicating that the question, in its current form, is not a good fit for our Q&A format. The point is to get the asker to edit the question to comply with our guidelines. — Cody Gray ♦ 51 secs ago
I like the general idea too to some extent. I was never only focused on one SE and I like the idea of making it easier to me to switch and also mix maybe, but I think that this particular variant is not a good idea. HNQ is a waste of time and I mostly either need to find useful answered questions or promising unanswered questions. The feature would need to be much more subtle to be useful. A combined search perhaps or tag filters across SEs or a completely customizable landing page. — Trilarion 1 min ago
I thought about making [jason] a synonym of [json], but resisted the urge because it's just wrong. [jason-lang] doesn't make sense, because it's not a language... — Cody Gray ♦ 1 min ago
I wonder if the following would be a suitable analogy: Why don't we show some popular C# questions on top of the Java tag question list? Java coders might be interested in C# topics too but not aware of it. On the one hand it would feel a bit ludicrously, but on the other hand it begs the question how people discover and keep track of interesting topics then. I use tags or tag combinations to filter questions. Maybe they could work cross-stackexchanges. — Trilarion 41 secs ago
@CodyGray I understand (even if.. :) ). For me a harsh closure is a closure occurring in the first 10 minutes after a question of asked. My (little) experience says that if the user is responsive comments are able to make him improve their question and make it answerable, and also says that after the closure it will probably remain closed. And because of the early downvotes, probably unrecoverable since downvoters will never come back to appreciate the changes, the OP will more likely delete question and ask the same question a week later. — Roberto Caboni 1 min ago
10:28 PM
@Roberto Closure is maximally useful if it is done as early as possible. You should never be waiting to vote to close. Vote to close immediately, then discuss with the asker how the question can be improved. Once it's improved, it can be re-opened. If you don't close early, then the question will attract answers in the meantime, and your edits will invalidate those answers. Closure is like a purgatory for questions. The nicest possible thing you can do is close early. If you miss that opportunity, the question inevitably ends up being deleted altogether. — Cody Gray ♦ 1 min ago
It's not hard to detect, though fixing it would take a bit more effort. Maybe
window.location.href = window.location.href
in addition to saving the #wmd-input
value so it can be retrieved on the next load. Wonder what other issues there would be with that approach — CertainPerformance 35 secs ago10:50 PM
Also, the HTML you've introduced is invalid as you've duplicated the
qlist-wrapper
ID. Please give it a unique ID, at least then we can target it better with Ad Blockers — Phil 30 secs ago11:16 PM
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