12:19 AM
The example they gave meant that the lm output was printed directly to console. This is similar output to other statistics packages: learnbymarketing.com/tutorials/linear-regression-in-r, spss-tutorials.com/linear-regression-in-spss-example, and not stats packages investopedia.com/ask/answers/062215/… — Michelle 1 min ago
@Nick Oh wow, good catch. So the original answer was correct, then someone added the bug in an edit. Surprising. — Kevin Meboe 58 secs ago
2 hours later…
2:33 AM
2:45 AM
There is an actual definition of meta-tag. It isn't given here or the linked post. But the linked post says "The reason meta-tags are a problem is that they do not describe the content of the question. They describe some other aspect of the question" A meta-tag is one that does not describe the content of the question. That definition depends on how a tag was actually used. The fact that a tag can be so misused does not make it a meta-tag. If a tag could only be used that way, it could reasonably be called a meta-tag independent of any use. A tag reasonably describing the content is OK. — philipxy 1 min ago
2:59 AM
The question should be is the tag useful. The tags I listed above are arguably not useful. They don't help questioners or answers. Having a list of questions tagged with "arrays" is arguably not useful, a waste of space, energy, and effort. If you want questions about arrays and some language you can search for that. So the arrays tag provides nothing useful. It instead just links unrelated questions to each other — gman just now
3:43 AM
@Makoto I'm sorry you feel that way. I did have mixed loyalties. I was loyal to the community and the employees, never the actual company. I was trying to defend the employees. I will never do that again. I am not against them, but my loyalties lie firmly with the community only. As mentioned, I regret going against Monica and apolgised, fortunately, she is gracious enough to forgive me. We have known each other for 7 years and she has seen me at my best and worst. I'm very, very lucky yo have people like this in my life. If I'm reelected I will endeavour to be the mod you need. All the best. — Yvette 51 secs ago
4:13 AM
This is a great answer. However, can you please update to clarify that, in this specific case, the flag was not declined by a moderator, but rather by three of their peers voting to leave the question open? — Cody Gray ♦ 54 secs ago
How do I set it up to indicate that I'm willing to relocate anywhere in the US or any other country that speaks English as a primary language? Do I have to enter all of those locations manually? Does that mean every city? — Cody Gray ♦ 17 secs ago
1 hour later…
5:33 AM
Coder, you've likely confused this site, Stack Overflow Meta, with the main site, Stack Overflow. The latter is for programming related questions, whereas the later is for discussing questions about the main site. — Christian Dean 57 secs ago
Outages should be very rare, and they only last for a short time, even in the worst cases. So, you should not have a real problem. I've closed this as a duplicate of another question where options for reading Stack Overflow offline are discussed. — Cody Gray ♦ 29 secs ago
I don't feel that you directly answered the first three questions. There are perhaps implied or subtle answers in there. Did you chose to not give straight answers here? If so, why? Being approachable isn't the same as being helpful if a user approaching you needs a straight answer. — Scratte 54 secs ago
People used to solve programming issues before SO even existed: fire up your debugger, study documentation, use your favorite search engine, ask your colleagues,.... By the time you are through with all of this SO should be up again. But then you did all of this before you even tried to ask on SO! — piet.t 15 secs ago
You are currently getting
none
for [gap-system] questions. I can make the [gap-system] tag use default
, which works as rene explained. Is that what you want? Do you think that's helpful? Usually we don't do that for unsupported languages, because the effects can be confusing. Sure, capitalized identifiers get automatically detected and highlighted as function names, but there will be lots of other things that are wrong, including comments not getting highlighted, etc. Generally, it's better just to have no highlighting than to have wrong highlighting. @Mike — Cody Gray ♦ 47 secs ago
2 hours later…
7:45 AM
@Yvette, The hate in your video were not target to monica. But to "every sheep" that need to "wake up". And every one that had a different input were clearly told to "F u" as you cursed us 'life will get you' if I remember correctly. You advertised your video as the truth in comment on MSO. That's how I found it. I'm just lost with this breakdown ping-pong. — Drag and Drop 7 secs ago
Error while calling API:
HTTP 503 fetching URL https://api.stackexchange.com/2.2/comments. Body is: The service is unavailable.
@user4642212 Yep I deduced that myself before posting this but my point is I got 1600+ posts and will not correct them manually each time something changed on the site... And considering whole site there must be a lot more posts corrupted by this. So some automatic repair should be done by the site to remedy this. — Spektre 1 min ago
As someone with domain knowledge, it's very unclear and nearly certainly lacks an MRE (unless I misread the question and it's only how do I extract the equation from a linear model, but then it also would not be minimal since that's a very basic question). We lack the data, and what kind of "relation" should be described (unless it's really just the linear effects without interaction). As the comments under the question hint at, this likely is an X-Y problem, and the statistical approach is wrong altogether, but that doesn't make a good question for Stats.SE. — Erik A 1 min ago
8:19 AM
If the question can't be adequately answered with the provided details, it should be closed. That's the only thing to keep in mind. — yivi 16 secs ago
8:29 AM
I think we should differentiate between questions that can be answered and questions that cannot be answered. I agree that it's sometimes hard to judge but at least we know there are two categories of questions. A lot of questions that cannot be answered simply lack details: "I get an error." - these should be closed until relevant details are added. Some questions do list relevant details "I get error X when I do Y, under these circumstances. I tried A, B, and C but cannot solve it". This question can potentially be answered. It might take months or years but t think it should stay open. — VLAZ 1 min ago
I'll never understand this meme. Sure, there's a lot of answers to all kinds of things, but it's not the only way to figure stuff out. People who answer had to figure it out before answering, so it's not impossible to find - just harder. If you rely that much on SO, you should probably cause an outage by blocking it some times just for the sake of learning — Zoe 48 secs ago
@dbc I am using Safari 13.1.1 on macOS 10.14.6 but the same issue reveals itself using Chrome 83.0.4103.116. So that's happening on two very different browsers. — Jeff Szuhay 1 min ago
That's where the subject matter comes into it, Xamarin and UWP have evolved so much since 2016 that I feel this specific question is probably less likely to get solved because these types of styling issues are solved in fundamentally different ways now. I did vote to close and quickly retract my vote specifically because of your point @VLAZ — Chris Schaller 26 secs ago
No. We close questions when they are off-topic. The question being old doesn't make the post off-topic. — Martijn Pieters ♦ 47 secs ago
Just because the original asker is no longer interested in the question doesn't mean that no one else is. As Martijn said, we only close questions if they are unsuitable for this site. Time doesn't factor into any of our decisions. — Cody Gray ♦ 23 secs ago
@ChrisSchaller: that the technology having moved on makes it less likely to get answers also doesn't matter. As the recent issues with finding COBOL developers to help fix aging unemployment registration systems in the States shows, sometimes you need to find help with outdated tech. — Martijn Pieters ♦ just now
9:13 AM
this answer misses to refer Twitter, which is long known as the most efficient communication channel for those willing to harm the community. The rest looks good to me — gnat 1 min ago
9:31 AM
@Ian If there's someone you think would be a good moderator, you should encourage them to nominate themselves. You would probably be eligible yourself, if you were interested... — Cody Gray ♦ 1 min ago
No chance I would wish to be a moderator until the company starts careing more about quality then maximise the stock price when their is a IPO. — Ian Ringrose 1 min ago
Traditionally, resumes and CVs have been poorly formatted. Are you sure it's a bug? ;-) — Cody Gray ♦ 1 min ago
9:49 AM
@MartijnPieters I would have expected that question to have been auto deleted, is there a bug in my understanding of the auto delete system? — Ian Ringrose 1 min ago
To be fair, I only expect a positive answer to this. If this question emerged becaue of a specific submission, I imagine that the community moderators are falling on the safe side and waiting for everyone to post their answers to the questionaire before the nomination phase ends. — E_net4 is not a porcupine 1 min ago
10:09 AM
Per the election sidebar, in the nomination phase "Nominees are required to construct a small, freely editable introduction to describe why they might make a good community moderator." Completing the questionnaire is not listed as required. — jonrsharpe 55 secs ago
10:27 AM
Also as per the question collection page: "Participation is completely voluntary." — Nick 12 secs ago
@Nick While your conclusion is correct, you reached it only by accident. In context, the quoted statement just means that participating in question submission is completely voluntary. — Cody Gray ♦ 31 secs ago
10:53 AM
@CodyGray I don't think that's correct..., question submission is obviously voluntary, there is no need for it to be explicitly stated as otherwise they'd end up with hundreds of thousands of questions to choose from. I read it as meaning participation [in the Q&A] is completely voluntary. — Nick 1 min ago
11:13 AM
11:25 AM
I had interacted under your post with someone else during Monica's problem. I remember how hostile your behaviour was towards me. I was very surprised to know at that time you were once a moderator. You were telling everyone to get on with their life and get out of Monica's issue. You weren't supportive of the community's revolt which finally helped to get Monica some justice. I would be disappointed if you are selected as a Moderator. — Aquarius_Girl 1 min ago
You can see the comments left by the candidate who retracted their nomination by going to their main SO profile -> All Actions -> Comments. They are distinguished from other comments since there's no link to a post. — Jeanne Dark 1 min ago
11:59 AM
12:53 PM
@Scratte Fair enough. I think I could have been more pointed so I made an edit to those 3. — Machavity 39 secs ago
1:07 PM
1:29 PM
@Cody I will not be deleting historically locked posts unless they contain really harmful information. I will definitely be applying historical lock myself, but only to carefully chosen posts that people have found useful in the past and keeping such posts online will not harm our community in any way. I will not be deleting content that has got any value unless really necessary. However, I am a strong believer that we do not need to keep everything alive. There is plenty of old off-topic low-quality posts that need to be removed and deleting them will make Stack Overflow a better place. — Dharman 1 min ago
1:47 PM
@CodyGray - If a plagiarism flag is provide. Please provide a mechanism to provide a url as an indication, so a moderator (or the community), can make an educated decision on the flag. The lack of formatting in a custom flag makes it difficult to explain the reason something has been plagiarized (copy and paste, improper citation, improper quotation, etc). — Security Hound 1 min ago
@Sec Yes, that was my intention and imagined design: you'd have a mandatory field to fill out with a link of where the plagiarized content was taken from. In the mean time, do note that you can use mini-markdown in your moderator flags (the same thing you'd use in comments). Bold and italics are supported, but not really useful. What is useful is the inline link markdown. And even if you don't use that, just pasting the bare hyperlink is fine; they do turn into links for us to click on in the mod flag dashboard. — Cody Gray ♦ 1 min ago
SO Jobs doesn't support language based desired work locations. However, job location targeting is at a country level, so if you have any US based location in your desired work locations, that should be enough to be matched with jobs that target the US. If you want to restrict the results to certain area, you can use the location search filter with a radius. — Juan 1 min ago
2:15 PM
@CodyGray Yeah, I think it would be helpful. I do recognize your concern though. In my limited experience adding
lang-gap
to a bunch of posts I haven't seen anything horrible go wrong. The GAP syntax isn't strange or novel or anything. It might be confusing that any capitalized word, even non-built in functions, get highlighted though. But gosh having those highlighted helps with reading long lines so much. I've added the list of GAP keywords and a small example to my post so you can see the effects of the default
highlighting. — Mike Pierce 1 min ago2:27 PM
Why would you not want to tag c# on a question that obviously deals with C# code? — user4642212 5 secs ago
Does this answer your question? Testing GitHub Oneboxes for Stack Overflow for Teams — user4642212 35 secs ago
Why would you want to execute code from GitHub on Stack Overflow? What’s the reason you put
<script>
tags there? Why not just use code blocks? That being said, see Testing GitHub Oneboxes for Stack Overflow for Teams. — user4642212 58 secs agoWell we require all the information needed to answer the question to actually be in the question. — Robert Longson 1 min ago
2:57 PM
How about just prepending the word "Thanks! " to the upvote tooltip? — simonalexander2005 15 secs ago
@IanRingrose: there seems to be a bug in your understanding of the auto delete system; you could try debugging it with the full rules for auto-deletion, perhaps? (the post has more than 1 comment, which makes it exempt from the roomba). — Martijn Pieters ♦ 37 secs ago
3:41 PM
Oh gods! I thought I was going senile as I thought Enter would submit the duplicate but all it seemed to do now was refresh the view. This is extremely bad. — VLAZ 19 secs ago
Ah, mystery solved! I was wondering how that "thanks" reaction snuck into my profile history, as I definitely didn't use that feature intentionally. — Cody Gray ♦ 48 secs ago
4:11 PM
wonder if this applies to nominations revoked by company staff. As a hypothetical example, say, if Robert Harvey nominated and after that, would be blocked by some formal rules, would regular users be able to see his de-linked nomination — gnat 10 secs ago
Gee, thanks for that shout-out, @gnat. :/ For what it's worth, as an experiment, I did in fact push the button and got a dialog that said "users who have been suspended are ineligible to nominate in an election for one year after the suspension ends." For those playing the home game, in my case that's roughly a year and a half from now. — Robert Harvey 1 min ago
@RobertHarvey this is quite interesting because as far as I know none of your existing accounts at SE sites has been suspended last year — gnat 8 secs ago
You can still find 7 questionnaires for past elections on the site (this year Catija posted it, but those past posts were all created by Grace Note). — Martijn Pieters ♦ 27 secs ago
4:57 PM
Does this answer your question? How was I able to continue reviewing even after I hit the 20 reviews limit? — user4642212 23 secs ago
@gnat: I was suspended for a year on meta.stackexchange before I asked for my account to be removed. — Robert Harvey 14 secs ago
okay that might br the reason..If I remember correctly it was less than 150 — Arghya Sadhu 1 min ago
These are better suited for Computer Science rather than Theoretical Computer Science. — Brian Tompsett - 汤莱恩 1 min ago
5:23 PM
@RobertHarvey I know that, what I learned now is that anti-recidivism system isn't local to the site, they apparently put some mark on network profile. Quite a pity that they use it only for political revenge purpose instead of doing really useful stuff like helping sites that suffer from attempts to circumvent asking blocks — gnat 1 min ago
Well, given we can trust the mods here on SO it is safe to assume something warranted that action. Waiting 11 hours for the comment lock to expire doesn't seem to problematic. Why would we need to spend a meta post on it to attract attention to a case that seems peacefully solved for now. — rene 6 secs ago
I actually have a lot of problems with the way the comment system is moderated nowadays. I suppose I could have written a larger post, but why don't we just focus on this specific issue for now. Also, moderator trust is hardly a given. — Robert Harvey 1 min ago
6:07 PM
Sooo, we learn that you didn't vote in those elections! Difficult questions will follow on your nomination about this. — Martijn Pieters ♦ just now
“You can't actually vote, however.” — In other words, you can’t reinstate Monica. — user4642212 21 secs ago
6:27 PM
If it's obviously just a copy-paste of a homework assignment, I'll leave a link to meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/334822/… — John Montgomery 1 min ago
@JohnMontgomery Yes, but that post is talking about wether it is ok to ask homework-related questions. What if it there is no sign that the problem is homework(aka it's just a low-effort question)? — Nikita Demodov 1 min ago
Know that a closed question already is given feedback. The close banner is there for a reason, it contains information for new users explaining why the post was closed. — Martijn Pieters ♦ 42 secs ago
I do appreciate the intent here, and leaving kind feedback can be helpful. But take into account that by commenting, you can become a target for a disappointed new user to try and 'convince' you to let them post their question anyway. — Martijn Pieters ♦ 1 min ago
@MartijnPieters, Yes, but if it's a new contributor they may not understand why exactly their question was closed. That's why I think it might be a good idea to leave a message. — Nikita Demodov 1 min ago
That said, one of the duplicates I used to close this post has an answer that points to Repository of useful pro-forma comments — Martijn Pieters ♦ 31 secs ago
@Aquarius_Girl I was not supportive of the revolt at all, not the way it was handled, it felt like a free for all and was intensely stressful on everyone. I did behave poorly at times, as did much of the community, as it was like the place was on fire. The lack of moderation enabled a lot of very bad behaviour to go unchecked and I did deteriorate in reaction to this. Not an excuse, but an explanation. In hindsight, I should have avoided the site. — Yvette 1 min ago
@DragandDrop I've never hated Monica. I did hate the way the community (including myself) behaved during that massive network meltdown. I regret participating in it. I started off with good intentions and we all know that didn't end well at all. I'm not sure what you mean by breakdown ping-pong. I was so intent on defending two minority groups I isolated myself from the wider community and the pile on was surreal. It was like MSO in the early days. Something we sought to change and did change on MSO. I'm referring to MSE participation for anyone reading this. — Yvette 1 min ago
@MartijnPieters But "too broad" got replaced by "includes multiple questions" — khelwood 26 secs ago
A candidate could give nonsense answers, so why bother to require it? People will vote accordingly and if they don't, this would hint at larger problems. No answer to the questionaire is also an answer. — Trilarion 48 secs ago
There was a discussion about jobs from a adware company, but it didn't receive an official answer. — BDL 1 min ago
@khelwood "too broad" also meant too many possible answers because we don't know where you are stuck to cover them all. — psubsee2003 52 secs ago
7:51 PM
jeeze why have I actually had to google "how do log out of stackflow", sort it out guys ffs — Martin Cooke 35 secs ago
If you want to be the morality police then start with companies that do actual large-scale harm to people around the world. Start with the military-industrial complex or the prison-industrial complex. What they do for profit is obscene. — Blastfurnace 38 secs ago
8:09 PM
That's not what this is about. Your complaint isn't about the company's name. It's about the industry in which the company is in. — Makoto 44 secs ago
No, if it was called "SLZY Enterprises LLC" or something I wouldn't have noticed/cared — C8H10N4O2 16 secs ago
...which, to be blunt, is par for the course for adult entertainment companies. — Makoto 18 secs ago
@RobertHarvey the pay seemed suspicious to me, but I guess it's not exactly a FANG in terms of building a resume. — C8H10N4O2 2 mins ago
Facebook, Amazon, Netflix and Google; for those of you who were wondering what the acronym meant and didn't have time to Google it. You're welcome. — Robert Harvey 1 min ago
the issue isn't with the advertisement or the posting itself, it's with the company doing the advertising.
-- Is there a material difference? — Robert Harvey 1 min ago@RobertHarvey: Yes. If the company posting was something illegal or seemed to follow the pattern of recruiter exploitation, that would fly against Stack Overflow's ToS. All I see is that it's just an adult entertainment company looking for devs which isn't against the ToS in its current incarnation. — Makoto 1 min ago
9:01 PM
If you're elected, would you pick up the moderator side of the tag burnination effort that Bhargav Rao♦ used to do? — Dan Is Fiddling By Firelight 20 secs ago
2 hours later…
10:47 PM
@DanIsFiddlingByFirelight Depends on the community, but it does seem like there's more interest in restarting burninations. Even Jon Clements (who suggested the Trogdor project to clean up the burnination list) has wanted to start running the burnination bot. Provided there's enough people to participate, I am willing to help run them. — Machavity 1 min ago
11:01 PM
Often, OP writes ~"Thanks!" in a subsequent comment. Robert Harvey's process would be streamlined if OP could accept a comment as an answer. — greg-tumolo 56 secs ago
@dbc I just tried it on Tor Browser 9.5.1 (based on Firefox 68.10.0esr) and got the same error message an unable to update page. — Jeff Szuhay 1 min ago
11:15 PM
The problem posed in the link you provided is a legitimate one. Letting comments pose as answers is the wrong solution to the problem. — Robert Harvey 56 secs ago
This would require completely redesigning how comments work. That's a lot of work for a problem that can be solved by just posting the answer as an actual answer. — John Montgomery 1 min ago
11:35 PM
The OP could also delete their question. Better result, and no development needed. — Davy M 27 secs ago
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