00:00 - 15:0015:00 - 00:00
12:03 AM
@10Rep What does it mean for a delete vote to be binding if the result is not that the post is deleted? (Or at least to be only visible to SO employees with particular database access privileges.) — Andrew Morton 57 secs ago
@10Rep That is what the question is. You are stating that you have the answer with no references to back it up. If you think you are correct, although SO does not itself give an answer that I can find, then please try adding your guess as an answer with links to MSO/MSE Q&As to back it up. Where did the "three" come from? — Andrew Morton 1 min ago
What do you think would be the advantage of splitting the site up by topic? How would this help you? — Cody Gray ♦ 32 secs ago
If you turned it into a software recommendation question, it might be something that could be asked on Software Recommendations. You'd need to read their Help Center first. Don't ask me; I haven't read it. — Cody Gray ♦ just now
new questions wouldn't get immediately buried under the 50 other ones per minute — develarist 1 min ago
Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat. — Cody Gray ♦ 43 secs ago
there's no reason for a python-only user's question to be mixed and have to compete with C#, JS and linux questions. why does only latex have its own stack — develarist 1 min ago
You can also search by tags. Then you only see question related to the specified tags. See this: How do I search for questions with (or without) specific tags? — akuzminykh 1 min ago
This question is requesting support with a site feature, which makes it on-topic here. Could it also be asked elsewhere (like a Samsung or Android support forum)? Yes. Does that make it off-topic here? No. Our code formatting requires that users type backticks, thus it is fully within our scope to help users figure out how to type backticks on their device in order to make appropriate use of this site's features. Do not close this question. — Cody Gray ♦ 21 secs ago
Surely you've been around enough C++ programmers to know that the answer to, "Should I use macros instead?" is almost always "No." :-) — Cody Gray ♦ 17 secs ago
@end-user IMO you can build a reputation pool a lot faster with answers than you can with questions. Driving views to questions is hard, but an accepted answer will always earn you points, and the act of posting an answer counts as more "activity" which will boost that question in the "hot questions" list (leading to more views and upvotes). — bta 1 min ago
1 hour later…
1:47 AM
This is answered in the help center article: What is reputation? How do I earn (and lose) it? The only thing you can really "earn" through voting are badges, such as Supporter and Vox Populi. — Spevacus 45 secs ago
2:05 AM
If Stack Overflow handed out reputation for voting on posts, mass voting would become even more of a problem! People already spam-click the voting buttons to get badges. — GalaxyCat105 1 min ago
When you accept an answer to your question (if you consider that a "kind of voting"), you earn 2 reputation points. But that's about it. — 41686d6564 9 secs ago
The point of reputation is for trusted users to have access to more features that help keep the site clean, and motivate new users to learn how this site works. If we handed out rep for voting on things, it would completely defeat the purpose. — GalaxyCat105 34 secs ago
@41686d6564 "you get 2 points per accepted edit until you reach 2000 points" - Or until you gain 1000 rep from just editing, although I'm not completely sure if I remember it correctly — GalaxyCat105 1 min ago
That's literally what tags are for - if I want to read Python questions but not C# or JS questions, I just read the Python tag - problem solved. Besides, that change would be a nuisance for people who follow multiple tags. I currently work in C#, Python, PHP, JavaScript, SQL, and occasionally R. Do I need to join 6 separate sites? — EJoshuaS - Reinstate Monica 57 secs ago
2:47 AM
@rbrundritt Accusing others of not understanding something isn't the best way to initiate a constructive discussion, I think if you look through earlier meta posts you'll find that when people bring concrete examples of what they want to discuss to the table, discussion tends to happen. As for the question being closed while you were asleep that is unfortunate but we also can't all adapt to the same timezone.This is a global community, people are online at different times. — ivarni 1 min ago
3:15 AM
Same boat here, only I don't think I even got an email. Would have remembered that sort of rejection — charlietfl 1 min ago
3:39 AM
Don't worry about reputation. Just ask and answer questions as best as you can. — user4581301 1 min ago
And every now and then someone does ask a question that really does require multiple language tags, Python-Delphi interop, for example. — user4581301 54 secs ago
4:11 AM
@bta I'm looking for better answers. Also, it would be great if I earn some reputations as I'm banned from asking because of a previously deleted question with 10 downvotes! — Akib Azmain 5 secs ago
4:43 AM
The reason you've not been able to add the Django tag is that you've asked this on the Meta site - for questions about Stack Overflow. — Wai Ha Lee 27 secs ago
I am sorry It urgent to solve this problem but unfortunately i am block as main user for posting question that's I used as meta user. But I don't get the djnago tag. — Imdadul Haque 45 secs ago
I am bored on this site Stack Overflow, I already said I can't post a questions so I should use this meta user option, But here is the problem, Some are continuously react my post as negative . It's to boring ! — Imdadul Haque 1 min ago
If you're unable to ask questions on the main site, asking on Meta isn't the way to go: far fewer people go on Meta, and your question will get closed as it's not a question about Stack Overflow itself. — Wai Ha Lee 1 min ago
@WaiHaLee I already asked for this issue in meta user but it't is not solved — Imdadul Haque 1 min ago
5:05 AM
It's important to note that How do I ask a good question? is not the only page. Under Asking you can find many more topics. Check out especially the first two. — akuzminykh 1 min ago
5:25 AM
TeX was made a separate site because it's not really a programming language. It's a markup language. So it wasn't really on-topic for Stack Overflow. At best it was borderline. Even if it is a programming language in technicality, no one writes programs in it, so it would have little relevance to or overlap with the rest of Stack Overflow. The same cannot be said of HTML and CSS, much less Python and C#. — Cody Gray ♦ 28 secs ago
5:49 AM
Then it depends on you. The "nice" way is to do what you've suggested: Inform the commenter about it. The "bad" way is to just write the answer yourself. I've written so many comments that answer whole questions and then just someone comes by, copy-pastes from the comment section and just posts the answer .. I think, it's a whatever. If that's "okay" or not, depends on you. The important thing here is about "deletion": If the question provides something good/new for SO, then definitely get it answered, by the commenter or you. If it's e.g. a duplicate, then get it deleted/closed. — akuzminykh 1 min ago
Oh yeah, I recall getting the e-mail way back. They invited me to fill a ticket and provide my shipping details. Then all was mum for 3 months. When I reached out and asked I got the response you did. Has it really been that long? Wow. — StoryTeller - Unslander Monica 29 secs ago
You can fight more here: Question with no answers, but issue solved in the comments (or extended in chat) — akuzminykh 1 min ago
6:33 AM
@Zoe, I know. But, if he has to add the tags before even typing the question, the quality of results will be way better — d4rk4ng31 30 secs ago
6:53 AM
Hi G Ganesh, welcome to Meta! I'm not sure which search brought you here but the problem you describe will not be answered on this specific site. To get an answer from users that have the expertise about the topic of your question you'll have to find and then re-post on the proper site. Check How do I ask a good question and What is on topic on the target site to make sure your post is in good shape. Your question is definitely off-topic on Meta and is better deleted here. — πάντα ῥεῖ 1 min ago
Before posting a question, I actively search on Google because it tends to be more precise in my experience for finding the duplicated question. The search here is also fine. — akuzminykh 2 mins ago
In "guided mode" that was experimented with a couple of years back, tags were the first thing the user had to provide. I imagine that as a result of that experiment that approach was finally abandoned. — yivi 57 secs ago
It was implemented. There were a couple of "wizard" iterations. The current "ask a question" page is the result of those experiments. — yivi 8 secs ago
7:23 AM
I would say, yes... goodbye swags meta.stackexchange.com/questions/341192/… — Dalija Prasnikar 1 min ago
7:49 AM
I mean, out of the the last 15 posts in sponsored-tags, 8 are the same "wrong icon" issue... — Cerbrus 36 secs ago
People are always zoomed in and locked on asking questions. What they should really be wondering is: how do I get better at searching for existing answers? — Gimby 55 secs ago
@Gimby I agree with you, it has occurred many times I duplicate questions because I can't find existing answers easily via search bar and search engines. — Akib Azmain 18 secs ago
This is good advice. I think a lot of people simply skim and downvote. I'd also say be very careful when using examples as well. A lot of questions are closed as duplicate because the example can be solved using some other technique, despite it being clear that you're looking for a specific technique. Don't try to dumb down a question to make it easier to understand; just leave it in the existing context, because this can appear like homework. — Muz 1 min ago
I cannot comprehend the logic behind that. Tag abuse is already bad as it is - if people write out their question before deciding on tags, they could get a better idea of what exactly their question is about. There's always gonna be a percentage who don't care, but they're a lost cause no matter how good the system is, and no matter how guided the system is. The tags have no impact on the result - the question is identical, and bad tagging can be corrected by editors. Users with 2k rep can help with tags in as little as 3 seconds of editing time. I fail to see the "bad result" — Zoe 5 secs ago
If you're talking about the quality of the question, trust me, changing the order in which tags are written out will have minimal effect. If that was all it took to improve quality, we would be using that. The wizard experiment, an experiment I actually had hopes for, apparently failed. Improving question quality is a complex problem, and no single idea alone can fix it — Zoe 31 secs ago
9:11 AM
The thing is, @TylerH, that Stack Overflow was always supposed to be for everyone. "How do I move the turtle in Logo?" is not a new question. OP's problem here is the cadre of deletionists, who look for excuses to delete stuff. — TRiG 24 secs ago
9:31 AM
9:55 AM
Does this answer your question? Why isn't providing feedback mandatory on downvotes, and why are ideas suggesting such negatively received? — Robert Longson 50 secs ago
It wasn't a question and your link is to a locked thread that is given a "final" answer, not allowing any discussion. Sort of proves my point about elitism here and the linear approach to things. — nicksource 59 secs ago
You've posted this before.. What led you to think that the results will be different this time? — Sweeper 26 secs ago
is there a way the site can be more accommodating for discussion with beginners No, sorry. We tried something like that, it failed. — rene 21 secs ago
Reposting questions closed and deleted by the community is not a recipe for success. — yivi 29 secs ago
Before you post you can work as long as you want doing research. What you do do before you post, is not anyone's business but your own. — yivi 24 secs ago
Does this answer your question? How long should we wait for a poster to clarify a question before closing? — Robert Longson 2 mins ago
Downvoting is rude? Are you serious? Also, it seems you are already in an iterative process with your questions ;) The thing about iteratively improving something is that you actually have to change something between the attempts. — NXP5Z 7 secs ago
Too many unproven assumptions here. Votes are anonymous by design, so you usually cannot infer where they came from nor for what reason. The target duplicate is a non-discussion FAQ that establishes the community's current consensus. Anything trying to refute that would need to be much more substantial than this. — E_net4 the account reporter 1 min ago
Downvoting is not rude. That has been reiterated so many times, and the point still doesn't get across. But even if it was, which would you rather: be rude, or get insulted by the people you wanna help by leaving a comment with a downvote reason? Because it's a real risk, and happens often — Zoe 13 secs ago
@NXP5Z: Yes without letting people known why you do it, it is! IMO: It is basically "silent treatment" — minus one 30 secs ago
Vote for duplicate, leave a comment if its bad, vote for delete, downvote if you have to. That's the order to do it. — minus one 59 secs ago
I wounder if we can use the SO api to check for images on tags then use @rene reverse image search to spot the wrong icons. — DaImTo 9 secs ago
@minusone You're missing my point, if a question is an obvious duplicate, like a duplicate of summing a list of numbers (note that's the canonical, not a duplicate), the question is unhelpful. Why would I not downvote it? I never have to do anything, but why shouldn't I? — Nick 52 secs ago
@DaImTo last time I checked there was no API nor SEDE so I produced this awesomeness: meta.stackoverflow.com/a/328278/578411 — rene 5 secs ago
When I was reading the first part of the question, it seemed reasonable and understanding enough to take some time to comb through the posts and see if some were unjustly closed/dv'ed or at least provide feedback on why they were closed. When I read the second, that intention was gone - please, when seeking feedback from the community, try to avoid alienating others by using terms "elitist" (especially that one). Instead, state your case, give examples of posts you think are good, prepare for possibly harsh feedback (as you expose them to wider audience) - it would be much more constructive. — Oleg Valter 33 secs ago
I must mention that to be burned, the tag has to fall under all 4 burnination criteria, and this one clearly does not. That said, I think a better approach would be to refine it to something useful (like if-statement), maybe rename it as well (as it is hard as hell to find anything related as it is a part of natural language) — Oleg Valter 35 secs ago
Bit of a bonus, keep in mind that leaving a comment on a downvote often gets a worse reaction than just a downvote. When a username gets associated with a downvote, the person who got downvoted can lash out. This happens relatively often as well, making people (including me) avoid leaving comments when taking any moderation action. It's much easier than dealing with users who handle the feedback - regardless of how constructively it's formed - horribly and take it as an attack, and retaliate. — Zoe 1 min ago
11:11 AM
Requires editing is for when users that aren't the OP can edit it into shape. If only OP can edit it appropriately (like in this case) Unsalvagable is the correct choice. — Nick 8 secs ago
When the question can only salvaged by the post author, the question is neither "ok" nor "requires editing". Since it can be salvaged by the author it's not "unsalvageable" either, but that's the only good choice you have to close the question and give the post author the opportunity to fix their question. The buttons are simply mislabelled, you were review suspended to make you aware of the fact. — yivi 1 min ago
That ^ and keep in mind that the vast majority of low-rep users don't come back after closure (source: experience). Seeing people fix questions after closure is rare, especially when said user also is a low-rep user. — Zoe 51 secs ago
@Werner There is consensus, but half the reviewers were wrong or not aware of it :) — Nick 14 secs ago
Fair points, but it's still questionable whether there was consensus over how the question should be categorized. Only 50% of reviewers classified it as 'unsalvageable.' — Werner 44 secs ago
Code, identifiers and file paths should be formatted as code. error output and logs is a bit less defined. some users prefer quotes, some users prefer code-blocks. I personally think it depends on the type of output/error log; which is very technology/tag dependent. Users should use their own discretion to style the output as faithfully as possible; while trying to preserve readability as much as they can. — yivi 1 min ago
Closely related, about error logs: meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/286706/… — Oleg Valter 6 secs ago
Code is basically the equivalent of unformatted text, whereas Quote is just fancy normal text. If a log contains anything that may be sensitive to formatting (alignment, special characters, ...) it should be code. — MisterMiyagi 1 min ago
error output and logs should be formatted as code if it's a stacktrace or anything elsewhere it's extremely useful for the output lines to be after each other instead of soft wrapped with no hard newlines. For cases where it isn't as important, either is fine, but there's some cases where a code block should be preferred over quotes. really case-dependent, so it's really enough to compare readability. — Zoe just now
Which again, depends a lot on the technologies used. I've seen a lot of error logs in the web side of technology were formatting them as code is simply terrible (even when the user remembers to use
lang=none
). But I understand that for other technologies, simply quoting the error can hide the necessary details to diagnose the issue. So in essence, it depends. — yivi 13 secs agoAgreed, judging from experience, if an error is a one-liner "cannot read [prop] of undefined" (for example), it is easier to read as a quote (easier to parse visually), whereas it makes sense to format as code when the asker dumps the whole stack trace for the error along the way. — Oleg Valter 23 secs ago
11:45 AM
@Adriaan - maybe I misunderstood you, but the 1 & 2 & 3 reads as only partially in favour of burning, and as far as I recall, burning requires clear fail on all criteria ( not judging the merit of such a restriction ). I am not defending the tag, though - as it stands now, I think it is, well, not very useful, and your points are valid, just mention that we can go a less destructive route — Oleg Valter 14 secs ago
12:03 PM
@OlegValter 1,2,3 are in favour of burnination. It's a for-sure burn for UNIX's
which
, and unless you want to end up with tags for r-which
, python-which
, java-which
, php-which
etc ad nauseam, those can be burninated as well as per my answer. Could you please detail what you mean with a "less-destructive route"? I see only very few ways of dealing with this, which mainly involves creating all the mentioned language-specific tags. — Adriaan 1 min agoOk I'll bite..... I see questions about data with 'this doesn't give me what I expect' with no sample of data or expected results. I also see a lot of 'design' questions. You do know Stack isn't for 'I dunno how to do X, can someone help me get started?'. For someone that combed through their own posts... Did you check the help center as well? :/. Seems to me you need a mentor, not a free q&a site hell bent on moderation and quality — Patrice 1 min ago
12:17 PM
@Adriaan - hm, what about making it a which-function (and giving it a wiki)? Seems like on-topic questions are about them. Plus it is searchable. We can retag/close the rest of the q's that are off-topic/incorrectly tagged then (if there still are). Certainly not in favour of combining with language tags, I agree that those should be burned on the spot. Re:criteria - I think, if the content is on-topic at least in part (#2), we shall strive to find a way to bring it in shape ( that said, it isn't my intention to get adversarial on that ) — Oleg Valter 51 secs ago
12:31 PM
I feel that you are just ranting because your bad questions got you banned. It's just a feeling I have, no evidence, you understand, yes? — Martin James 35 secs ago
@Ooker , the simple fact is folks don't care much about the specific close reason. When someone sees a low quality question, they just click to close it. (Very often they literally just choose the top one in the list! Who can be bothered tediously and carefully evaluating a list of close reasons, few people.) That's the actual answer to your question. Any rationales given supposedly explaining the exquisite details of why one or the other were chosen, are totally fatuous. — Fattie 1 min ago
@Ooker , you are chasing details on a completely non-existent issue. (A) all of the close reasons are incredibly poorly written, (B) almost always the close reason is just something like "pretty low quality question, obvious mistake, too beginner level" and folks just try to pick one that is in some way close to that, and (C) few people put any much thought in to which button they pick on that screen. More fundamentally new users and beginners are just not welcome on SO. SO-Snark is one of the basic facts on the net. Searching for detail is pointless. — Fattie 1 min ago
@Paulie_D I can do that, I can even raise close vote on my question, but would that help me to get out of my ban? — Akib Azmain 41 secs ago
"How do we know that questions based on a false premise are rarely useful?" Of course, obviously, questions based on a false premise can be useful. I ask all of the most challenging questions on the site in my fields, and indeed very often the outcome is false premise. What you're seeing is fatuous post-facto quasi-rationales (which are bizarre/whacky) for the simple reality ... to reduce it to gutter language nobody gives a shit about close reasons. — Fattie 1 min ago
Your questions don't look bad. One of your titles "can't see anything on screen" could be more descriptive, and your last question could perhaps have been reduced to a mcve but you can do these things and still get a low response rate, depending on what tags you're active on. — C8H10N4O2 55 secs ago
"it just means that the question is not useful to SO" That's like saying, if party B loses an election, "Party B is not useful". As it happens, by consensus, basic/beginner questions are not welcome on SO. But that's only as it happens and by consensus. SO-Snark is a basic on the internet, it's utterly misguided to ignore that reality. — Fattie 1 min ago
1:01 PM
That stinks. I'd gladly pay up front for the international shipping costs of the swag... — Gimby 25 secs ago
@OlegValter having the tag called which or which-function is moot to me. Might as well update the tag-wiki of which in the first place. The entire problem with that name though is as mentioned in the question, and point 1 and 3 of my answer here: it'd be ambiguous due to the plethora of different languages with a
which
functionality, all of which are implemented differently and do different things. So no, having a single tag for all those functions lumped together isn't a good thing IMO. — Adriaan 1 min agoI usually like to put error messages as code inside a quote block to help highlight that it is not my content but rather a response that I'm quoting, which I think is the most important distinction for error messages. Though indeed if the error message isn't a stack trace or something where code formatting is critical, then I just wrap it in a quote block. — TylerH 35 secs ago
Yes, questions about certain
which
functions might be on-topic, but we don't need a tag about every single function in java
either. So the concept of which
can be on-topic, but I haven't yet seen compelling arguments as to why a "random" function in a "random" language should have its own tag. — Adriaan 1 min agoPlease don't put error messages that has multiple lines in quote blocks. It's completely unreadable. The errors are almost always easy to skim when they're put into a proper code block. — Scratte 34 secs ago
@Scratte You realise you a quote block can do multiple lines line just remember to leave two spaces after a carriage return. — Lankymart 16 secs ago
Check out the history of the "Too Localized" close reason, it was deliberately killed off to avoid people trying to predict the future. Personally I'd far rather have a (well written) question that "seems useless" stick around, I don't think it's a good idea to let a few close voters decide among themselves that nobody else would ever want to ask the same thing, but I guess some users want that? — jrh 1 min ago
@Lankymart I just tried. It doesn't seem to adhere to the carriage return at all. No matter how many spaces I put after each line. — Scratte 13 secs ago
Seems a lot of people here don't understand how quote blocks can be used. It will only wrap text if you don't place a hard carriage return followed by two spaces, but most people are either too lazy or just don't know it's possible. — Lankymart 53 secs ago
@Lankymart
\n
did not work to enforce linebreaks inside quote blocks for me. — MisterMiyagi 39 secs ago@Adriaan - I know R has
which
function, but I don't know of any in Java (which [insert name here]
is asked only in context of using shell) and PHP ( if you referred to this query, they ask for alternatives ). Maybe I am lacking some domain knowledge, but it seems like the alternative is R/UNIX, we can simply disambiguate. It has reasonable amount of watchers (50), 75% of q's are about R. Also, maybe we should ask akrun to weigh in? — Oleg Valter 45 secs agoIt would be a waste of the reviewers time to allow them to edit an audit, because it's useless. — Jeanne Dark 1 min ago
@TRiG Aside from that, you're letting some personal frustration muddle the waters here; OP is confused about the applicability of a close reason. Nothing was ever said about deleting content or some shadowy, scaremonger of a group such as "a cadre of deletionists" — TylerH 5 secs ago
@TRiG Eh, it's probably true Joel/Jeff didn't intend to gatekeep, but I think the site was definitely intended (as tours/help pages still show today) for programmers of a higher caliber/interest level. From Joel's 2008 announcement on the problems SO was intended to solve: "And you won’t even get an expert answer. You’ll get a bunch of responses typed by other programmers like you. Some of the responses will be wrong, some will be right, some may be out of date, and it’s hard to imagine that with the cooperative spirit of the internet this is the best thing we programmers have come up with." — TylerH 1 min ago
@Lankymart Thanks for the clarification. Note that this is not specific to quote formatting, it will work in regular text as well. — MisterMiyagi 1 min ago
@Scratte Sorry meant to say two spaces followed by a carriage return, see the edit here. — Lankymart 2 mins ago
@OlegValter at the very least MATLAB has a
which
as well, and probably more languages do. So I'm still no fan of disambiguation, as you'd need r-which
, php-which
and matlab-which
at the very least, presumably more languages need to be added at some point. Besides, at least for the MATLAB one, there's in my opinion no need for having the tag. That'd be like creating matlab-for
or something. — Adriaan just nowIt moves on because the post has already been handled, though it's extremely frustrating when there's a post that needs editing, but clicking "edit" triggers an audit failure. The best move is to not play — Zoe 1 min ago
If that's what happened (Telerik sponsored Blazor and put their own icon on the tag), it sounds like a process change is sorely needed. That is misleading. — TylerH 35 secs ago
@Lankymart I cannot see the actual commonMark as I do not have edit privileges. But I tried this: Just normal, then two spaces at the end of each line which was fine until I marked it and pressed the quotes that messed up the lines to only having 5 lines, not 9. Un-quoting them made it even worse, not bringing it back to the way it was. — Scratte 5 secs ago
@Zoe just like normal text, quote blocks can force line breaks using two spaces followed by a carriage return. See Line breaks section in this answer. — Lankymart 1 min ago
@Lankymart That seems to make a big difference :) Unfortunately most of the errors in quotes I see on main is really just a big.. mess. Likely due to the tool. — Scratte 12 secs ago
"When in doubt, prefer code formatting" ... for error messages, code, file paths. Not for anything else. I spend entirely too much time cleaning up other people's edits to add code formatting to words that are not code (like names of programing languages, libraries, frameworks, etc.). — Heretic Monkey 1 min ago
If this is not just another of the (far too many) "oopsies, wrong tag" goofs and is in fact intentionally requested by Telerik, then this would normally be textbook trademark infringement by using the Blazor logo as part of their own, more complex logo, and then inserting said logo on a 'blazor' tag; they are essentially associating someone else's product and reputation with their own name. Because blazor and .NET are open-source, I'm not sure if the logo is trademarked, so worst case Telerik may just be guilty of bottom-of-the-barrel behavior here. — TylerH 1 min ago
@Zoe agree just pointing out that quote blocks do support hard breaks. Personally I only use quote blocks for error messages and code, logs etc I use a variation of the code block via syntax highlighted or
lang-none
for logs. — Lankymart 38 secs agoStuff only makes sense if you understand when they're meant to be used. Doesn't help people who don't understand when they're meant to be used, because they don't have a concept of when it makes sense — Zoe 2 mins ago
Edit review audits tend to be faked, done by the machine inserting random words into a post. That clearly happened with your audit, fixing it doesn't make sense. — Hans Passant 1 min ago
@HansPassant the fixed is not related to fake edit. The post (not the one that you mentioned) had some other problems with the formatting before it was inserted with random words. — NearHuscarl 1 min ago
@WaiHaLee, thanks for the tips. But the button is still deceptive though, I thought there would be an editor opened for me when I click the edit button but there wasn't. — NearHuscarl 1 min ago
2:33 PM
I guess, then, that you could reframe your question as a feature request - something like "'Reject and Edit' for review audits should pass the audit and allow editing the original post". — Wai Ha Lee 1 min ago
It's not really a software recommendation, @CodyGray. Skinning a Linux OS to make it seem like another is a whole level of effort and exercise that can take literally months to get right. Having done this in the distant past, I can say with confidence that the Stack Exchange model is a poor fit for questions like this. — Makoto 1 min ago
00:00 - 15:0015:00 - 00:00
« first day (419 days earlier) ← previous day next day → last day (1310 days later) »