1:21 AM
is:answer user:me "a" should return any text with an "a" in it, right ? Is there a way to get it to search comments as well ? — AAAfarmclub 58 secs ago
@CamiloTerevinto: is there an easy way to explain to a Unix programmer the differences between asp.net, asp.net-core, .net, .net-core? Or is it sufficiently complex that's it's best left to those with a need to know, rather than those (like me) who don't have a real need to know. — Jonathan Leffler 1 min ago
2 hours later…
3:19 AM
3:33 AM
The rules should also be explained when new users start getting those downvotes, not only before they post — charlietfl 1 min ago
1 hour later…
4:43 AM
5:21 AM
Hi Alex Zai, 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 55 secs ago
5:35 AM
Also, if you cannot post a question on the main site, please read and follow What can I do when getting “We are no longer accepting questions/answers from this account”? — Andrew T. 1 min ago
6:25 AM
@Chipster Main reason is the cross-tagging between C and C++ which has always been a big problem. It may also be relevant to keep tag usage in sync for questions comparing the two languages. Other than that, the two language standards tend to be updated in sync nowadays: there was C11 and C++11 at the same time, C17 and C++17, etc. — Lundin 1 min ago
6:55 AM
@misterManSam yes that's true - it's just a good idea to put them there in case you need to put more rules in the block — corn on the cob 1 min ago
7:11 AM
@JonathanLeffler It's actually simple. .NET Core is a re-write of .NET Framework without some of the libraries (like WCF, WWF) and ASP.NET Core is a re-write of ASP.NET Framework without WebForms. Both "Core" are just the "next-gen" and, most importantly, open source. For a Unix programmer, the main difference is "cannot run natively" (.NET/ASP.NET) vs "can run natively" (.NET Core/ASP.NET Core) — Camilo Terevinto 8 secs ago
Basically, although the site's rules have changed over the years with experience on what works and what doesn't, we don't want to destroy value by deleting old questions that would no longer be accepted here today. So, we keep them. But we do expect you to follow the current rules, because those rules work. Trust us when we say that the old, highly-ranked questions you find are rare exceptions, not the norm. Do feel free to flag them, and we'll still close them, but, as Heretic Monkey said, there are many of us who'd prefer not to delete them if they still might have some value to someone. — Cody Gray ♦ 1 min ago
@davidbak Absolutely! Alternate solutions are part of what makes Stack Overflow work. I don't care if the accepted answer worked for the OP, I care that answer #7 that someone left three years later happened to be exactly what I needed because it more closely matched my own approach to the same problem. — Booga Roo 53 secs ago
7:41 AM
7:59 AM
@AlexeiLevenkov I haven't wrote a thing what you are telling that I wrote. Please read the post carefully. I haven't asked for the whole tutorial, I have just asked, 'how can i put that layer in my model'. Please read the post carefully! — NITIN AGARWAL 49 secs ago
8:47 AM
Instead, just read your email or visit the site from time to time. If you are not invested enough in your question to pay even a little attention to it then that's not something we are going to fix by adding direct messaging. — Martijn Pieters ♦ 12 secs ago
You'll need to provide some more proof for your assertion that new users don't use their personal email when registering: so he have less probability to put his personal email.. Note that us moderators already have a method to contact users privately. Those messages are emailed to you as well, so not having an email account registered that you actually read is not going to help here. We only use those messages for very specific problems, having your question closed as off-topic is too common an occurrence to work with one-on-one messaging because there are just not enough of us. — Martijn Pieters ♦ 1 min ago
I thought the only way you communicate is by mails, and I wanted it to be clear that you will only receive mails — ninjaconcombre just now
@AnitaTaylor Could you please address the concern that having 1 survey per downvoter won't give you a fair representation of why people downvote, as downvotes are hugely dependant on posts? I strongly agree with other commenters that you'd have much more interesting results collecting surveys on a certain numbers of votes, not voters. — Docteur 23 secs ago
I visit the site. I never got a private message I guess. Did you read the second part? — ninjaconcombre 1 min ago
No, we don't only communicate by email. Being sent email is a courtesy, a way to let people that don't visit the site to look at how their question is doing know what is going on. — Martijn Pieters ♦ 40 secs ago
But why the website keep telling me I will receive private feedback if I wont? — ninjaconcombre 56 secs ago
(Side note: you are using the term 'administrator' here, but you are, by the looks of it, confusing *members of the community with privileges to vote or close and the elected community moderators, the former are not administrators, the latter mostly just janitors here to clean up messes the community can't.) — Martijn Pieters ♦ 2 mins ago
I think you are talking about the closed post banner. The 'private feedback' there means this is only visible to you because you are the author of the post. It is not a messaging system. — Martijn Pieters ♦ 1 min ago
Ha okay I understand from where come the confusion. Do you know where I read the "An administrator will message you part" upon closure of topic? Did I just dreamed of it? — ninjaconcombre 16 secs ago
You seem to misremember that. That's not something that the site would show you. — Martijn Pieters ♦ 1 min ago
There is a lot of self-help if you know where to look for it. I hope the close banner that you see is already linking you to What topics can I ask about here?, and perhaps even How do I ask a good question? — Scratte 43 secs ago
Okay @Martijn Pieters. If I ever see the message I will picture it. Then I am just disappointed. It's not the topic anymore but I would never close someone question without a comment. When you edit a closed question and it stay closed, you don't really know why. People just have the power to put questions down without explaining. — ninjaconcombre 31 secs ago
9:23 AM
@Gimby: "Your title cannot contain these Unicode characters" would have been helpful and saved me a lot of trial and error. And why not mention the affected characters? Shouldn't be too hard. And if it's too hard, the programmers can ask how to do it on SO :-D — and I'm sure I'm missing some 1 min ago
@CodyGray: ok, got it. Other titles ("Why does my Regex not work?") are too broad. Anyway, I'll try harder next time. — and I'm sure I'm missing some 13 secs ago
@ninjaconcombre: Regarding "close someone question without a comment": Please take a look at: Why isn't providing feedback mandatory on downvotes, and why are ideas suggesting such negatively received? — honk 30 secs ago
@HereticMonkey: I still think we should tackle hacked accounts on a different level than error messages. It's the wrong tool for the job, IMHO. Other sites require to confirm a "new device", "new browser" or what they call it. Also IMHO, spam will be flagged soon, so why not let me ask 3 spam questions, prevent posting more questions in a short time span and notify me about potential spam misuse by email? — and I'm sure I'm missing some 1 min ago
@HereticMonkey said this is mainly a concern of hacked accounts. Are low rep spammers an issue or hacked accounts? — and I'm sure I'm missing some 44 secs ago
10:07 AM
Okay @honk . I am okay with people closing question with a pre-writed indications (Unfocused for mine). But then you edit it specifically to address the concern, you flag it, and it stay closed. Are the closers even notified that you edited the question? Still I am left without any indication. I don't understand how no-one would explain to me why it's unfocused after I show the will to improve it. It was so weird to me that I thought the problem came from the fact that I could not access my mail. But as pointed it boils down to: "We are not enough". Sorry for this post tho — ninjaconcombre 1 min ago
10:53 AM
You're asking this question on the wrong site. You need to ask it on the Stack Overflow main site, not this site which is the "meta" site. — Hovercraft Full Of Eels 1 min ago
11:33 AM
Related (not a duplicate): May we have a way to edit a closed question without bumping it into the review queue? — Wai Ha Lee 1 min ago
11:59 AM
Hi Heikki, after our discussion in the question I also opened a relevant Meta post: meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/402197/… — Tomerikoo 54 secs ago
It's on its way to be closed again... Stack Overflow close voting has not improved since the labels have been changed, in my opinion. — Gimby 22 secs ago
I didn't say it was mainly anything. That's just a concern of mine regarding high-rep accounts being able to post spam-like titles and posts. I don't think that, just because an account has higher rep, it should be able to get away with posting content that a lower-rep account could not. @andI'msureI'mmissingsome — Heretic Monkey 1 min ago
"But I wouldn't accept it if I knew the question is closed" - ... why not? If the edits are good, they're good. Heck, maybe they make the question good enough to reopen it, but we have a separate queue to decide that. Having to worry about closed status in the edit review queue is just another burden you don't really need. — Gimby 49 secs ago
@Gimby well you raise a good point that's hard to argue with, but the way I see it: Why bother with editing a closed question with minor edits that wouldn't change the meaning of the question just for it to pass to the reopen queue to be someone else's burden... — Tomerikoo 18 secs ago
ah, it seems this is only happening with Firefox on Ubuntu, tried this on FF on Win10, and it worked just fine — SmartCoder 8 secs ago
@Gimby A Question gets one free ride to the reopen queue with the first edit. If the author at any later point can actually edit it into being OK, their opportunity is lost due to some superficial edit. Not that it matters in this case, but closed Questions should not be edited unless the editor thinks the Question becomes re-open-able :) — Scratte 1 min ago
Does this answer your question? Suggested Edits queue should indicate if the question is closed — nbk 1 min ago
12:59 PM
Remembering it for that specific post using a short-lived cookie would be my preference. You rarely change your mind and want to flag exactly the same post for moderator attention but for an entirely different reason, and removing a piece of text is a lot easier than writing the same piece of text again after accidentally deleting it. — Erik A just now
Another option would be: don't close the popup IF there is text in the messagebox, unless the user clicks Cancel. Clicking outside the popup could do nothing in that case. — UuDdLrLrSs 1 min ago
1:19 PM
Most likely other languages should indeed have priority over this, I am not stating any priority with this reques. I am aware of the fact that Nim has very few questions in SO, since the forum (forum.nim-lang.org) is mostly used for questions. I personally think Nim community would benefit from an increased SO usage and I expect that this will happen soon enough given the sustained growth of the community. Feel free to evaluate this feature request with the appropriate priority and also to let me know if this is not the appropriate channel for such a feature request. — pietroppeter 6 secs ago
1:37 PM
@Gimby Indeed, follow Hanlon's Razor: "Never ascribe to malice, that which can be explained by stupidity" :) — Heretic Monkey 44 secs ago
1:49 PM
To be fair, the highlighting rendered here is so horrible (based on my use of Fortran) that calling it "working" is a stretch, — francescalus 1 min ago
1:59 PM
Yes, next time I'll make sure the time difference will be 47 seconds. Thanks for noticing. — rene 19 secs ago
similar question at MSE: Spiteful downvoting? Two fast DVs to my unrelated posts. I recall receiving such "doubles" and if memory serves even cast them myself a while ago (dropped it because it felt useless and boring). The idea I think is to let the target user notice that somebody is unhappy about them without triggering reversal script — gnat 6 secs ago
@rene: Avoid disclosing your identity on the votes you cast... voting should be secret. — Amit Joshi 1 min ago
are you doing some curation on the site? closing, flaging, commenting bad asnwers, etc? if so then you have a reason. I have accepted that reason since too long now. — Temani Afif 48 secs ago
Alas, there is little to be done here other than seeing if you can improve the posts. Posts with a low score are a good target for users feeling that they lack revenge. It could well have been someone else doing the second stream of downvotes, curation does bring this kind of negative attention. If only <redacted>. — E_net4 has many friends 5 secs ago
@TemaniAfif: Yes; but I am doing it on entirely different tags. Not the tags where the DVs cast. Anyway, you made a point. — Amit Joshi 35 secs ago
@AmitJoshi it doesn't matter the tags, users will randomly select some of your questions since downvoting a quesiton cost nothing and making only 2 downvotes will not trigger the serial voting algorithm (yes, I am used to this kind of things ;) ) — Temani Afif 1 min ago
@francescalus It indeed does not look too peachy, but I personally don't use Fortran, so I can't comment on it for sure. I just came across this question when searching for the syntax highlighting help section. On the bright side, it's probably easier to make the it look good now that there is at least some level of support. If only someone who knew Fortran could make a PR... (wink wink) github.com/highlightjs/highlight.js/blob/master/src/languages/… — kelvin 1 min ago
Fortran isn't in the list of supported languages on SE: meta.stackexchange.com/a/184109/158100 . Not all packages that are available are loaded. Try
java
as language hint (without the lang-) and then use fortran
. Notice the difference. It fallback to using default. — rene 1 min agoFortran is not the supported list by SE: meta.stackexchange.com/questions/184108/… what you're seeing is the best effort attempt of the default highlighter. — rene just now
Never trust anything to a web interface. Prepare it offline in a text document. — Peter Mortensen 35 secs ago
2:35 PM
I am not questioning your ability to debug (none of the questions were rhetorical). You did not answer the question about how long you researched before posting (to be clear, not a hetorical question). — Peter Mortensen 1 min ago
I am not questioning your ability to debug (none of the questions were rhetorical). You did not answer the question about how long you researched before posting (to be clear, not a rhetorical question). — Peter Mortensen 12 secs ago
In any case, it is best to avoid list-of-X questions (e.g. recommendations). Instead ask a question where one of the answers might actually be a tool (it could be "It is not possible because of C, but the tool D has it built in"): "I am trying to access the hardware counters of X. I have tried the method in source A and got error message Y. I also tried the alternative method in source B, but I got error message Z. How can I fix it?" — Peter Mortensen 27 secs ago
In any case, it is best to avoid list-of-X questions (e.g. recommendations). Instead ask a question where one of the answers might actually be a tool (it could be "It is not possible because of C, but the tool D has it built in"), e.g.: "I am trying to access the hardware counters of X in the scenario E. I have tried the method in source A and got error message Y. I also tried the alternative method in source B, but I got error message Z. How can I fix it?" The documented research and specific error messages narrows down the question. — Peter Mortensen 1 min ago
I wonder how many edits are being composed at any given time. Are we talking 10s, or 100s? If it's not many, would it be terrible if the system allowed edits already being composed to go through even when the queue is full? I'm in total agreement that this is one of the most annoying/ frustrating things, especially when the edit is non-trivial. — zcoop98 13 secs ago
You are on Meta. This question will not be answered here and you may want to go over the Checklist and How to Ask before you repost on main. Please consider deleting this question. — rene 1 min ago
It's certainly interesting but nothing more. We don't have enough data to make any kind of assumptions and neither can the system. It could be a coincidence, maybe the posts are linked in some way, maybe these questions are showing in search results and are not useful, or maybe someone was really mad with you and downvoted your 2 lowest scoring questions. — Dharman 1 min ago
I doubt it was done as part of curation efforts. Although it has happened multiple times to me that when doing some cleanup I encountered and had to downvote posts by the same user at the same time. This kind of thing happens. Unless there is a bigger pattern it's difficult to say that these are not legitimate votes. — Dharman 1 min ago
3:23 PM
@E_net4 But isn't that just your interpretation? Mine could be downvoting posts for anything but the merits of the post is fine. Want to get a badge for voting on 600 Questions? Easiest way is to just open up the home page, open the first 40 posts, downvote them all. It only takes 3 weeks to get the badge. I guess getting a badge is a reason to vote. Is the reason reasonable though? — Scratte 1 min ago
@Scratte We could do this all day, but I'll just end with this: nowhere did I or Martin James state that bad reasons for voting do not exist. Suggesting that such behavior is pertinent is the problem, because there is no evidence of that. — E_net4 has many friends 52 secs ago
@E_net4 You're right. But there is also no evidence that good reasons for downvotes exists. And this post states about upvotes that "many are totally inexplicable", which there is no evidence for either. — Scratte 35 secs ago
I understand your frustration, but there isn't any need to claim that "because your questions always sucks" and "why he ruined your life" are, quote, "from memory" when you perfectly well know it isn't from memory. — Peter Mortensen 1 min ago
3:45 PM
@PeterMortensen .This was just humor because I know you guys cope a lot with that kind of feelings, it's funny to me to exagerate it. And I don't know what to tell you about the memory thing. I really thought I read it somewhere. Do you think I said it because I like to look like a liar on something that people will check that easily? Again, i am sorry about this post because it's complaining about a problem that does not exist. And at the time I thought it was. — ninjaconcombre 21 secs ago
This is definitely a bug -- I'll have our developer look into it. Thanks for reporting. — Anita Taylor ♦ 1 min ago
@Scratte Peter Mortensen is likely using an automagic post editing tool, which might, among many other things, be converting that word automatically to something that isn't an expletive. I wouldn't call it a problem. Any possible improvements to this is just another edit away. — E_net4 has many friends 1 min ago
@Docteur We had to weigh the annoyance factor. It would be very annoying to have the survey pop up for each and every downvote, especially for people who downvote frequently. That was the primary factor behind our decision to show the survey once. — Anita Taylor ♦ 38 secs ago
Self answering is unfortunately misunderstood by many (due to reputation points envy?). It is best to leave a comment on the self answer to this effect (also occupying the important spot of the first comment which sets the tone for the rest of the comments). The comment could contain a quote from the canonical (FAQ on meta? Help page?) and the link to the source. — Peter Mortensen 39 secs ago
Self answering is unfortunately misunderstood by many (due to reputation points envy? Due to too many users using Stack Overflow as a forum?). It is best to leave a comment on the self answer to this effect (also occupying the important spot of the first comment which sets the tone for the rest of the comments). The comment could contain a quote from the canonical (FAQ on meta? Help page?) and the link for the quote. It is best to post it a few seconds after the answer (prepared in advance), but it can also be done after the fact. — Peter Mortensen 30 secs ago
Just because a comment has been made doesn't mean that all deserving actions have been taken. Also, Liam is not a moderator, he/she is just another user like you. In this case you should have flagged the question as unsalvageable so that it gets closed, rather than choose "No action needed". — CertainPerformance 9 secs ago
Auto bans only occur with failed audits, right? So this was manual, since it wasn't an audit. — CertainPerformance 1 min ago
The canonical is Should 'Hi', 'thanks', taglines, and salutations be removed from posts? (cross site). — Peter Mortensen 7 secs ago
@EJoshuaS-ReinstateMonica Yes, it does. It'll say "Review audit passed..." or "Review audit failed..." on audit tasks. — CertainPerformance 1 min ago
@CertainPerformance Would it say that it was an audit if we just click on the link? I'm actually not sure about that. If it wasn't a review audit, it would have had to have been a manual review ban, though. — EJoshuaS - Reinstate Monica 1 min ago
If users feel compelled to say it, it can be added to comments (where it is mostly harmless). — Peter Mortensen 32 secs ago
Not what you are suggesting, but related: Could we have the ability to mark a change as minor in questions or answers?. — Peter Mortensen 13 secs ago
@MisterMiyagi I could see it being scheduled a few different ways. 1) schedule on clicking edit (open reviews block queue). If necessary raise queue by 25-50 to accommodate this change. 2) schedule on clicking submit. If edit queue full then add to queue as 20X'th spot. The queue limit is used for allowing clicking edit, but if you click edit before the queue is full then you are guaranteed a spot. There would be a dynamic size queue in this solution — noah 1 min ago
There's no requirement that you comment on a post that need to be closed. The only requirement is that you raise an appropriate close flag on it. Since someone else already commented on what the post author needs to do, you are right to not add another comment. However, commenting on a post that needs to be closed is just informing the post author. Nothing more. Even if the "I'm Done" button gets activated from you commenting, you're not "Done" on such a post. — Scratte 1 min ago
I read these when I first got started: How should I get started reviewing Late Answers and First Posts?, What are the guidelines for reviewing? and How does the Triage queue work? and I went through all the pages in the help center about asking.. and answering.. Understanding what's in those posts and pages will help you review better :) — Scratte 1 min ago
@Scratte has an excellent point. Also, why should an otherwise good edit go down as rejected and (possibly) penalize the editor just because the question is/ got closed? — zcoop98 19 secs ago
"I think I can also see I am not naturally suited to reviewing but I will try my best to help with answers instead". Being better at reviewing will also make you better able to pick Questions that will not get closed or deleted, so it's not a waste of time reading about it. However, not reviewing is likely to save you both time and trouble :) — Scratte 30 secs ago
@zcoop98 because he shouldn't have edited a closed question in the first-place if the edit is not meaningful... — Tomerikoo 52 secs ago
Can you provide information on your browser? When you interacted with the modal in any way, JavaScript on the page would have set a "notice-dvr" cookie which the server would use to stop serving you the toast. This is similar to cookies used for dismissing the announcement banners that can appear at the top of the page. — Brian Nickel ♦ 1 min ago
@zcoop98 That is an unfortunate case. Often those edits are rejected. It would be preferable if the close voters were to approve the edit before closing the post. That way the editor will not get punished with a rejected edit. But, choose the Questions you edit wisely to avoid such risks. Pick ones that are fine and doesn't have recent activity. "Active today" is not a good choice. Other users are unlikely to begin other actions on such posts. Some will even have your edit rejected to push their own. — Scratte 2 mins ago
I say that as more of a hypothetical than something that's happened to me prior, but point taken. Related post: Why is there not an edit-rejection reason to cover cleanups of off-topic questions? — zcoop98 52 secs ago
Does this answer your question? How long should we wait for a poster to clarify a question before closing? — gnat 1 min ago
5:01 PM
SO/SE has no way to impact how links on other sites (including search engines) open. It is unclear why you see this as SO/SE bug and what action you expect as result. — Alexei Levenkov 14 secs ago
The review you linked was neither an audit nor in the Triage queue (@Scratte). It appears that the moderator (who subsequently closed the question) feels that you need alerting to the fact that it was a particularly bad review. You can wait for that moderator to respond to this question, or maybe ask/plead for mercy/absolution in his dedicated chatroom. — Adrian Mole 1 min ago
@PeterMortensen 1) Accepting a suggested edit is one decision. 2) Editing a suggested edit before accepting it is an additional decision. These decisions 1)&2) are taken without knowing that the question is closed. 3) Placing a closed question into the reopening queue is an additional decision which the Suggested Edit reviewer implicitly takes on the closed question. Mostly edits to the closed questions have been minor, just clarifying the question. Therefore, in this context I would rather suggest the possibility to "mark as major" the edits on the closed question. — Heikki 37 secs ago
I added a question today that is downvoted because no obvious research was shown in the question. I have been looking at questions that today have been asked and are not donwvoted. Most of them are not donwvoated with and lake obvious research results. Now I do believe that I have asked a diffucult question by the simple fact that the one who downvoted it declared him self as an expert in the field but could not answer it. What choose do you than have? Right downvote and blame it on the person who asked the question. And indeed it is frustrating since my question is still not answerd. — Edwin 1 min ago
If you find the icon and "red dot" annoying, you can add this to your uBlock Origin
stackoverflow.com##.review-button-item.-item
— Scratte 55 secs ago5:39 PM
6:01 PM
The icon on the top bar will show a red dot when it wants you to review. You can see an image of it in Review queue showing review alert for users who can't review. The information in the drop down has been changed now with Make it more obvious that you're review banned, so users are informed, but I suspect the red dot still appears. If you have the adblocker "uBlock Origin", you can easily disable the icon. — Scratte 59 secs ago
6:17 PM
@CertainPerformance I will definitely take a look. If you check this question, none of them are runnable for me. — Spectric 58 secs ago
Works fine for me. Try a different browser or a different connection / proxy? — CertainPerformance 1 min ago
This is how your answer there renders for me: i.stack.imgur.com/kqNTY.png Maybe an issue on your end or with your ISP - maybe give it an hour and see if things improve — CertainPerformance 1 min ago
6:37 PM
Your previous post was closed as a duplicate of this, which has an answer recommending you "flag a post & ask a moderator to have a look", and someone left a comment saying something similar on your post. That is what you should do, if you haven't already, and there isn't really much else you can do (unless you wish to point out that mods are mishandling such flags). Flagging and posting on Meta serves different purposes and this belongs firmly on the flagging side. — Bernhard Barker 1 min ago
Trying a closure again on this old question (official reason: This question does not appear to seek input and discussion from the community). — halfer 32 secs ago
There's a a canonical post on serial voting on Meta SE featuring a "What if I think I'm the victim of voting fraud?" section. — Bernhard Barker 1 min ago
@CodyGray True - I think that the OP was talking about piling on with more comments though. — EJoshuaS - Reinstate Monica 50 secs ago
7:47 PM
Stack Overflow enforces this because they want you to actually explain your question, not just dump a bunch of code and hope people can understand it. — John Montgomery 23 secs ago
You may as well just add "please downvote and close my question" instead, since that's basically what that tells me. — John Montgomery 1 min ago
8:09 PM
FYI, the website that Ansgar Wiechers points to in his comment is basically his own personal blog. The article is his and he completely ignores the +40 million lost jobs as the reason for the 2nd dip in Answer, even though it corresponds nearly identically to the slope and timing of that 2nd slope. — computercarguy 54 secs ago
This is complete and utter garbage/nonsense. If someone doesn't like the way a question is formulated >>ignore it<<. It literally takes more time and effort to complain, or block a user, than it does to skip it. — Mark Olbert 1 min ago
8:33 PM
@pietroppeter There is a Tampermonky script to add support for extra languages that you could use if seeing Nim higlighted would be of benefit to just yourself. I'm sure it could easily be converted into a Chrome plugin as well if someone had the time. It's also possible communities without languages supported by SO could encourage the use of such plugins to improve their individual SO experiences... — Josh Goebel 43 secs ago
@tylerH
console.log
ALONE is not enough to guarantee a source snippet is JS... we could indeed add a bit of relevance to that, but given a medium or large snippet of code that still wouldn't guarantee that the language would be detected as JS. I've written that exact sequence of code in Ruby. It's not solely unique to JS. Summary: Auto-detect is a hard problem to get right 100% of the time, even if it seems obvious to a human. The problem is that single line of code is just too short to know anything for sure. [Disclaim: I am the Highlight.js maintainer.] — Josh Goebel 1 min agoi think we should add to check if this is a serial downvte, when the time gap between dwnnvotes are to short, to read the answer/question. 2 downsvtes is not enough to get noticed,by the system — nbk 57 secs ago
@JörgWMittag By your definition we semantically highlight also. We know for JS/TS/LiveScript/etc that
console
has a different semantic meaning vs say "abc"... it's not a keyword, but it's a built-in, which means it give an edge to JS. Honestly I'm not sure why SO is making that choice. When I run auto-detect on that out JS/TS grammar "wins" with 4 relevance vs C++ only having 2 relevance, so we do "know" it's Javascript... could be a bug in SO implementation? Or one of the many improvements we've made from 10.2 to 10.3.1? (Which I don't think SO is using yet?) — Josh Goebel 1 min ago@a_horse_with_no_name There is a PR to fix the SQL highlighting (dropping MySQL and Oracle specific things) and make it more generic/standard... but sadly that didn't make it into 10.3.1... should probably land in 10.4 in December. — Josh Goebel 1 min ago
@WilliamRobertson We indeed do have a grammar for "PostgreSQL and PL/pgSQL"...
pgsql
, but I believe SO has chosen not to use it because of its size... They could include it if they so desired and it greatly improves the fidelity of highlighting PostrgeSQL specific stuff. — Josh Goebel 1 min ago@DavidC.Rankin HIghlight.js provides inconsistent function highlighting in C/C++ If the problems are solvable a pull-request would be appreciated. :-) We aren't a full language parser so sometimes it's impossible to know what is and isn't a function because the C++ grammar can be very complex... That said quite a few fixes have been added to our C/C++ grammar since the version SO is currently using - and we have a contributor planning to add more in the future. The best thing SO could do for many of these issues is update the library frequently. — Josh Goebel 1 min ago
To see the current version SO is using you can run this in your console:
StackExchange.using("highlightjs", () => console.log(StackExchange.highlightjs.instance.versionString));
— Josh Goebel 9 secs ago@BenKelly For sure I'd recommend using release versions. :-) I think the hope is that you would simply update soon after we make new minor releases... perhaps even without a specific request... our goal is typically a 6 week release cycle, though 2020 has been a bit off. — Josh Goebel 37 secs ago
@JoshGoebel OK. JS is more widely used than Ruby, I think (certainly
console.log
is used more often in JS than it is in Ruby), but anyway, have you ever written console.log
in C++? My point is you pick the most likely language to cover the most cases. I don't care so much if console.log
is auto-detected as Ruby vs JS, but C++? That's just lazy. — TylerH 1 min ago@TylerH See my above comment to someone else. We actually do detect it properly (in this case) as Javascript. I replied to you before testing it. It's possible the bug here is on SO side or the poster was confused when they posted those snippets. Or that there was a bug that's been fixed in the two minor releases since the version SO is using. — Josh Goebel 46 secs ago
@TylerH Also our library is OSS and only exists because of unpaid volunteer effort... so if you find future issues where we've been "lazy" you should feel free to contribute a pull-request to help out... or perhaps re-consider whether it might be a bit disrespectful to call us "lazy". — Josh Goebel 26 secs ago
@10Rep Deleting Answers on meta because one doesn't agree with them is not very useful at all. When it happens it depicts a non-existing "happy place" where everyone just agrees about everything and hides the truth that not everyone actually agrees. It's also called censorship and it's a slippery slope. — Scratte 1 min ago
... that might involve two quick votes. E.g., sometimes a person is seeking help for a problem that has two or more discrete components, related enough that the same user might have provided two different posts on the same topic, and only after reviewing all the posts a user might choose to cast a vote on both posts, one right after another. This can even happen with three or more...at some point, that would be reversed by the daily script. It seems that the policy choice is that it's likely enough to see two such votes, but rare enough for three or more, that two votes are left alone. — Peter Duniho 30 secs ago
@TylerH It’s perfectly valid (and sensible!) C++, and I’m almost certain that it exists in C++ code somewhere. The only reason to give JavaScript preference at all here is that in JavaScript
console
is a builtin object, whereas in C++ it isn’t. And that’s why it is given preference by highlight.js. — Konrad Rudolph 50 secs ago@nbk: "when the time gap between dwnnvotes are to short, to read the answer/question" -- Now and then, I think about additions that could be made to the daily script, but wind up giving up. There always seems to be a potential unintended consequence that counter-balances seemingly-good ideas. E.g. such as using the time between votes, unfortunately there's no requirement that a vote be made immediately after reading a post. So a person could review more than one post, and then go back and vote on them all. And there are legitimate scenarios ... — Peter Duniho 1 min ago
Bottom line: even when you can interview a person, it can be exceedingly difficult to judge motive, and when all you have to go on is the actual voting record, it's basically impossible. The policy seems set to focus on blatantly irregular scenarios, and leave alone anything remotely plausible. — Peter Duniho 40 secs ago
@JoshGoebel I'm not calling you lazy (and as an open-source contributor the "us" label is a bit strong), I'm calling the implementation lazy, but that's predicated on the details, which as your prior commentary suggests, might be on Stack Overflow's fault. So it seems like I'm not even referring to the highlight.js project at all with my comment, but SO, instead. — TylerH 1 min ago
@KonradRudolph I think the main reason is the answer to the question "how many pages deep do you have to go in google results for 'console.log' to find C++ results" is anything other than "page 1" when the answer to the same question for JS is almost certainly not just "page 1" but also followed with the addendum "but also every other page of results that google returns will have JS results on it". :-) — TylerH 46 secs ago
@TylerH Sure, but that strategy of language classification is clearly unpractical. You can make the call at a glance because you know the semantics. A syntax highlighter pretty much by definition doesn’t. — Konrad Rudolph 17 secs ago
@TylerH Re: "us" I think that was actually part of my point. :-) If you're included in the "us" then you're sort of included in the "lazy", otherwise it's just a (minor) dig at others... are lazy implementations not created by lazy people? Is that not the implication? :-) That was how I read it. :-) — Josh Goebel 1 min ago
@TylerH But it is very easy to nitpick when the auto-detection fails, for sure - and it can fail in "dumb" ways... Luckily in this case I think Highlight.js isn't to blame, but flip the coin on another day or perhaps with a larger example we possibly would be... there is a whole thread about the complexity of auto-detect (specifically how we do it) written over on Git if you wanted more of the back story. I think the "best" way to do this would be with some type of machine learning, not hand-crafted rulesets... I don't think you realize the time involved in writing such rules. — Josh Goebel 53 secs ago
the classifier of Prettify was comically bad. It was much, much worse I really think there is definitely a large dose of "it's different here" - and people are intuitively noticing those differences... plus SO makes some very questionable logic decisions when there are multiple languages tags... it almost sets itself up for failure when it could so easily guarantee success. — Josh Goebel 1 min ago
@jrh Nice, CMake, Verilog, and Fortran StackOverflow only gets the languages they choose to bundle and that includes FAR fewer than the full list we support in the core library. The whole Highlight.js library weighs in at close to 1mb if you build every single language, which is obviously a huge expense and reason to be selective. — Josh Goebel 52 secs ago
Additional data points should always be useful to someone trying to detect things. Much like asking questions on Stack Overflow, it's about solving your immediate problem, but also helping others with the same problem. Although that's not to say the data would get to where it needs to go to be useful. — Bernhard Barker 9 secs ago
I have them occasionally where i got my highest Answers downvoted in 56 seconds. One for php from 2016 and a fairly new one in perl, the only thing in common that they are in my votes among the highest and 1 go so far. that this was a serial downvoter that didn't like something or other. Why he only downvoted 2 answers, quite simple he knows that the system don't recognizes it. — nbk 1 min ago
@jrh Someone probably added CMake long ago just to support what they were doing with it rather than making it comprehensive... Harder to comment on Fortran as we have had several fixes and contributions to it since I've been maintainer. If you wanted to drop by on GitHub and file an issue with some specific details on "barely works" that could help... but it'd be even more helpful if you knew those dialects and JS and were willing to help improve them as a contributor. :) Of course that doesn't guarantee SO would add them... — Josh Goebel 45 secs ago
(continued) D) We don't provide updates as to the status of escalations, nor do we tell you about any actions we may have taken with respect to other people, both of which will contribute to a feeling that nothing happens.E) We, or the CMs, may well look at more of the voting involved in your account than just the serial downvoting the flag is raised for. This may result in other serial/targeted downvoting, or upvoting, being reversed. F) There may be other things affecting the situation, what, if any, we won't disclose to you. — Makyen ♦ 15 secs ago
(continued) However, votes don't necessarily need to be close together in time in order to be targeted voting/revenge downvoting. The pattern could be spread out over months, or even years. C) At times, the CM backlog can be very long, as in many months (e.g. it was 9+ months earlier this year), which can easily make it feel like nothing happened as a result of your flag. A concentrated effort on the part of the CMs and others recently dramatically reduced the backlog to much more reasonable timeframes (i.e. down to weeks, or days in some cases). (continued) — Makyen ♦ 22 secs ago
Notes: A) The official guidance is to wait 24 to 48+ hours after the serial/targeted voting and prior to flagging in order to allow the automatic reversal script to either revert it, or demonstrate that it's not going to. B) Moderators are happy to escalate voting irregularities to CMs, but there needs to be a pattern that reasonably indicates something other than random chance. Two downvotes that happen to be close together in time, if that's the only indication (potential indications also including comments, other actions, etc.), really isn't much of a pattern. (continued) — Makyen ♦ 30 secs ago
Based on that I'd guess that Fortran just isn't enabled on SO, whereas cmake is just broken in a really strange way, adding a comment line will make or break the whole parser, which I found really strange. — jrh 38 secs ago
@JoshGoebel Hm, I am very familiar with CMake (honestly, far too familiar, I never want to see it again, but I guess it's here to stay), I am a beginner at Fortran, and a novice at Verilog, if that helps. Javascript is not my best language but I will take a look and see what kind of changes I'd have to make. As for Fortran I tried everything I could think of to get the syntax highlighting to work on, e.g., this question, triple backticks followed by f90, fortran, and f95 seemed to have no effect. Triple backticks followed by c, does work, though. — jrh 1 min ago
@JoshGoebel I have loading prettify and highlight.sj on a local server I have and I've investigated highlight.js. The problems I see on SO with sequential
#ifdef
preprocessor conditional not being correctly highlighted are not reproduced on my local install. The horrid look of the syntax highlighting colors for highlight.js in dark-mode can be attributed to a change in the atelier-forest-dark.css
style -- which in prettify produces almost exactly the old dark-mode colors, but for some reason unexplained, that theme was changed to the burnt-orange and blue we see today. — David C. Rankin 21 secs ago10:47 PM
@JoshGoebel I think you overestimate the "it's different here"-effect. When I see inconsistencies with the highlighting, then I notice. I do not think I ever stopped and thought "Wait?!?.. what is that?!?" with Prettify. But I do it a lot now.. Of course to add to the trouble, the colours they picked is way too low contrast. I spent time to get actually highlighting in, which means that for most users it probably felt a lot like a regression. — Scratte 59 secs ago
"the website that Ansgar Wiechers points to in his comment is basically his own personal blog." Given that my name is in the contact info I doubt that people needed you to point that out. Also, please explain how layoffs in March/April would a) cause in a steady decline of the answer rate since the beginning of January, and b) have an impact beyond the downward spike I already discounted for, when the vast majority of lost jobs are unlikely to be SO users in the first place. — Ansgar Wiechers 1 min ago
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