1:05 AM
1:17 AM
How would making it free resolve any of the issues you mentioned? How would that be any different than many of the product-specific sites we have on our network through the Area 51 process, that have existed for many years and still have not been taken over by those companies? — animuson ♦ 1 min ago
As much as I'd love collectives not to exist... I don't think you've put forward any good or useful arguments. — Nick 39 secs ago
1:38 AM
I don't see any reason why you would be receiving notifications about that post... Any chance you "follow" it? — Alexei Levenkov 1 min ago
yivi consider incorporating @Willtech's comment on the original question "SergeP Code is difficult I know but you have to try." which interacts very nicely with "please try harder to isolate the issue you are having" in your answer... With that comment OP demonstrated some interesting idea on who is responsible for making the question clear and fitting the site's rules. — Alexei Levenkov 50 secs ago
You'd probably have better reception if you just proposed to remove them entirely :) On a more serious note, really why would they make it free? This product was clearly designed with profit in mind (and I do not believe, even for a second, that community benefit was a concern when the idea had first been conceived), so what would be the reason to keep it around if not for at least getting a good buck out of it? — Oleg Valter 38 secs ago
2:38 AM
I know there was some SEDE query that showed which posts have had the most other posts closed as duplicates of them, it would probably be possible to filter that by tag, and searching that might help. — Ekadh Singh - Reinstate Monica 25 secs ago
3:12 AM
The go badge is super bright too. Also, it's too bad there wasn't a [gadget] tag applied to this, so it could have read [go] [go] [gadget] [factory]. — jrh 15 secs ago
4:05 AM
Note that you have commented on that answer once, and @reply doesn't work with whitespaces, so it will fallback to "@Dan". However, I still can't solve the mystery of @reply's name matching on why you still got the notification even though Dan Dascalescu (the OP of the answer) has commented after you. — Andrew T. 1 min ago
1 hour later…
5:15 AM
@AndrewT. "An exception is the case when the first
@name
either matched nobody, or matched the post's author (and thus isn't necessary); in this case, the next @name
will be checked." might be the reason. — Abdul Aziz Barkat 50 secs ago5:53 AM
6:55 AM
I suspect you may be question banned. If so you'll need to read this rather than asking here. — Robert Longson 1 min ago
@Robert Longson Please can you help I have a stackblitz created please I am really stuck. — Nithin Babu Paravath 1 min ago
Meta is not the right place for programming questions. If we find them here we close and delete them. — Robert Longson 1 min ago
7:12 AM
Your Question must be easy to find and relevant to other people. Debugging code on a site somewhere else isn't a good addition to the Stack Overflow repository. Perhaps read Writing the Perfect Question to get a feeling of what is expected. — Scratte 1 min ago
7:30 AM
Great initiative! What was the (approximate) (estimated) success rate of getting the users to actually use it (both in relative (percentage) and absolute terms)? — Peter Mortensen 1 min ago
@Ryan Teaching a man to fish is still not an answer to the question as posed. It may be the most appropriate answer, it may be the most helpful answer, it may be the objectively best answer... but it is still not a valid answer according to this site's rules. The simple reason is that so many garbage questions would easily be "answered" in such a way, which would encourage rep-farming on such answers instead of having those garbage questions closed as they should be. Again, Stack Overflow is not a forum, nor is it a place for teaching the absolute basics of programming. — Ian Kemp 1 min ago
A tag is the obvious answer, except that there are no restrictions on who can tag what, so you'd end up with garbage humans tagging their garbage questions with these tags. Fundamentally the Stack Overflow platform would have to change in some way, and that's not gonna happen. — Ian Kemp 39 secs ago
8:08 AM
@IanKemp Is seems to be a partial Answer. I wonder if one could post Answers instead of answering in comments. Perhaps what would make for better duplicate targets. Apart from that, there's no such thing as a Question that is too simple. Stack Overflow is for everyone, not just experienced developers. ..and what's up with the bold? — Scratte 1 min ago
@TheGeneral That's not even funny. Creating an atmosphere of punishing people is not constructive. It's quite the opposite. It creates fear, and it removes creative thinking.. and it even lead to someone posting a comment saying killing people for posting on Stack Overflow is better! — Scratte 49 secs ago
Does this answer your question? How does a new user get started on Stack Overflow? — Jeanne Dark 1 min ago
You don't need to be an SME (or to have any clue about a technology at all) to recognize and curate low-quality content. You need to know how SO works and what it strives to be. For example, just because I know that a C++ debugging question with images of code needs debugging details, doesn't mean I could find suitable duplicate targets for C++ questions. — Jeanne Dark 50 secs ago
@Scratte If you don't like how I refer to people who make zero effort but expect exhaustive answers to be handed to them on a platter - tough. I'm tired of the nonsensical view that they're just poor misguided souls who will magically turn into incredible Stack Overflow contributors, because they never do. If you want to stick your fingers in your ears and pretend they're not the main problem contributing to the downward cycle of quality that SO is stuck in, that's your choice. But don't expect me to do the same, and especially don't expect me to be complicit in your denial. — Ian Kemp 31 secs ago
"And with the increasing number of users who don't bother accepting answers".. yeah well, once a Question is accepted, there's probably to lot less chance of getting another Answer, so personally, I'd never accept any Answer if I posted a Question. — Scratte 17 secs ago
"And with the increasing number of users who don't bother accepting answers, there's no guarantee that a valid answer will be accepted. ... The end result is that badges in language-specific tags are becoming ever-more difficult to obtain." Since accepting answers has nothing to do with getting tag badges, I don't see how this follows. — Ryan M 1 min ago
Just to be clear: "because now those curators could immediately close said questions with a single vote" means this is effectively about awarding curators with a dupe hammer? — MisterMiyagi 1 min ago
@IanKemp We sure have different views. I do not think that people need to show any attempt as long as they post something that is answerable. It makes no difference what hoops they went through, and I certainly don't expect to see their sweat and blood seeping through my monitor. Most good posts came about because someone wanted to know how to do something. They're extremely valuable to this site and they have good Answers especially because there was no botched attempts made in the Question. — Scratte 17 secs ago
Since people do everything for badges (see the armies of robo-reviewers), would this not potentially do more harm than good? — Jeanne Dark 8 secs ago
...and I say this as someone with thousands of "successful" close votes in a tag where I do not have a gold badge. — Ryan M 23 secs ago
8:57 AM
@IanKemp I just disagree wholeheartedly and don't think we'll see eye to eye. There's no such rules. No rules against partial answers. No rules against posting links to online learning resources. Despite your 3 claims of rules break neither fit the bill. Partial answers are allowed and encouraged and you're trying to argue it's against the rules when it isn't. It is ABSOLUTELY a place for teaching the basics because we all have to start some somewhere. You seem to have your own zealous textbook rules for how the site should run where a helpful, partial answer is somehow against your code. — Ryan 1 min ago
Also, can I just say point out, you've strawmanned me in every single one of your comments so far and my patience wears thin. As i've stated, multiple times, this is a discussion around partial answers. Not the quality of the question or the experience of the author. It's not even relevant yet you keep going off-topic to insult non-existant authors. I stated that the answer presented would answer their question partially, as it's two pronged and they have an error and don't know how to identify it. The answer identifies it for them. Hence, partial answer. Hence, allowed under the site rules. — Ryan 13 secs ago
9:18 AM
How exactly is single voting duplicate closure helpful for dealing with the influx of garbage? Duplicates aren't dealt with by roomba. So now you moved the 3 close vote requirement to be 3 delete votes. Not to mention this just seems intent on abusing duplicate closure. If a question is unclear it should be voted to close as unclear, not hammered shut with a "maybe duplicate". — StoryTeller - Unslander Monica 56 secs ago
9:38 AM
9:50 AM
document.querySelectorAll('a[href^="/collective"]').forEach(el => el.remove() )
— Mhmdrz_A 51 secs agoNo, because the issue answer to his question, he knows why it appear and that he can't fix it. — Elikill58 21 secs ago
@JeanneDark Probably not, since the Answer seems to be "This is a known bug, as per this issue" — Scratte 19 secs ago
"Is a good thing to just include the link?". No, that would be flaggable as "not an answer", per the duplicate. — yivi 21 secs ago
@yivi Did answering with "This is a known bug and there is no fix for it" been included into the "Not an Answer" definition? — Scratte 32 secs ago
@yivi It's not about the content of the link. It serves as a reference to "This is a known bug and there is no fix for it" — Scratte 8 secs ago
When I mean "just a link" it's without code or something, just say it's a known-bug by the owner of the linked dependency used. — Elikill58 9 secs ago
@Scratte Exactly, it's not about the content of the link. Just linking to an issue (or to anything else) is not an answer in my book. Posting an answer that explains that it's a known bug in X version, and that the bug is filed "here", would be. — yivi 13 secs ago
@yivi Fair enough. But now everyone knows this, so the next question is, Is anyone going to edit it, since we all know it.. or are we going to delete something useful, because it doesn't comply in it's current revision? — Scratte 14 secs ago
At the moment when the OP answer with this link, it was solving his question (now waiting for fix). IMO SO should keep it as answer and show if the bug is solved, to know if this answer is right (not fixed), wrong (fixed, not this issue), no longer available (dead link) — Elikill58 39 secs ago
Hopefully someone will edit it, @Scratte, if they find it useful and know about the subject matter. Since I'm fulfill neither of those requirements, I'll pass. Hopefully it's fixed before it's deleted, if it's actually useful (no clue if that's the case). — yivi 41 secs ago
I don't think trying to improve the site tools as a volunteer is particularly appreciated by the company. They already did an experiment with a wizard, which was cancelled in favour for some new question page layout. So I'd rather reach out to the open source, non-profit Q&A communities and offer to design a wizard there, or to integrate your current work in their site. Except at least Codidact already got a wizard... if you are curious to compare it with yours, it's found at meta.codidact.com/tour. It's for generic Q&A though and not specifically for a programming site. — Lundin 38 secs ago
10:28 AM
Though, personally, I don't disagree that curation should be rewarded (there are far too many people that don't make use of their curation privileges in my opinion), this isn't going to solve the problem in my opinion. Unfortunately, I suspect that rewarding curation (which many users incorrectly understand as "gate keeping" and "unwelcoming") would actually make things worse though, where questions that can easily be made on-topic by the OP or other users get closed/deleted much quicker as certain users hunt their internet points. — Larnu 8 secs ago
10:40 AM
@blackgreen Nice to hear that there is at least something positive coming out of it. I wonder why though. Either it's the gamification features (collective's leaderboards) that are working or it's simply Google allowing its employees to spend more time here. Because otherwise nothing has changed really. — Trilarion 11 secs ago
11:27 AM
Agreed. I've lamented this in the past - the current system means that if a user answers a lot of duplicates, they can easily get a dupe hammer. If a user closes a lot of duplicates, they have difficulty obtaining a dupe hammer. Trying to merge this into badges treats an XY problem, to me. People who do a lot of curation should absolutely be awarded with more curation options. I just don't think the current system is a very good fit. I think it fundamentally does not for incentivise curation. So, trying to change the gold badges seems like a band-aid. — VLAZ 25 secs ago
(1) The pandas bit certainly shouldn't be there, that was a stupid, unusual mistake. (2) This is the only time I've repeated the recommendation or mentioned the course. That's not the goal. Is there anything bad about the first comment apart from the pandas bit? (3) I stayed and helped this person through multiple errors after everyone else left. I don't think it's fair to say things went south. — Alex Hall 1 min ago
(4) The problem was not the promotion. If I had nothing to promote, it would still have come down to me explaining the M in MRE, that the question code doesn't need to contain the whole homework assignment, and that the asker's problems are bigger than this assignment and they need to go through some tutorial from the beginning. (5) Of course if I do something many times it will sometimes go badly, but if it helps most other times, isn't it worth it? — Alex Hall 54 secs ago
(6) Yes, it needs work, but getting feedback from real users is essential. For example, based on this case I'm going to add a more thorough explanation about replacing
input()
in code. (7) As with others, I'm happy to hear your ideas on how to improve the UI and make it useful for other kinds of questions. I'm struggling to see how I can offer significant value outside MRE style problems. But I don't see why it has to. Why is it bad that it only targets a specific kind of problem? — Alex Hall 1 min ago(8) Why is it too late to use the tool after posting to SO? If it helps them fix one or several issues, isn't that good? Besides, a question needing an MRE doesn't imply such a chain of issues, just a need to explain one problem better. If it's too late to link to the wizard, why isn't it too late to link to the MRE page? (9) In what sense can the wizard 'live alongside' the questions you link to? Is linking to those posts in comments somehow different? — Alex Hall 19 secs ago
I hope there is no need for me to point out that comments are not appropriate to discuss 9 (!) speed dumped rebuttals either. — MisterMiyagi 29 secs ago
@yivi I can't even see it now. So no, I can't edit it. On a side note.. I'm also not a good editor. — Scratte 16 secs ago
(a) I think these are important points and it's fair for me to make them whether or not you respond. I don't see what my alternative is. (b) Many of these points don't prompt a response at all. (c) One even links to a more appropriate place for longer discussion. (d) You could edit responses into your answer. (e) Choosing one of my points/questions that you find most important and responding to only that would still be very valuable. I'm not forcing you to respond to everything or even anything. (f) Speed dumped? I took my time and wrote everything in a separate editor, I don't see an issue. — Alex Hall 29 secs ago
1) Yes. 2) It's not actionable, doesn't even work for me (Safari) directly. 3) I do think it's fair to say the promotion went south. 4) Yes the problem was the promotion. Explaining requirements of this site and promoting a tool are two different things. See 3). 5) I am not convinced that it helps most other times. 6) I don't see how "but I need feedback" is an excuse for this anymore than for other inappropriate topics. 7.1) I can't say you seem to be taking my feedback constructively. 7.2) I don't think you can. 7.3) Because it is described as a question wizard. […] — MisterMiyagi 1 min ago
@Paulie_D It's not asking for an off-site resource (links to tutorials etc.). It's also not necessary to write a whole tutorial to answer it (too broad or more focus/details or clarity). — Jeanne Dark 25 secs ago
Thinking that complaining on meta about collectives is going to do anything at all is you lying to yourself. What this feature develops into or if it stays at all is between the company and their partners. And their pocket books. I would instead spend your energy on trying to co-exist with it, because this is for sure not going to be the only way that the company is going to try and extract more revenue from the brand. — Gimby 1 min ago
It's a simple and poor question. I don't think we have a close reason for those. We have votes at most. Maybe it's a duplicate? Is there no question dealing with swift basic syntax? — yivi 13 secs ago
@yivi I don't think there is a question handling the basic Swift syntax, basically we'd need 100+ questions to handle all basic aspects of the language. — Cristik 44 secs ago
[…] 8) Because it turns the question into a chameleon question. 9) The point was that a general collection of MRE helps/tools/guides on Meta seems more appropriate than promoting a specific tool. — MisterMiyagi 6 secs ago
Does this answer your question? Preventing suggested edit queue being frequently full? — yivi 14 secs ago
(2) Sounds like I should take Safari more seriously. (3/4/9) I think we fundamentally disagree about promotion being inherently bad. I don't see the relevance or negative impact here. This is my way of explaining to people how to make an MRE. I don't see this as truly different from me linking to a blog post I wrote, or that someone else wrote, or a meta question or help article. It already links to some help articles and I can add more, e.g. I can link to the pandas MRE guide when someone imports pandas. That would make it a collection as you say. (7.3) You want me to change the title? — Alex Hall 54 secs ago
Hmm.. if you can't edit it, you need to Skip the review and let someone else edit it. Don't do another action because you can't do the required one. It's not about "your review", it's about reviewing being put in place to make the site better. — Scratte 41 secs ago
We need a close reason for personal motivation problems. Because not wanting to properly inform yourself and thus making your life far harder than it needs to be is not a programming problem, it's a personal one. — Gimby 51 secs ago
Other people can edit without review (>=2k rep); certainly we shouldn't block post-editing for them? — Heretic Monkey 1 min ago
@Mhmdrz_A I think you also posted on the Question. Doesn't it find for example links to Collective Article downvote pushes for explanation. Bug or new feature? and Collectives member count is way off — Scratte 36 secs ago
@Scratte the thing is, I already completed my edits, and I didn't know that queue was full. So I just wasted my time making changes to the original post. This is the main issue for me. Some posts are understandable but only need some formatting and maybe grammar fixes, and as a reviewer, I get an option to edit the post to make it better, which is not available but shown as so. — Raguel 11 secs ago
"We need to drop this lazy moderation culture. Either moderate properly or stay your hand" - indeed. Essentially what is true for reviewing is also true for moderating. The fact that there is far too much junk flowing in and the company not doing anything about it does not change the fact that you should still try to do the right thing. — Gimby 36 secs ago
Maybe the name of this user is inaccurate representation of chick sounds? — Rocket Nikita 41 secs ago
It's incredible that this link still isn't back after over a year since this topic was opened. Right now the close message makes zero sense for a user, because the "debugging details" part (which one would expect to link to something describing "debugging details" only lists irrelevant other things). 😒 - We already have 53 upvotes, what else do we need to get common sense back? — CherryDT 44 secs ago
Yeah, have to second Scratte here - if you can't edit, "skip", tough luck - we have suggested edits cluttered with typo fixes, irrelevant tags, and other "good" stuff, unfortunately. It's been near its capacity every day for a long time, and recent changes to review queues did not help much in brining new reviewers. That said, well, we hear you, it is annoying as hell (even users with 5K+ can't edit tag wikis without going through the queue, and getting "the queue is full" after carefully constructing one is baffling). There is little to be done, though - after all, queues are an async [1/2] — Oleg Valter 24 secs ago
@Cristik Given that Stack Overflow is a "library of detailed answers to every question about programming", why not? For JavaScript we have What does this symbol mean in JavaScript? where all syntax/symbol related topics are bundled so they are easy to find when you want to close one as a duplicate. — Ivar 1 min ago
People don't search for "why can't I reference an array index that is greater than the length of the array in Java?". They search for (if they search at all)
ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException
plus maybe java
. and that's it. That's why having a catch-all "super broad canonical dupe target" is nice to have; for people to land on when searching. Now, it might be better if the answers to that catch-all question were spread amongst more targeted dupes for symptoms, like What does this symbol mean?, but a single target for searchers seems good. — Heretic Monkey 37 secs ago[2/2] process. You can start editing at 497 review tasks and finish when 3 more tasks have already been poured into the queue from other places. What should happen in this case? 'tis a non-trivial problem. It is solvable (i.e. give priority for edits incoming from other queues) but not easy and, frankly, at this point I do not trust Stack to be capable of solving non-trivial problems. — Oleg Valter 1 min ago
@Scratte I know, but please, read the message again, is not about user perception :) It's about the real state of things. Agreed that there is probably close to impossible to solve. However, I do not believe it is completely impossible given that the queue state can be passed around live with WS instead — Oleg Valter 1 min ago
@Cristik No. Just one for for every aspect that people have asked about. If no one ever asks "What does if mean in JavaScript?" I'll be happy. — Heretic Monkey 1 min ago
@HereticMonkey Not understanding that very generic error messages are unhelpful is obviously part of the problem, see the other post that I linked. Obviously if people knew the cause of the problem, they wouldn't need to ask, but ending up with some generic post isn't necessarily helpful. This is a Q&A site and not wikipedia - our goal isn't to build wikipedia 2 or to collectively write a Java book. First of all I could obviously just RTFM about what
ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException
means. But if that turns out unhelpful, that's when I would ask on SO. — Lundin 9 secs agoFWIW, I would be quite happy to have a few nice and crips "what does <this> mean?" for the tags I frequent. That would make for good dupe targets for all the page long stories of suffering that actually boil down to "what does <this> mean?". — MisterMiyagi 1 min ago
"So why do we even have the possibility to edit the post if it is not available for edit?" - well it's hard to predict the future. The only blocker would be if the queue would be full the moment you hit the submit button, not when you open a piece of content for editing... I do that quite frequently without the actual intent of committing any edits too, I do it to see the raw post content before it is rendered by the Matrix. — Gimby 1 min ago
This is a matter of opinion, and being conspicuous is certainly the point of having a special icon in the first place. Voting to close. — TylerH 38 secs ago
Bonus points for actually solving the mentioned problem rather than just nuking the icons entirely. — Gimby 14 secs ago
@Gimby I think it is possible to return the current state of the post and make the edit button unavailable. Of course, I don't know how the database works in StackOverflow's backend but adding this feature would add a great user experience. — Raguel 12 secs ago
@Scratte Meta is a place to discuss things and share differing viewpoints, yes, but posting a discussion asking if something is "too conspicuous" is not something that useful opinions can be shared around, and as I mentioned it misses the fact that conspicuousness is the entire point of the feature. Opinions are useful if they can be backed up with useful data or perspectives. Here, though, it's just a case of pure whim. — TylerH 14 secs ago
I’m voting to close this question because frankly it's a troll question, and Shog's answer is a troll answer, too (albeit in good humor). — TylerH 47 secs ago
The issue also takes place if the word "SumProduct" is not in code format (you might check the different edits I did on my comment). — Dominique 46 secs ago
Also, next time you want to report something like this, it's better to include something more than a link to a comment. Comments can be deleted at any time, and whatever "issue" you experience, if it happens at all, can be easily demonstrated with a screenshot. In the comments you link, the word
sumproduct
only appears in code blocks, so the issue is not apparent. — yivi 1 min ago@Scratte There is already a fairly consensus among the community that Collectives are bad, but the community consensus on Collectives is irrelevant, because it's a product the company has chosen to pursue. As has been documented numerous times recently, what the community wants is not considered in terms of big decisions where the network is concerned. Aside from that, a feature request to make an icon less conspicuous won't do anything to remove Collectives from the site altogether, so that's a non sequitur. — TylerH 32 secs ago
I think this is really neat. However..my brain has basically been trained that when I see comments like "Hey I made a tool to do this check out the link ..." I (at least mentally) flag them. Not commenting to discourage you..but to perhaps explain the flags. — rob 58 secs ago
@yivi: Indeed: when I don't put parenthesis, the formatting is correct. Is that a bug or is that expected behaviour? — Dominique 46 secs ago
To me, it started working again a few weeks ago - with or without VPN. I think they might have fixed it - I just wonder if it was fixed for everyone... — Leonardo Alves Machado 41 secs ago
@Raguel what if when you click "edit" the queue is not full, but it's full by the time you are done with your edit? What then? — yivi 42 secs ago
@chivracq No need for such hyperboles. "Accessible" being related to accessibility is something that, as a programmer, you must know. And I use "must" purposefully here. No need to study the content every day to know about accessibility. For instance, now you know, it took 5 minutes. — Félix Adriyel Gagnon-Grenier 19 secs ago
2:00 PM
It looks like a bug but it is so isolated that I wouldn't count on this getting any kind of priority in the next decade. — Gimby 47 secs ago
@blackgreen thank you for sharing that. It is reasonable to believe that a very specific open source oriented collective like Go (and also Gitlab) which is tied to a single tag can help streamline things. For other programming platforms it might be a little more troublesome though. Is there going to be a Java collective... or an Oracle collective. There is like a world of difference there :/ — Gimby 1 min ago
Does this answer your question? Comment formatting is not working with & (and other special characters) sign(s) after letters/words — Stephen Rauch 51 secs ago
@zcoop98 thanks for that query. Those numbers are quite mind boggling. — Ekadh Singh - Reinstate Monica 1 min ago
3:12 PM
I mean... the collective created a leaderboard that is best pursued by refraining from gaining rep outside of tags related to the collective. At least some number of users will go from answering more broadly to narrowing down to that set of tags to boost their rankings, for whatever reason they deem important. — Kevin B 58 secs ago
@Scratte Uh, what? Non sequitur means "does not follow logically". For example, "I drove my car to work today instead of taking the train, so I don't know who painted the Mona Lisa." Opinion has nothing to do with it. — TylerH 7 secs ago
@Mhmdrz_A That's a nice pipe dream, but it's not a reflection of reality, unfortunately. If SO listened to community on such matters over their own desires, we'd still have the old profile page layout, Collectives would be removed completely, Monica would be reinstated as moderator everywhere, gold-badge Mjolnir powers would cover other close reasons, et cetera, ad infinitum. None of those things are the case, despite massive Community clamoring for each one (and that's far from an exhaustive list). — TylerH 1 min ago
@yivi Then the problem wouldn't be 100% solved, but it would still be better than what we have now, and would foreseeably waste a few less people's time. — zcoop98 20 secs ago
3:43 PM
@Ryan Spare me your faux outrage. Your so-called "partial answers" that explain how to troubleshoot are not valid answers to questions posed regardless of what you want the rules to be. Your constant attempts to deflect from being called out on this are testing the patience of anyone who actually knows the rules of this site. — Ian Kemp 43 secs ago
3:57 PM
@Ryan Further, the kind of questions that would attract the tutorial-type answers you so want to be allowable, are the kind of questions that don't belong on this site. So your "solution" of posting tutorial answers to those questions is... not a solution because said questions shouldn't be answered anyway. In other words, your entire argument is predicated on nonsense, you know it, and since you have no counterargument you've resorted to accusations of bad faith... which you're making in bad faith. Hypocrisy much? — Ian Kemp 1 min ago
You are correct, but you can't state it as broadly as "questions about IDE's are on-topic" - the "must be a programming problem" bit still has to apply. If an IDE interface shows graphical corruption... that's bad luck, but it's not a programming problem. Probably a driver issue or a bug in the software itself. If you don't know how to install/setup your favorite font... tough luck, I'm sure the IDE has a manual. Questions about IDE usage for the act of programming are the juicy bits we want to hoard. — Gimby 1 min ago
Ian, It may be legit outrage over faulty reasons. I 1/4 agree with Ryan. An answer that's "Use a debugger" is crap. Decent comment a lot of the time, though, if backed with a quick rundown on how to use a debugger. Part answers, assuming they're not misleading, just don't get upvotes from me unless they are pointing out something very important. I vehemently disagree with Stack Overflow as a place for teaching the basics. Where you draw the line on basics may vary, though. — user4581301 1 min ago
If the asker cannot explain their problem or I can't explain the solution to the asker because they do not know enough of the terminology, they can't be helped without a study of the fundamentals. But, A) the fundamentals scale with the question, and B) Screw the asker. The answer might still be extremely useful to future askers who do have sufficient background understanding. — user4581301 1 min ago
4:18 PM
Sounds good but, in effect, you are acting as a dupe lookup-drone for OP's who can't be bothered if they can con some mark into doing their work:( — Martin James 50 secs ago
'Yes, that is what we all do on Stack Overflow'....not all. If I don't know the answer, I won't look it up. If it's a trivial answer, I just comment some quick clue/tip. — Martin James 38 secs ago
4:57 PM
DO NOT expect that anyone will do that for you ever again. BSMP went way above and beyond with this. — Heretic Monkey 34 secs ago
5:33 PM
In addition to the primary.css rule of
.badge:hover, .badge-tag:hover { color: hsl(0,0%,100%); background-color: hsl(210,8%,5%);}
not taking into account dark mode, there's also an issue with the :hover
classes, which use .badge:hover, .badge-tag:hover {color: hsl(0,0%,100%); background-color: hsl(210,8%,5%);}
— Makyen ♦ 30 secs agoIs the last sentence a question or not? Re "inconsistent and transparent moderation": Don't you mean "inconsistent and nontransparent moderation" (my emphasis)? — Peter Mortensen 1 min ago
@Someone_who_likes_SE Our local development environment actually uses meta as its test database. I can update the screenshot if it's confusing. — Aaron Shekey ♦ 1 min ago
Like this, but contrast is extra low for Teams completed items: i.stack.imgur.com/YeVxM.png — Someone_who_likes_SE 1 min ago
@Ollie You have to see all of the user's posts in order to know that, if you don't want the spoilers :P — VLAZ 11 secs ago
Is this an email notification or a notification in your inbox here on the Stack Overflow site? — TylerH 28 secs ago
6:22 PM
Does this answer your question? I've been told to create a "runnable" example with "Stack Snippets", how do I do that? — TylerH 1 min ago
6:42 PM
6:57 PM
7:18 PM
Yeah, searched for a bit and found nothing because apparently I searched for the wrong words. Maybe marking this question as duplicate could make other users typing the same words as me redirect to the other post. — D_00 17 secs ago
You clicked the "Share" button and shared a link, or someone else did and put your user ID in it — Nick 53 secs ago
This bug is a byproduct of messing with badge CSS for high contrast mode (by not necessarily because of high contrast mode). We have a fix that'll be going out in the next release. See also: meta.stackoverflow.com/a/411824/652353 — Dan Cormier ♦ 29 secs ago
2 hours later…
9:20 PM
Catching it was easy, but I first had to regain my vision to report it! :P Thanks, fix is live now. — Andras Deak 11 secs ago
How does a "canonical question" look after, say, 9-10 years or more? I've seen plenty of "duplicates" point to a question that old, but the answers on the "dup" are more relevant than those on the "original" due to changes in language, software, or 1000 other things because it's only 1-2 years old or maybe only a few months old. We need to be careful when we look at "dups", because relevance to current situations can make even similarly worded questions very much not duplicates of answers using deprecated methods or procedures. — computercarguy 1 min ago
@Someone_who_likes_SE we've shipped a fix for the Teams completed items contrast. Thanks for reporting it! — Dan Cormier ♦ 45 secs ago
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