12:04 AM
Total aside, I'm really happy I saw the moderator comment on that flag, as they're easy to miss, and especially when you've potentially flagged hundreds of posts since. There's an old feature-request on Meta Stack Exchange to get notified when a moderator comments on a flag, for anyone interested. — Jeremy Caney 1 min ago
I think the meaning of these sentences is that they remove the Job SO and no more. They suggest existing customers to use other, already existing SO services (teams, ads), but none of these are meant to step into the place of the Job SO. I can only hope that it will be more gain for them than harm. — peterh 1 min ago
I think the numbers of the salary calculator are surreal for my region, but it is still more than nothing. Glassdoor/Kununu gave for me more exact results (if I compare them to the companies I know). — peterh 55 secs ago
12:29 AM
This is an excellent response, and a compelling argument why it shouldn't be both (re-)flagged and deleted. I especially appreciate the differentiation between the LQA and LA queues, as I often find myself jumbling the rubrics when jumping between the LQA, LA, and FA queues. Of course, don't Late Answers that are voted for deletion just end up in LQA anyway? If so, the workflow here is confusing, even if the guidance is not. — Jeremy Caney 1 min ago
12:44 AM
According to the updated review queue map from Review queue workflows - Final release Late Answers that are recommended to be deleted never end up in LQA queue, they are simply deleted when they reach the threshold. No workflow issue in that regard. — Henry Ecker 1 min ago
12:57 AM
You've convinced me. I've started following this guidance in my own reviews—and will reference your answer when I see reviewers recommending deletion for duplicate answers (which is a fairly common occurrence). If there are any concerns with this, then it sounds like we need to update the guidance/FAQs for the LQA queue. Until then, I'll consider this the appropriate and expected handling. Thank you for your diligence in addressing my ambivalence. — Jeremy Caney 13 secs ago
I agree if the duplicate answers should be handled in LQA queue then the guidelines would need to be updated. Somewhat related there is a feature-request How about adding a "duplicate answer" manual flag type? which has an answer that proposes a way to implement either a separate duplicated answers queue or somehow integrate it into LQA. — Henry Ecker 52 secs ago
4 hours later…
5:32 AM
5:57 AM
6:19 AM
How is that duplicate supposed to apply for this question? It is at best part of an answer in itself ("people are supposed to learn it via that meta") but it does not care at all about how users are exposed to it. — MisterMiyagi 31 secs ago
2 hours later…
8:32 AM
To answer your first comment: The answer to the question "Is it possible to ask 'should I bother myself with going back to reproduce an error?'" (exaggeration intended) is "not on any SE site". This is purely opinion based. On the other hand, if you just go on and find a MRE for this issue, this is a different matter. You could first ask what happened, how to fix it, and/or is it a bug in matplotlib. Once again, you can always ask questions that are not necessarily on-topic in chat (read the rules first) and package-specific communities (don't know of any specific for matplotlib) — Tomerikoo 40 secs ago
@uhoh Regarding the second comment, seems like a good question to me. Don't get too bothered with downvotes. Sadly, they sometimes have more reasons then their intended ones. Take a look at my profile and see if you agree with the scores of my first two questions... I got angry at first, I just stopped caring. Back to your question, I'm not an expert in profiling, Mac and other things in your question so it seems to me like again a MRE is missing. But it might not be the case. Just for the record, I didn't downvote your first question as it seemed interesting, just VTC as I explained above — Tomerikoo 23 secs ago
9:02 AM
Then what would be the point in editing that answer when you remove the only information it had, the 404 link, and replace it with code which is not coming from the link? In my opinion that edit is quite dodgy. It adds code and states a website as a source which can't be the source, because it doesn't exist anymore. So the answer shouldn't be undeleted and if you still want to provide that code as an answer, then you should do that in a new answer post. If you want to name a source there as well, please make sure the link actually works. — Tom 16 secs ago
9:29 AM
You don't. It's been a known "problem" that Stack Overflow likes a lot of white space around their pages. — Larnu 39 secs ago
You can easily use 100% of your browser's width by making your window narrower. No need to thank me for this power-user tip. — yivi 59 secs ago
@JörgWMittag I imagine there's some significant sampling bias here because you would never notice the ones that did think to reduce the size of the code - they just look like someone with a normal question. Essentially you've said "when I think of all the users that observably did X, it turns out a lot of them did X" :) — Kemp 41 secs ago
1 hour later…
11:04 AM
But you might send your car mechanic a picture of your car, asking them what's wrong (in order to fix it yourself), which might be easier than bringing the car to the mechanic. — mkrieger1 39 secs ago
11:14 AM
@mkrieger1 How do you know which part of the car to send them? I'm sure if I sent a picture of my car to a mechanic asking them to tell me what's wrong with it they would tell me in no uncertain terms to get lost. — user692942 1 min ago
@mkrieger1 Lets say that the problem is that the starter engine is dead. You send a picture of your whole car. Not helpful. Or if you realize that it's the starter engine, you send a picture of that, where no visible damage can be seen. Not helpful either. Or even if it is - that won't fix it. After spending a significant amount of inane texting back and forth, taking up the mechanic's time, you realize that you should just have brought them the car to begin with. — Lundin 43 secs ago
Also unlike SO, professional car mechanics are probably not willing to act as some interactive DIY tutorial. — Lundin 17 secs ago
@SylvesterKruin I'm not reading "Stack Overflow is for professional and enthusiast programmers" as "Don't post images of code". I'm reading it as "Stack Overflow is not for everyone". Are some still going to? Sure. Should we cater specifically for them? Nah. — MisterMiyagi 1 min ago
@mkrieger1 Well how about all those years you go to school and whenever you run into a problem, you either bring your textbook and notes to the teacher or have them to come over to help you. You don't send them a picture of the book and text them... If one doesn't understand why and still somehow made it through school and now consider picking up programming... well, programming might not be for them. — Lundin 33 secs ago
11:35 AM
To be fair, it wasn't until I stumbled across it in the comments of someone else's badly formatted question that I found out the "How to ask" page even existed. Granted; it should be common sense that images are essentially useless when asking about code — Andrew Corrigan 8 secs ago
11:57 AM
Did the welcome email have the words 'DON'T PANIC' in large, friendly letters? — Tadeusz Kopec 1 min ago
This feedback might be a little late :D But I quite like how LinkedIn does it. — Rob Grant 22 secs ago
12:14 PM
@mkrieger1 at this point, it's clear that SO does not want to introduce any more quality control and nobody can stop the ever-increasing influx of users who couldn't care less about quality, thus all we can do is either laugh or rage. I personally choose a bit of both. — l4mpi 56 secs ago
1:12 PM
@Marco Bonelli: It is a spam, etc. fighting feature (now only on high-traffic sites like Stack Overflow and Super User). — Peter Mortensen 19 secs ago
1) You could also mention pinging the editor again and asking them directly to review their edit. 2) It's worth mentioning that SOCVR has rules about asking for action on posts that one is involved with. While this particular instance may, or may not, be within the rules, it's a good idea to not give the impression that SOCVR can be used to handle issues with one's own actions. — cigien 1 min ago
@cigien You can't ping them unless they've left a comment or such below the post. — Lundin 22 secs ago
An automatic suspension when posting an image of code seems quite excessive to me. Wouldn't it make more sense to just block users from posting images in the first place? — cigien 48 secs ago
Yeah, that's certainly possible. There's no mechanism to ensure that a user actually responds to a ping :) But they will get notified, and in cases where there's a simple typo like the one in the OP's question, I expect any reasonable editor would correct it, even if they don't choose to respond. — cigien 1 min ago
Stack Overflow isn't a Forum; people don't discussion people's answers, and things like "Thank you" comments are often flagged as "No Longer Needed" and removed. The main method for people to demonstrate they agree (or disagree) with an answer, as feel it is(n't) useful/help, is via the voting mechanic. — Larnu 19 secs ago
@cigien I believe that instead of blocking a user from posting an image of code, it would be better to just block the user entirely. Not neccessarily for life, but a nice 3 month timeout might have a chance of getting the user to think before posting. But of course this has no chance of being implemented anyways - if the issue ever gets big enough to get attention from SO management, their reaction will probably be to call us unwelcoming for rejecting images and recommend we all use OCR tools instead... — l4mpi 25 secs ago
I applied for my current job through Stackoverflow jobs. Very sad to see it go :( — Vahid Amiri 9 secs ago
"Stack Overflow is for professional and enthusiast programmers": do you seriously expect people who are stuck on a programming problem to think "Hey, I need help and here there are people who can help me, but since I'm neither a professional nor an enthusiast I'll move to another site"? — Fabio says Reinstate Monica 15 secs ago
@JeremyCaney I see it as a level below: may. Someone may cross reference libraries while reviewing, but it's not expected and not encouraged. — Braiam 21 secs ago
@FabiosaysReinstateMonica I expect them to know that the thing they are having trouble typing correctly is text. That really doesn't seem like much considering what else is expected. — MisterMiyagi 1 min ago
2:05 PM
@FabiosaysReinstateMonica I expect them to realise the thing they are trying to write is text. That really does not seem outlandish compared to what else is expected of them. — MisterMiyagi 56 secs ago
2:19 PM
Just to note: the link in the answer is broken, but the article does still exist: logaretm.com/blog/forcing-recomputation-of-computed-properties — Gimby 35 secs ago
Perhaps the tour could contain a list of common mistakes so that people could at least be aware that it is a mistake. The learning part remains their own responsibility, there is only so much that can be crammed into the tour before it becomes TL;DR. — Gimby 56 secs ago
I sampled the 20 newest question (out of 22,124,504 questions) today at about 2022-01-17T133000Z+0. It wasn't that bad. 3 out of the 20 had images. 2 out of 3 seemed justified (perhaps one borderline with red squiggles from an IDE). One question had an image as code (external link to PNG - by 1 rep user). Though a minimum sample size of 50 or 100 would probably be more appropriate. — Peter Mortensen 30 secs ago
@user1580348 The header looks weird, those icons for notifications and reputation shouldn't overlap. Do you have other addons active or a strange zoom setting? And please make sure the browser you're using is one of the supported ones: stackoverflow.com/help/browser-support — Tom 1 min ago
3:12 PM
@user1580348 Good to know. When adding !important to the first setting (see my update), when it works for both "left column" settings. — Tom 45 secs ago
Anyone else getting triggered by the +865 covering up the number of responses the OP has? 🙃 — Larnu 11 secs ago
@Larnu Not me :D. I have a custom header style which replaces the notification and reputation numbers with a small dot/point, similar to the review queue point. — Tom 6 secs ago
3:47 PM
It is possible to detect images of data or code and prompt the user to copy/paste instead. I made a meta post on it a year ago demonstrating it. Interestingly a lot of the images come from people with plenty of rep. meta.stackexchange.com/questions/358441/… — Chris 20 secs ago
@Larnu I've posted a custom Styling to reduce the header size. That also replaces those numbers with small dots, similar to the review queue notification marker. You can find that here if you're interested: What time is it? It's time for another question about the new navbar! (compromise edition) — Tom 35 secs ago
1 hour later…
4:49 PM
I don't feel this is a very useful answer; it doesn't actually solve anything. This answer feels like it's saying "we don't have to teach them, they should just know". Well... the problem is clearly that they don't know, so unless we just want to deal with it and keep complaining, we should find a good way to instruct the ones that don't know, otherwise they'll just keep on not knowing. — zcoop98 12 secs ago
5:24 PM
@zcoop98 I feel it's more like "if we fix it we still won't stop complaining - because they still won't understand what is actually needed". — MisterMiyagi 33 secs ago
I know of a userscript that's in the ballpark to this functionality called Activity Indicator, but it unfortunately doesn't track viewed status. — zcoop98 1 min ago
pssst... I accept feature requests :) Cannot guarantee an ETA, but likely sooner than 6 to 8 time units — Oleg Valter 46 secs ago
I have a freind that stopped posting on youtube because of all the putdowns he received although he has been auditioned by Sony. Some people get a kick out of invalidating others. There are no stupid questions. making snerd remarks to someone who is seeking help is vain and narcissistic. i post questions as a last resort here because of the arrogance. It's just a fact of human nature that people feel strong putting others down. It doesnt show strength, it shows ignorance. — uberdave 1 min ago
1 hour later…
6:57 PM
That's why we have the code-formatting tips on the right of the question-writing page. — Sylvester Kruin 30 secs ago
New users don't bother reading, they're on site to post question and they choose better way for them to do so — Kos 20 secs ago
This is certainly the case. The first time I asked a question here (a while ago; using my old, now-deleted account), I pasted in code but it looked truly awful. I was considering posting an image but then I remembered triple back-ticks like GitHub had. Even more evidence: during my very short tenure here on SO (3 months!) I've seen a great many questions by new users where the code looked plain horrid. — richardec 1 min ago
@KevinB the interaction flow may be different, like with the closure votes. The "OK" / "Cancel" popups are universally understood as "are you sure?", and since I clicked "Delete", I know (or I expect that I know) what I'm confirming. In my opinion, using both the same link title and a confirmation mechanism for opposite things is confusing. — bereal 49 secs ago
@KevinB Having "Delete" and "Retract" on button instead of OK would be huge improvement. — Dalija Prasnikar 1 min ago
Absolutely, or maybe a proper UI with a button like "Retract (you won't be able to vote again)" (and not the current confirm where pressing space - which I often do reflexively - will result in the action being taken) — CertainPerformance 33 secs ago
7:50 PM
8:10 PM
@richardec not text, but code which simply doesn't pastes with formatting, plus indentation issues may prevent code from displayed properly; screenshots nowadays are made with one hotkey - fast and obviously convenient for new askers — Kos 11 secs ago
8:50 PM
@MisterMiyagi Part of the problem is that some new users still have issues formatting code and taking a screenshot becomes the easier thing to do. — BSMP 19 secs ago
My related feature request: Raise the amount of reputation needed to stop seeing the warning on the image upload dialog. — BSMP 16 secs ago
9:19 PM
@OlegValter I might throw one your way soon, I noticed today that the script doesn't apply to meta sites, which is something I'd find really useful! That'd be an easy adjustment to make too. — zcoop98 59 secs ago
9:47 PM
If you removed the second half of your post, it'd probably stand a chance at sticking around. however, given the content of it, i wouldn't expect you to care, ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ — Kevin B 9 secs ago
@KevinB You're right, I don't care. And it needs to be shouted from the rooftops. — Kevin Krumwiede 15 secs ago
We have tag synonyms for this purpose. If tags are synonymized, then the questions tagged with the duplicate tag will become tagged with the other over time, and the old tag will point to the new one. — zcoop98 1 min ago
Considering that both the descriptions for [project-calico] and [calico] refer to it as "Project Calico", perhaps [calico] should be a synonym of [project-calico] instead. — Larnu 49 secs ago
There is also
calico-project
. This is a matter that can largely be handled by editing-out redundant tags. — Adrian Mole 27 secs agoDid they ask about salary in the 2020 and 2021 surveys? I know the survey question sets have been pretty wacky the last couple years, so they may have just not included that info. — TylerH 39 secs ago
@Larnu But I see that tag on the same questions as the tag(s) under discussion. Editing is what is required. — Adrian Mole 44 secs ago
I have removed the [calico-project] from the 2 questions that misuse it, @AdrianMole . — Larnu 31 secs ago
Not reallly, @AdrianMole . People mistag [sql-server] all the time because they are using MySQL [Server]. There's little we can do about the (lack of) effort people use when reading the tag excerpt when they spam said tags (the 2 questions I just editted had [calico], [calico-project], and [project-calico] all tagged, demonstrating it was just tag spam). — Larnu 1 min ago
This has been asked [several][meta.stackexchange.com/questions/137408/… [times][meta.stackexchange.com/questions/5070/… [before][meta.stackexchange.com/questions/23580/…, but those questions were all on the "old" MetaStackOverflow and have hence been relocated to MetaStackExchange. — Edward 20 secs ago
Do you not also downvote the content you are trying to delete? That should serve as a visual cue that you've already visited it. If not, hovering over the delete option will tell you whether you've already voted or not via a tooltip. You should probably do both of these any time you think a post should be deleted. That being said, yes it would be nice for them to change the "Delete" link verbiage to "Retract" or something else (not "Undelete, because that's confusing with a deleted post you want to undelete). — TylerH 50 secs ago
@zcoop98 thanks for the edit; I'm not sure why we should remain silent about silent downvotes in the main site, perhaps SO still thinks these are okay? — uhoh 56 secs ago
my issue with it was there was always such a large number of smaller businesses that never used it. Was it due to lack of discoverability by smaller businesses? cost? For us it was cost. Just priced right out of the equation, even though there were no other businesses in the area advertising. I wanted SO jobs to work, but it never worked for us, — Kevin B 1 min ago
I read the project and have to wonder: it's really on topic? That project is squarely with the system admin crowd. — Braiam 51 secs ago
10:47 PM
It wasn't the OP that started the bounty on that question, if we're talking about this one. — Larnu 50 secs ago
That's just the reality of how SO works. Questions, just like answers, are posted by users who have no obligation to stick around or participate past earning reputation. It's unfortunate that you sunk time into someone who went absent, but there's really nothing that can be done about that. If the user is absent, no amount of penalty will make them return. — Kevin B 52 secs ago
Bounty is meant to attract answers and views. Answers are posted not for the sole benefit of the asker, but more importantly for future readers. As long as you were able to find that question and post a useful solution, you can be happy with the outcome, even if you don't receive the bounty. — Dharman 1 min ago
11:47 PM
The bounty system has automatic awarding precisely to prevent this kind of incident. So it's up to you to create an answer that's good enough to qualify for the automatic award. — Robert Longson 1 min ago
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