1:02 AM
The "default" (which would be more precisely described as "random") highlighter would be a pretty significant downgrade for those posts IMO. I'd prefer TS being highlighted as JS for all TS questions (like you said, the difference isn't that much) than to have a big chunk of TS questions receive completely inaccurate highlighting. Still hoping they'll revisit an easy fix to this... — CertainPerformance 27 secs ago
@OlegValteriswithUkraine I am a SME, but the automatic warning from the site when I moved to delete the question gave me pause. — Karl Knechtel 58 secs ago
1:15 AM
In the first comment you mentioned deferring because you aren't a SME. There are other reasons, to be deferential too. I wasn't particularly trying to ping you so much as just indicate the flow of the discussion, sorry. — Karl Knechtel 1 min ago
@KarlKnechtel ah, ok, I just wasn't sure what this was about :) [feel free to NLN on read] — Oleg Valter is with Ukraine 1 min ago
1:55 AM
Firstly, thank you for your response. How would you suggest I approach explaining where and how I have searched? As for the second, I will fix that now. — Triangle4 56 secs ago
Take a look at this question: stackoverflow.com/questions/72336750/…. This shows certain approaches that the OP has taken. I would also suggest doing something like this: "I have tried example.com/tutorial, but that didn't work because that was referencing a depreciated version of the framework I'm using." Describe a few sources that you have seen and why they didn't work - that will also help others because it will reduce the chances of an answer that has already been tried. — Mr Developer 1 min ago
2:17 AM
It is a bit unclear to me why you think you should replace the question with another one like you did in the linked question. You're supposed to improve existing questions, not replace it with other ones to circumvent a question ban. — Tom 12 secs ago
Personally, I don't really see the harm in replacing an old question that had no comments, votes, or answers. — Ryan M ♦ 39 secs ago
I would love to provide more to those who might wish to help, however: If you search "Unable to find an entry point named" in DLL "net6.0" You get two pages. Now being a data analyst at my firm, it is my job to know how to quickly ascertain information from the web. I have to, or I wouldn't be employed. I get it, no one knows that, but if there is no research to provide, how can I provide it? And who decides if I did enough research? No one on the web has encountered this error in dotnet 6. Asking this question was VALID and necessary. There is no research to supply. — Triangle4 18 secs ago
That said, I suspect that's the reason for the downvotes - many people don't like that. — Ryan M ♦ 58 secs ago
Otherwise, I don't see anything immediately apparent that's wrong with it - but I'm not a subject matter expert. It is possible that there's something apparent to subject matter experts that is wrong with it. — Ryan M ♦ 17 secs ago
@RyanM I updated my question to include dates, to clarify the question. I would have expected both technologies to have been included in the developer survey perhaps as far back as 2018. And since Gatsby is less popular than Next.js, the fact that Gatsby is present in the survey and Next.js is not...just seems very strange indeed. — Brent Arias 1 min ago
Right now, it is unclear what you want to discuss here with the community in this discussion post. Please feel free to edit the post to clarify what you'd like to discuss (in particular, what question do you want answered?). — Ryan M ♦ 15 secs ago
Do you think that it is an appropriate use of the downvote button, to downvote a question whose answer could both benefit the community, resolve a much needed problem? Or do you think maybe the community is more focused on politics rather than actually fostering an environment that promotes a community of scientific growth and excellence? It is clear that I went out of my way to ask a question that was beautifully laid out, and followed the rules. This is a clear example of what I said in my last meta post, about this being a lot like the lord of the flies. — Triangle4 1 min ago
It is ok, I will close my account, and create a new one. What a waste. I dont understand how that is any better than me doing this... Question bans dont make any sense. — Triangle4 32 secs ago
I have requested a deletion of my account. Understand ryan, that I clearly know how to ask, and answer questions. So all this does, is make me frustrated, and need to recreate my account. I doesnt stop the user from asking bad questions. They just create new accounts and do it again. Except in my case, I clearly am trying to do good, I am clearly trying to ask solid questions, and I am clearly trying to help grow a community that honestly I am not sure deserves my energy. — Triangle4 32 secs ago
"I clearly am trying to do good" ... oh, that is why you now circumvent the question ban a second way? You're a real good boy, indeed. — Tom 32 secs ago
And regarding your comment Tom: Lets say I ask 5 questions that are dumb. There is no way to revive them. 1 + 2. Its 3. Everyone knows it, so there is no way to revive that question. Now, I have 10 questions. My most recent questions were well received. My deleted ones were from when I understood the site less well. But a question ban occurs after 10 questions have been asked and 1 year has passed. I cannot recover from that. I am left with no choices. So I got creative, and revived a question that was not active. This is not a crime, so thats why I did it. It was logical. — Triangle4 19 secs ago
I have to remind the esteemed commenters to avoid getting personal, please, this is borderline a breach of CoC [this is in reference to a now deleted comment]. @Triangle4, please note that the ban is fully automatic - we cannot influence it in any way. It is also inherited, so unless you go out of your way to avoid it (which will constitute abuse of the system and likely to incur grave consequences if/when discovered), it will be applied to the newly created account. — Oleg Valter is with Ukraine 19 secs ago
So toxic. How is it that you foster a community of such toxicity? I feel like I am in a room full of children and I am the only adult ( and Ryan, you seem to get it.) — Triangle4 58 secs ago
You dont have my name, you have an old email I dont use anymore. No one will discover it, and I deserve a fresh start. I am not trying to screw anyone over here, I am just looking for some fairness, which there clearly isn't any of. — Triangle4 51 secs ago
3:20 AM
Again, Oleg, an example of toxicity here. I deleted a comment because I did not approve of it. And yet, you brought it up, as ammunition. If I deleted it, I did so because I personally felt that it was not applicable, or not quality. So in deleting it, I already deemed it unnecessary. For you to bring it up, demonstrates that you are more interested in politics, than you are in quality communication. — Triangle4 56 secs ago
Thanks, yeah that was why I did. I posted it and then a few minutes later I realized it was not a good question and deleted it. At the time I thought deleted questions were just gone. I know better now. I Know right?? I did not want to put the research section either, but someone mentioned that it was likely getting several down votes because I didnt supply research. I thought It was kind of self explainatory... but with 4 downvotes... Anyway, I don't think I can use stack over flow anymore. I am brought to tears because every time I reach out for help I end up with downvotes. — Triangle4 51 secs ago
I think we really need a website that cares about helping people with their code, and so I just bought a website and I am going to build it. I hope that I can make something good, that will help people, because its clear that I as a developer, I am developing questions improperly and its stopping me from moving forward with my problems. — Triangle4 28 secs ago
I understand how it can be frustrating to receive downvotes on something where you've actually taken the time to put in effort, but please understand that downvotes are not meant to be personal attacks, so you really shouldn't take them personally. 4 downvotes means that 4 random people on the Internet didn't like what you posted or didn't think it was good enough. It is my firm belief that that should not be enough to bring you to tears. — Cody Gray ♦ 23 secs ago
But they are personal attacks cody. Downvotes lead to a disconnection from a community we need to help us grow. — Triangle4 47 secs ago
I have a question ban, I am developer and good one. I need to be able to connect with my peers, and when it becomes about stylization over content, (which I agree needs moderation, but not to the extent that people can no longer participate), then we are left helpless, needing a solution. There is clearly a need for a community that can accept questions, without banning people when they arent perfect. I am going to make that community. And I hope, I just hope, that others will be helped by it, and not left feeling helpless when they need help, like I do here. — Triangle4 1 min ago
Downvotes are not personal attacks any more than upvotes are personal... whatever the opposite of an attack is. Upvotes are a sign of agreement and approval; they suggest that the content is useful, clear, and a valuable contribution to Stack Overflow's knowledge base. Downvotes are the opposite. You should not be looking to this website (or probably any other, but definitely not this one) to provide for your personal growth or personal connections. That's not what this site is for. SO is like Wikipedia, except that it's in the form of bite-sized questions and answers, not long-form articles — Cody Gray ♦ 44 secs ago
I am not looking for personal connections Cody, nor have I anywhere Implied that. And this website is absolutely for personal growth. Any time you gain knowledge, you grow. When you ask a question, and you receive a valid answer, you grow. Your knowledge expands. — Triangle4 38 secs ago
"I need to be able to connect with my peers," is where you implied it, I read it the same way as Cody appears to have, even if that wasn't your intention. — Nick stands with Ukraine 1 min ago
I agree that the negative reception of your question was puzzling and, I think, unjustified. But drawing broader conclusions from that just doesn't follow. Getting a question downvoted doesn't mean you're a bad developer. I have had, and still continue to get, questions downvoted that I don't think have obvious quality issues (see, for example, this one). It isn't a commentary on me as a person or a developer. You said "I need to be able to connect with my peers"…how is that not looking for a personal connection? — Cody Gray ♦ 1 min ago
I think you misunderstand the use of the word community. We here are a community, and as developers, we depend on each other to help each other grow, through the sharing of knowledge through questions and answers. This makes us a community. — Triangle4 30 secs ago
We are not here as a community. We are here as individuals contributing to a knowledge base. As stated in the tour, we are trying to build a high-quality library of answers to questions about programming. What you seem to be searching for is a social network for developers. While that might be valuable (I'm personally not interested), it definitely isn't what Stack Overflow is or is meant to be. You can certainly learn things from this site, and those things might help you grow as a person and/or a developer, but that's not the site's mission. — Cody Gray ♦ 45 secs ago
This is not a site for that, any more than a museum is a site for archaeologists to connect with their peers or a library is a place for pet-lovers to connect with other pet lovers. — Cody Gray ♦ 1 min ago
stackoverflow.com Go to the homepage of stack overflow. In the title you will see StackOverflow - Where developers Learn, Share, and Build careers. That is the definition of a community. — Triangle4 21 secs ago
Learning and sharing refers to reading, researching, asking and answering questions. Build careers is about Jobs... which is effectively dead. A community, but not a "community". — Nick stands with Ukraine 1 min ago
stackoverflow.com/collectives Where stackoverflow explicitly tries to promote community growth. — Triangle4 55 secs ago
Yes, there is a lot of misinformation that the marketing department has placed on the home page. I've complained about that numerous times before. It is doing a severe disservice by improperly setting users' expectations. You appear to have been the latest victim. The fact that the people who come to this site are developers is merely coincidental, as is the fact that by contributing to this knowledge base, we share information with each other. This is not a social networking site. It is not a community. It is a Q&A site. If you want community, you should look elsewhere from here. — Cody Gray ♦ 1 min ago
Collectives also FWIW are nothing to do with community, they're just groups of related tags bundled together and "owned" by some sponsor. Merely a filing cabinet of sorts. — Nick stands with Ukraine 1 min ago
In my city, this is how we talk, and I would appreciate it if you would refrain from putting words in my mouth. — Triangle4 57 secs ago
When you're talking with people internationally you need to understand that not everybody will talk the same way as you, nor interpret things the way you necessarily intend them to. You certainly shouldn't assume malice or people "putting words in your mouth" simply because they're reading something differently to how you expected. Don't try to be elegant, try to be clear. — Nick stands with Ukraine 30 secs ago
What you call "elegant" is what I call "misleading". It sets expectations that this is some kind of community where people care about other people. It isn't; we don't. This is strictly a question and answer site; the only things we care about are questions and answers (i.e., content). By using flowery language to describe some potential consequences of contributing here, it does a very real disservice to new users who don't properly understand our model by creating improper expectations. This, in turn, leads to a lot of frustration when they start receiving downvotes. — Cody Gray ♦ 25 secs ago
This chit chat here, this exchange of information... This is community. This is discussion, that breeds a better understanding. If you dont understand that, then now you do. This IS community. Responding is community. You are chatting, discussing, debating. Its a community. Regardless of whether you want to call it that. — Triangle4 28 secs ago
This is the Meta site. Discussion and exchange of information is what we do here, in order to help support the people who are trying to use the main site. What we are doing here would be completely inappropriate on the main Stack Overflow site. That's why Meta was created. I am, as a moderator, willing to help you to the best of my ability, both to understand how SO was meant to work and to help you figure out how to benefit from it, b/c I do think it's an amazing resource. Meta works very much like a support/help desk. The main site isn't like that; treating it that way will turn out poorly. — Cody Gray ♦ 28 secs ago
@Triangle4 Re: misinformation, yes, it's misinformation and misleading. The community (read: the core users and ex-staff who really care about SO) has put their thoughts on here: Revisiting our logged-out homepage. See how they were against this forced change. — Andrew T. 24 secs ago
4:47 AM
It is the meta site, and yet I challenge you to find one stackoverflow post where people don't dicsuss like a community in the comments. Additionally you yourself called it a forum. The Websters Dictionary Definition of a forum is merriam-webster.com/dictionary/forum exactly what I am saying. And thirdly, there is nothing in these comments that would indicate that anyone has a difficulty understanding the English language. Everyone here is clearly capable of conveying ideas and concepts in english. So what you are demonstrating, is a desire to attack everything I say. — Triangle4 29 secs ago
I just have to reiterate, that community is what it is. It does not matter whether you personal agree with the definition of it, anymore than if you disagree that we need oxygen to breathe. Community is what it is. And stack overflow, regardless of what fancy term someone wants to attribute to it, is a community. We all discuss and share information. — Triangle4 1 min ago
Stackoverflow exists as a part of a major community. We are a community of developers, NOT THOSE OF US ON STACK OVERFLOW, all developers in the world are a community. We talk about science, we refer to it as the scientific community. In the workplace, when we talk about computer science, we refer to it as a the community. We. Are. The community. All of us. Stackoverflow exists, whether by intention or not, to serve that community as a library of questions and answers. As a side effect, the medium for precipitating that communication is other members of that community. — Triangle4 8 secs ago
My question, helped that community, and down voting it for petty reasons as outlined above, is poor stewardship of said information. Period. Like me or not, that question needs an answer. And its selfish of anyone to deprive future answer seekers the opportunity to find that answer. That is why stackoverflow exists. So politics should not stand in the way of successfully completing the mission of stackoverflow. I am reading this back and am blown away, because I am upset with how I my question was received, and yet I am defending the very foundation of what stackoverflow stands for. — Triangle4 58 secs ago
@Triangle4 Forums are for open discussion or expression. The only place true open discussion can occur here is in chat, not on SO itself. And expression is poorly defined. Thus, not a forum by the definition you've given. SO is only a community by definition in that we share a common interest (programming) but it's not possible to "be part of the community" that you appear to want it to be as that form of community doesn't exist here. Hence why I said above that it's a community, but not a "community". — Nick stands with Ukraine 57 secs ago
Again nick, you are splitting hairs. Missing the point. You disputing because you don't have an answer to the question and want someone to argue with. I have said my piece. I have initiated the deletion of my account, and this time tomorrow, you are all on your own. Have a good night :) — Triangle4 29 secs ago
@Triangle4
I challenge you to find one stackoverflow post where people don't dicsuss like a community in the comments
Find one post on SO where this is true, and it won't be longer after that. Discussions like that are, for good reason, usually deleted or moved to chat. Discussions of that kind are not allowed on the main site. — Daedalus 21 secs agoOur semantic disagreements aside, we will not be permitting you to delete your account, given that your expressed intention is to start over again with another account. As noted in my answer, that is breaking the rules on this site, and it is the job of moderators not to allow that. — Cody Gray ♦ 1 min ago
@Triangle4 If I'm missing your point, you're clearly not doing a good job of explaining it because all I see is someone trying to fit SO into a box and trying to tell others what it's meant to be without actually knowing what it's meant to be... — Nick stands with Ukraine 1 min ago
5:14 AM
Well Cody, be that as it may, I already said that I wasn't creating a new account as I was informed it was not allowed. And Its the law in canada, you cannot retain my information if I ask for it to be deleted. And thirdly, how does preventing me from creating an account stop me from using another email? I fail to see what your plan is here other than upsetting me. Which you are clearly trying to do. — Triangle4 13 secs ago
I have no intention of upsetting you, but merely to enforce the rules of this platform, which remain true regardless of which country you are accessing the site from. If you seek to be forgotten, you wouldn't be creating a new account. If you don't want to create a new account, then you have no need of deleting this one, so there's no further action that needs to be taken. Best wishes to you. — Cody Gray ♦ 5 secs ago
You are right I come across entitled. I apologize for that. I don't deserve another chance. My questions are garbage. You are right, If you are missing the point it must be my fault. I am going to have to work on improving myself a bit I guess. If this many people disagree with me, I realize it must be me that is the issue. So I will remove my comments and apologize for offending anyone... I guess its not a community, which I acknowledge now, so I dont need to apologize. So many things to consider. — Triangle4 1 min ago
And you know what, I think I have been doing that too. We all read things too quickly and miss the authors intent. — Triangle4 34 secs ago
Thank you all for your efforts. I apologize for reopening a deleted question. I Searched policy before doing so and did not find a reason why I could not, which is why I did it. After I found out it was against policy I deleted it and someone reopened it. I am trying to do a good job here, and get an answer. That's all I want. Just an answer. Not a community. I just want answers when I have a problem. I am sorry for offending you all, I never intended to. I clearly need to work on myself, and so I will do that. Thank you all for the time you invested in this. Cheers. — Triangle4 1 min ago
I just wanted to say one last thing. If were not a community, we should really remove the terminology from community on the site. I mean I just got ripped a new one for calling stack a community... and yet: ibb.co/80RfD4f This picture shows that when we change our profile, its called a community, by the developers who made it. So if we want people like me to stop treating it that way, can we please stop calling it that throughout the site? — Andrew stands with Ukraine 45 secs ago
And I am not trying to be rude by writing that, I hope you dont take it that way. I am saying it as nicely as I can and as well meaning as I can. :) — Andrew stands with Ukraine 7 secs ago
And nick, good username. Our household also stands with ukraine. Not trying to build a community by saying that. Just pointing it out — Andrew stands with Ukraine 1 min ago
That’s an entirely different question. The question the author is asking about doesn’t have the relevant information from that question contained in the body — Security Hound 23 secs ago
6:32 AM
While it would be nice, brief testing indicates the problems mentioned in the answer below definitely affect questions. I tried briefly assigning
lang-typescript
as the default for typscript. The posts I check with both typescript and javascript started using Go syntax highlighting, which seemed substantially more disruptive than using lang-js
, which is at least closer. It's a sad statement that the syntax highlighting is still so poorly handled 2 years after the switch to highlight.js. Hopefully, SE will actually fix things. — Makyen ♦ 1 min ago
2 hours later…
8:19 AM
What is "no content reputation"? Why should users earn reputation for doing/contributing nothing? And, more broadly, what is the advantage of splitting reputation out into different categories when all reputation really measures is the extent of one's engagement with the site? Why is it materially different that that engagement has been in the form of contributing questions versus contributing answers? — Cody Gray ♦ 1 min ago
@Cody Gray It could be called
Site Support Reputation
or Reviewer Reputation
. I am sure it can be found an appropriate name which will be good for everyone. If it is fair I think that most people would agree. However giving points of reputation for no content contribution could be seen as an insult to existing users who have contributed in the past. — Panagiotis Bougioukos 22 secs agoA high scored one (but only covering a particular aspect) is Make the "must be accompanied by code" warning more direct — Peter Mortensen 40 secs ago
@TylerH You know... I'm trying to clarify your misunderstanding out of courtesy, but it's not like I have to. I said what I said; other people already agreed / found it useful. It doesn't really matter whether you in particular refuse to "buy" that somebody could read only part of a post and miss another part :shrug: So... good day, I guess. — walen 1 min ago
What does "mod dropdown" refer to? The new editor? What is "mod"? "Modification"? "Moderator"? — Peter Mortensen 1 min ago
9:27 AM
But how would they know what to do? Do they see more than "Needs details or clarity - This question should include more details and clarify the problem.". Aren't they left in the dark? — Peter Mortensen 1 min ago
there arent edit queues for each tag... SO gets a lot of questions. There is one queue for the site. So you may not see suggested edits in your tag but they exist for others — Suraj Rao 57 secs ago
"Why is the edit queue always full?" In my opinion, the short answer: too many people submit low quality edits and not enough people (myself including) go through the review queue (peer reviewing low quality edits over and over again can be a real motivation killer). — Larnu 33 secs ago
9:44 AM
@SurajRao Oh okay, I didn't know that. But i guess it makes sense - especially for tags with a smaller audience. — eDonkey 48 secs ago
It is incomprehensible near "does not matter, is not not that filter active". — Peter Mortensen 1 min ago
@Larnu Well that's understandable and I respect and appreciate the people who use their time to review these posts, as i think (or guess) it isn't the most fulfilling work to do. But as I just read, it isn't a tag specific but a general problem that Stack Overflow is facing. — eDonkey 24 secs ago
As mentioned, @eDonkey , the edit queue is site wide not tag; if there were (say) 500 pending edits and every single one were on a post tagged [python] then those when < 2,000 reputation could not submit an edit on anything; regardless of the post type or its tags. — Larnu 11 secs ago
Another remark is that some of the main ML packages (at least tensorflow and lightgbm) now route to SO by default - on top of answering questions on their github. It might not be entirely clear for the users where to post their questions. Might be worth to take that into account in any decision. And maybe to get in touch with them. — lcrmorin 36 secs ago
10:40 AM
It could also maybe be clearer about not writing "I'm having the same problem" in there, judging by the number of those I delete every day. On the other hand, I suspect approximately none of them have read the How to Answer page. — Ryan M ♦ 50 secs ago
@RyanM I agree with both arguments. Regarding the first: the only NAA-related guidance is about thank-you and link-only (in a way...). It should definitely be clearer to all other kinds of NAA (there actually is a paragraph about Have the same problem? which actually encourages to post partial answers...). Regarding the second, as I said I'm sure most users don't read the page. But I want to believe that at least some will bother to have a quick look if someone directly links them to it... — Tomerikoo 1 min ago
Oh, definitely don't interpret that as an argument against this: I'm all for it. — Ryan M ♦ 8 secs ago
11:12 AM
@Andrew stands with Ukraine: It doesn't say that. It says "Stack Overflow - Where Developers Learn, Share, & Build Careers" — Peter Mortensen 1 min ago
Just to clarify, is this about an answer that is actually NAA, or also including personal thought like "I'm not sure I understand what you mean..." but then explains what the answerer thought in detail. While the former is certainly wrong, the latter is debatable, though it might still be removable as fluff. — Andrew T. 34 secs ago
@Andrew stands with Ukraine: Re "I just bought a website": That sounds exciting. Breaking new ground is due (and not just cloning the known). What is the domain? Where can we follow the progress, incl. the design decisions (e.g., it is easy to fall into the forum trap and not design for Eternal September)? On Discourse? Twitter? A blog? (Not rhetorical questions.) — Peter Mortensen 1 min ago
@AndrewT. To clarify (please let me know if this should be edited in the question), the answer prefaced with "I'm not sure" and a few questions, and then went on with something like "Anyway you should do..." and an attempt of an answer based on what the user understood the question was. I eventually edited out the preface with the questions and left the attempt and commented on the answer as I mentioned above — Tomerikoo 40 secs ago
It refers to the default syntax highlighting selector, visible on the tag info page for moderators, @Peter. Henry links to rene's MSE bug report in the same sentence to provide context. There's a screenshot of it at the of that question. — Cody Gray ♦ 44 secs ago
A bit unrelated directly to the question asked here, but this phrase is really wrong (although your intentions are probably good) - "Even though a lot of questions there aren't programming related, I think it's important that the questions still get answered, as a lot of people don't know the Stack Exchange Network and thus only post their questions here". Just because people don't know the SE network doesn't mean we should keep off-topic questions. If there is another, more suitable site, you should direct those users to it and flag/close the questions as off-topic - not answer them... — Tomerikoo 1 min ago
In fact, as @Tomerikoo noted, you've nearly answered your own question. The reason why the suggested edit queue is always full is because people are submitting edits to blatantly off-topic questions when they should be simply flagging them to be closed. Off-topic questions should not be edited; that just wastes everyone's time. — Cody Gray ♦ 24 secs ago
11:54 AM
Thanks for your comments. I see, so i am not only asking about the problem, i am part of the problem. But sometimes i'm just not sure where it really belongs, as configs could be seen as "programming" as they often use their own language, but at the same time the question would be better off on other exchange sites... — eDonkey 1 min ago
I see he made the right call since he improved my edit, and I see why thanks to your answer Dharman, although I thought at the beggining it was a new edit. I have been told in the past to avoid making such small new edits and that was really where I was heading with this question. — S. Dre 23 secs ago
I'm not sure that I agree with the current close reason Needs More Focus, but it does seem to be seeking recommendations for libraries the way its worded. I would remove the language around being "open to any libraries or custom implementation" to avoid reclosure since it is on the cusp of being reopened. — Bender the Greatest 1 min ago
@BendertheGreatest yes thanks, i see the point. i had removed the sentence before. i am actually not looking for library recommendations, but for any way at all to achieve it. i wrote this because i was afraid that my sample code would cause people not to consider any other options than what i attempted. — Reto Höhener 1 min ago
12:29 PM
Yeah well, also confusing is that when we submit an Edit, we get a Msg that some "Trusted User(s) with 20k-Rep will have to approve the Edit" (Quote is approx, from memory...)... (=> 20,000-Rep, not 2,000-Rep, has been like that for years...) — chivracq 24 secs ago
Thanks for your comments. I see that i am not only asking about the problem, but rather am part of the problem. I've got to say, that sometimes i'm just not sure where a question really belongs, as e.g. configs could be seen as "programming" as they often use their own language... I guess I have to overthink about how I'll handle such questions in the future. — eDonkey 1 min ago
Please consider not rage quitting. For instance, log out of Stack Overflow and take a wikiholiday of, say, two or three weeks. And think about the design decisions for an alternative to Stack Overflow (for instance, to not repeat the exact same mistakes, like not designing for Eternal September (which Stack Overflow has been in for 12 years now)). — Peter Mortensen 36 secs ago
I agree with your misgivings and for the inaccuracies introduced by heuristics like this. I do like the idea of querying the author to see if the help in the SG was good. Thanks for the feedback. — Yaakov Ellis ♦ 1 min ago
1:12 PM
Related (it is listed there): Review our technical responses for the 2022 Developer Survey — Peter Mortensen 1 min ago
Please elaborate on why it is about the 2021 survey and not the very recent 2022 survey. — Peter Mortensen 16 secs ago
1:27 PM
The original comment by the OP was deleted - they were asking how to show what they had tried. My comment above was an example. Their comment was deleted because their account was deleted. — Mr Developer 18 secs ago
1:42 PM
You can use the 32-bit tag instead to indicate you're dealing with VBA6; many VBA questions use bit-specific tags already. I don't think the questions you linked suffer much without the VBA6 tag considering they've gone this long without an answer in the first place... while having a [vba6] tag. — TylerH 56 secs ago
1:55 PM
@TylerH Using the 32-bit tag would be misleading I feel as VBA7 code can be written and executed on 32 & 64 bit machines.
#If WIN64
is already used incorrectly because people conflate bitness with language version. Bitness is a difference but not the only one. Regarding the unanswered questions, I don't see how removing the tag would make them more likely to receive an answer, I can only hope it has meant more people have seen the questions so far but they are simply hard to answer. I don't follow the point? — Greedo 1 min ago2:17 PM
@nbk Well that is not (shouldn't be...) a normal procedure. If a question is not clear, you should ask for clarifications in comments and answer once you understand it. Anyway, an answer is not the place to ask for clarifications. You can post a speculative answer and ask for clarifications in comments, but don't ask for clarifications in an answer... — Tomerikoo 1 min ago
I considered sharing it as proof. But I am not sure I trust anyone here.ibb.co/YTyTDbL — Andrew stands with Ukraine 20 secs ago
2:39 PM
2:50 PM
@AndrewstandswithUkraine This place is a community. But it's not a community in which you have defined it. We come together as CodyGray and others have said, but our goal is not to seek approval/appraisal from our peers. SO is a Q&A site and we gather around a vested interest in providing high-quality Q&A. Curation and quality activities are what this place is centered around. The fact that the topic of SO itself is incidental. — Bender the Greatest 12 secs ago
I understand it can be frustrating when personal expectations of this place aren't met, and I get that (and was on your side of the fence once, too). But this isn't a place where upvotes mean you are a competent programmer just as downvotes don't mean you are incompetent. We're not here to provide support for each other (although sometimes major community backlash can result in that effect). There are many other communities on other sites that offer what you are seeking, approval and support from your peers. SO simply is not that place, and is why it can sometimes come across as cold and blunt — Bender the Greatest 41 secs ago
Negative and positive feedback should not be taken personally here; we focus on the content, not the user. — Bender the Greatest 12 secs ago
I dont see where I have defined it as anythibg other than a place to ask questions and rexieve answers. It was written above that I defined it as a place to connect with my peers, however someone deleted that, which was miscontrued. — Andrew stands with Ukraine 1 min ago
Bender, how is it not personal when someone rips me apart in their answer? — Andrew stands with Ukraine 49 secs ago
That doesn't fix the tags that already existed from the olden days in which Stack Overflow was still trying to figure itself out. Most burninations aren't from new tags, if memory serves me well here. — Makoto 23 secs ago
@PeterMortensen: No? They get a link to the Help Center which does explain a few things about what could be missing in general, so I wouldn't count that as being in the dark. If there is a shortcoming with this, then file a bug and highlight the issue being that more guidance needs to be available in close messages. Instead of us trying to fix the bug in a way that isn't ever going to be sustainable, let's actually get this to the forefront of the company and make them responsible for fixing it. — Makoto 6 secs ago
If you're referring to this answer, we're on meta. Cody Gray is a mod and called out behavior, which is acceptable here as it is in direct response to points in your question and behavior on this post. If you're referring to an answer to one of your questions on the main site, can you provide an example? — Bender the Greatest 23 secs ago
So stack allows personal attacks on meta? then why did they delete my comment when I said someone was being toxic? I am so confused. — Andrew stands with Ukraine 41 secs ago
What are you identifying as a personal attack? Nothing I've read makes assumptions about you, only uses what is publicly available about your behavior. I am not a mod, so I can't speak to any comments which were deleted as normal users can't read deleted comments no matter how much rep we have. — Bender the Greatest 47 secs ago
If you feel a moderator has acted in bad faith (I don't feel anyone here has done so however), you have some options outlined in the answers to this meta question. — Bender the Greatest 1 min ago
3:30 PM
The canonical for explaining downvotes is Encouraging people to explain downvotes. — Peter Mortensen 7 secs ago
How about making vba6 a synonym of vba, and making sure that all existing questions with the vba7 tag also have the generic tag? (I don't use VBA, so feel free to ignore me). — PM 2Ring 47 secs ago
4:05 PM
One correction to my penultimate comment (before this one): "if you don't know what the tag is, then you can't answer to whether it fails the criteria and it should not be removed (by you) " — Bender the Greatest 1 min ago
I found this meta post, when trying to figure out what to do about a question where I had figured out the solution for. I had first edited the answer, then was told to put it in Code Review. Finding it silly that introducing the silly error back (which doesn't have much to do with the answer to the question how I see it) I rolled the edit back and answered my own question. This is the question, if anyone is interested: stackoverflow.com/questions/72380296/… — Cornelius Roemer just now
4:34 PM
Its okay, as my uncle pointed out, this is a knowledge base, and as a good friend of mine pointed out, Its time to let it go. — Andrew stands with Ukraine 1 min ago
I also see absolutely no way this prevents abuse since one can close it with an extra click automatically. If one wanted to prevent abuse, one should not allow the user to close themselves without someone suggesting. — Cornelius Roemer 50 secs ago
4:59 PM
Perhaps the user chose the wrong reason for whatever reason. Perhaps they didn't know how bounties work. Maybe the user just didn't like having much reputation, so they wanted to "get rid of" 100 rep. Doesn't seem terribly useful to inquire, though. There is one single user who can answer that. The rest of us would just be guessing. — VLAZ 1 min ago
I guess if there is not a disingenuous possibility I'll just ask the answerer on their question — Bender the Greatest 39 secs ago
5:19 PM
5:35 PM
I have been known to make an utterly trivial "improvement" to push through a good suggested edit that cleaned up a question that desperately needed the cleaning. — user4581301 1 min ago
A lot of the poor questions could, with enough care and attention, be made acceptable, but the kicker is if the asker put in the time that the care and attention requires they probably wouldn't have a question left. A good question-asking process leads to solutions, and a lot of those solutions are self-discovered. It's kind of counter productive with respect to the Stack Overflow mission of gathering high quality questions, but good question writers ask very few questions because in the process of asking the question, they usually get the answer. — user4581301 12 secs ago
6:24 PM
Well, I guess the Products menu is much more important than the main Stack Exchange menu ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ — 41686d6564 stands w. Palestine 1 min ago
There doesn't seem to be a way to edit the bounty. I am interested in seeing the behavior once it expires. I'm not terrible concerned about the reputation points. — another victim of the mouse 47 secs ago
6:37 PM
The problem with most of these questions isn't simply having a precise specification; the problem is the amount of functionality to implement. Even for things that would comfortably fit in a Stack Overflow answer, the problem is generally that OP has not attempted to break the problem down into steps and figured out what is actually difficult. The question is "too broad" because it is "multiple questions in one" - one question each about the steps that OP hasn't yet identified. — Karl Knechtel 1 min ago
"Implement this algorithm" is going to be too broad because an algorithm is a flowchart through various steps, and the implementation is translation of those steps into code. For each individual step, it usually either isn't the source of OP's difficulty, or could be easily researched. The rare exceptions are where we get acceptable "easy" questions for the site. — Karl Knechtel 16 secs ago
3 hours later…
9:15 PM
Related: Support for OpenID ended on July 25, 2018. Some updates may be in order. — Peter Mortensen 18 secs ago
Related: Should 'Hi', 'thanks', taglines, and salutations be removed from posts? (and perhaps No Thanks, Damn It!). — Peter Mortensen 1 min ago
Yes, user onboarding is not great. There isn't any prevention of the most common pitfalls (causing a lot of pain in the process). A canonical is Why do I need 50 reputation to comment? What can I do instead?. — Peter Mortensen 8 secs ago
1 hour later…
10:44 PM
"Important" isn't highlighted in the second set of questions vs the first - the first set of questions doesn't ask about "importance" at all - it's asking about "difficulty". I don't think important and difficult are the same, so maybe it's just that you didn't realize that the difference between the two sets is the difficult/important change. Lots of important things are actually pretty easy. :) As to the question about taking courses, it's now skippable. — Catija ♦ 32 secs ago
1 hour later…
11:59 PM
@Tomerikoo as as for a long working programmer like me, knows a lot of problems and solutions. So that my brain recognizes a solution for the problem like I understand it. That may not be the solution that user is looking for, so the user adds som es more clarification and I adapt my answer. The answer I am often helpful, because the asker can use it to clarify and that couldn't be done on a comment. So maybe you are looked ng only for questions that are perfectly clear, but I like chalanges and use the comment quite often fo RR clarification, but can't be done in a camment — nbk 56 secs ago
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