12:15 AM
@Braiam Sorry, I thought it was obvious that was sarcasm. Curating newly created tags is literally what the OP is asking how to manage, and the answers here explain how to do that. What are you even trying to discuss here? Or do you just have an odd way of agreeing and making it sound like there's an issue to discuss? 🤷🏻♂️ — Drew Reese 1 min ago
1 hour later…
1:19 AM
My preference here would probably just be... Use a one line code block rather than inline code. — Nick stands with Ukraine 18 secs ago
All cleared now - thanks very much for your swift attention to this issue. — Adrian Mole 28 secs ago
1:35 AM
That's probably what I'd do if it was my own answer, too. But I'm still interested to know a technique for no-wrap on inline code, if any such technique exists. — wim 6 secs ago
I remember the term being introduced with Java in the mid 1990s (Perl already had, but with a different name). I could be wrong. — Peter Mortensen 14 secs ago
2:07 AM
I'm just going to delete that second one with only this tag since it belongs on Meta, is too old to migrate, and I'm pretty sure we have an FAQ for that... — Ryan M ♦ 44 secs ago
I think you are correct, but doesn't "locale" have a very specific meaning when it comes to computers? — Peter Mortensen 42 secs ago
2:29 AM
Short answer: yes. Longer answer: type-narrowing is probably better after cleanup of narrowing as @AndrewT. said. — Daniel Widdis 1 min ago
3:19 AM
3:45 AM
@β.εηοιτ.βε Yes, that's true, accepts is a small number compared to up/down votes. I'm not sure why that's relevant here. I don't have any issue (at least not as far as this proposal is concerned) with reputation earned via up/down votes, since that's supposed to be representative of quality. I'm claiming that rep earned via accepts is an issue partly because it's not representative of quality, but is only representative of utility for a single person. — cigien 13 secs ago
4:39 AM
1 hour later…
5:42 AM
1 hour later…
6:42 AM
Please check out the Stack Overflow tour and make sure you understand that this is not a discussion forum, and comment sections are not for having a conversation. Also please note that every comment on a Stack Overflow post is public, @-notification or otherwise. — Karl Knechtel 1 min ago
"I find it very important to thank a person who has freely spent effort for me, so please don't try to persuade me not to write such comments." Then please instead seek assistance on web sites where that isn't directly opposed to how the site is intended to work. — Karl Knechtel 28 secs ago
7:24 AM
Yes, again, this isn't a good audit IMO. It looks like a reasonable answer, and the username doesn't match the author of the linked article, so I don't see how it's possible for someone to figure out the connection. This is all covered in the answer below, and there's not really any point in adding more examples of bad audits to this question. This is going to happen every now and then, since audits are automatically selected, so if you want to continue reviewing, I'd suggest either not getting upset about failing audits occasionally, or clicking through to the post for every review. — cigien 1 min ago
@KarlKnechtel: I find your comments quite offensive. I have asked a question on a feature of this site and I been notified that my question is a duplicate, which I accept, hereby my question is answered. As for the usage of "thank you" comments: StackOverflow is a website, based on free efforts of people. Thanking them for their efforts is just a form of politeness. Thanking a person can be done either by upvotes, accepts or comments. When an upvote or an accept is not possible (as I've deleted the question), I have chosen for a comment. — Dominique 27 secs ago
I don't see the restriction about multidimensional-array being cubic. I tend to agree with Tyler about jagged being a vague term. I read through the wiki of multidimensional array and it doesn't restrict itself to cubic arrays. It actually mentions ""array of arrays" (also known as jagged arrays or Iliffe vector)." so I would say that maybe jagged arrays could a synonym for that, but for starters maybe
arrayofarrays
is better as a synonym to multidimensional-array
— Tomerikoo 16 secs agoThere is nothing offensive in notifying you that it is not how the site is meant to operate. Noisy comments (which "thanks" are), are strongly discouraged. Personally, I find the knee jerk reaction of calling others offensive to be offensive in and of iteslf. — StoryTeller - Unslander Monica 1 min ago
@cigien I appreciate the response. My intention in adding this new example is to at least note that it gives the impression that the bot is potentially a bit overzealous about which posts it removes. If humans can look at the post and not see the problem, should it really be removed automatically? I know it's driven by votes and flags, but it still suggests that perhaps there is room for improvement. — Z4-tier 1 min ago
There's most certainly room for improvements to the audit system. What exactly these improvements should look like is not always clear, unfortunately. Here's a nice answer that goes over some of the possibilities to what changes could look like. Searching through Meta should yield some other discussions as well. — cigien 1 min ago
8:00 AM
"If
bools
stored a boolean literal instead of an array, the answer is a simple "yes", and if additionally x
isn't an array, then the answer is "yes in Python with functools.lru_cache
." In how far is this relevant? These aren't the conditions of the question; in fact the different conditions seem integral to the question. — MisterMiyagi 59 secs agoIf you truely think someone's comment are offensive, you should flag them as "unfriendly or unkind", though i agree that there is nothing offensive by those comments. Rather, comments like your own are likely to deter others from contributing to your question(s) for fear of thinking that constructive criticism is going to end up with them being called rude... — Larnu 52 secs ago
"Thanking a person can be done either by upvotes, accepts or comments. " This is very incorrect, there are no thanks here; upvotes are to denote useful/helpfulness, Acceptance to denote the answer was the must useful to the OP, and comments to seek clarification. Comments stating "thanks" are often removed shortly after they are made (if they are flagged they are often removed automagically, rather than even getting to the moderator queue). — Larnu 1 min ago
@TheMaster Not really an expert beyond those languages, but as far as I know these definitions seem to hold fairly well in most languages. Some Java or C# guru might disagree since the array type in those languages is a class (whereas C++ is an OO "hybrid" language) and each item has could have an individual size. At any rate, it should be sufficient for this discussion that the synonym between arrayofarrays and jagged-arrays does not hold for two major programming languages. — Lundin 1 min ago
I guess
<code>" ".join(map(shlex.quote, sys.argv))</code>
would work, at least for now. — Kaiido 38 secs agoIt goes way back. K&R C in the 1970s mentions multi-dimensional arrays vs arrays of pointers (not calling them "jagged" though), claiming that a arrays of pointers were more useful because of flexibility. This was however some 20 years before the advent of cache memories and 30 years before C got variable-length array support. — Lundin 1 min ago
9:07 AM
I'm just here to back up existing comments; thanks comments are considered noise, and shouldn't be posted. We remove them regularly, though because of the volume of comments, a lot of them slip through the cracks. These aren't evidence "thanks" comments are okay, they're a symptom of bad comment moderation tools, something I'm working on myself but cause we don't get anything cool from SE. Slight rant aside, by posting thanks comments, you're adding to the moderator workload. Please don't. — Zoe stands with Ukraine ♦ 46 secs ago
9:30 AM
I don't see a problem with thanks in comments. I think there should be an outlet for the urge. There could even be a special kind of comments that are automatically deleted after a set time, say 72 hours. Just as most people misspell Stack Overflow, even users with several hundreds of thousands of reputation points, we can never not get rid of the forum expectation. — Peter Mortensen 6 secs ago
9:42 AM
@Dominique please read the official company Help Center on commenting. Comments that only exist to express gratitude to posters are not in line with what both the community at large (see here) and the company considers to be acceptable behavior on the network. — Oleg Valter is with Ukraine 1 min ago
9:57 AM
If you read a really good wikipedia entry, would you feel like you had to write 'thanks' somewhere to thank whoever wrote edited it? — user438383 57 secs ago
The customer tag doesn't "seem broad and vague"; it IS broad and vague, and it has no usage guidance at all! Suggesting that "we can better spend our efforts elsewhere" is a disappointing response, since that can apply to almost any constructive suggestion on meta. We should either provide usage guidance for the tag, or remove it. Doing nothing - the approach you seem to advocate - is the worst possible option since it perpetuates the problem. — skomisa 42 secs ago
10:15 AM
“We can better spend our efforts elsewhere” applies if the marginal cost of doing something is high. While the cost of doing something might be high, most of that cost (the meta question, the people reading it) has already been paid. It's only 202 questions. — wizzwizz4 41 secs ago
@Kaiido That might cause problems if people copy it and expect it to be a normal space. — Mark Rotteveel 1 min ago
@MarkRotteveel I must admit I didn't try with the server-side renderer but from the front-end one (using below answer box) it seems that copying this character would copy a normal space (at least on my macOS Firefox, it may be system dependent). — Kaiido 42 secs ago
10:40 AM
Currently, the score for the question is 28 and you are received Nice Question (bronze) and Good Question (silver) badges. ie., For the same question, you can be awarded two badges. — Arulkumar 54 secs ago
10:52 AM
11:19 AM
But you wouldn't do that in the wikipedia article, @Dominique , you would reach out a different way. Stack Overflow doesn't have DM's, by design, but you could check the users profile and see if they have a way to contact them a different way; some have their own websites, some provide Social Media links, some have link to where you can "buy them a coffee". If you see them in a chat you could thank them there (please don't actively seek a chat that they are active in). Those are all ways you could use to say "thanks", but on the question on Stack Overflow itself is the wrong place. — Larnu 19 secs ago
1 hour later…
12:22 PM
12:57 PM
The question has now been closed and locked. "This question is not reproducible or was caused by typos. It is not currently accepting answers." and "This question and its answers are locked because the question is off-topic but has historical significance. It is not currently accepting new answers or interactions." respectively. — Peter Mortensen 1 min ago
I would burninate the arrayofarrays tag after ensuring the question has a arrays tag. If it was kept, it should be repunctuated to the modern (more readable) style: array-of-arrays. — Jonathan Leffler 1 min ago
1:15 PM
@skomisa We don't need to start a meta thread in order to write a tag wiki though, just do it. We have an endless amount of tags that are just useless nouns without any particular technical meaning, such as for example list (131,679 questions) and algorithm (114,903 questions ). These would be hard to make any sense of even when accompanied with other tags. If we were to burn every "useless noun" tag, there's an endless amount of busy-work ahead. — Lundin 8 secs ago
@wizzwizz4 The cost of the SO burnination procedure is ridiculously high measured in man-hours, compared to how little work it is for someone to create a new crap tag. That burnination energy is best focused at tags that are actively harmful: either because they are confusing or because they act as some broad placeholders for the actual tags that should have been used. The vast amount of "company tags" for example, that should be replaced with product tags for products made by that company. — Lundin 11 secs ago
Is there still a question wizard? It needs to suggest for questions that only contain the sql tag, that the questioner consider adding a specific RDBMS. Many new questioners think
SQL
= SQL-Server
. Code can definitely be different betweem RDBS's. Questions wanting specific SQL code, and not general questions about SQL really need to specify the RDBMS. Otherwise someone wastes time writing an answer that doesn't run on the specific RDBMS — Nick.McDermaid 51 secs ago1:37 PM
I don't see what's "rough" about your comment; it's the OP's comment that seems more abrasive. We don't know what the OP is (or isn't) capable or, and there's looping is such a fundament principle in most languages that it's well documented; if the OP didn't know how to loop they could easily search how to. — Larnu 1 min ago
"You are asking a dumb question and wasting peoples precious time" Not sure how you thought that would help. — takendarkk 1 min ago
And a mod deleted my comment but OPs "lame today or in general" is still up. This site is slowely turning into a joke — Josip Juros 54 secs ago
A vague appeal to ‘do some research’ certainly isn’t going to be actionable for someone who is barely a beginner. — user3840170 29 secs ago
I think I managed to capture the whole comment thread before it disappeared. — E_net4 - Mr Downvoter 1 min ago
@JosipJuros I was in the middle of deleting the comments; you happened to refresh between me deleting your comment, and deleting the "lame today or in general" comment, which was clearly over the line — Zoe stands with Ukraine ♦ 1 min ago
1:54 PM
@JonathanLeffler Wouldn't a merge([arrayofarrays]=>[arrays]) be more appropriate then? — TheMaster 16 secs ago
2:05 PM
2:30 PM
I don't disagree with your complaint about the relative costs of creating vs cleaning/burning tags, but individual tag requests is not the correct place to debate the issue. — Dan Is Fiddling By Firelight 26 secs ago
3:12 PM
@takendarkk that's the comment you focus on? The other 2 of OPs were fine in your mind? — Josip Juros 31 secs ago
@ZoestandswithUkraine thanks. I always thought people should learn some problem solving skills before asking other to solve their issues. My way of expressing that is flawed — Josip Juros 1 min ago
In what world does list not have a "particular technical meaning" when discussed in the context of programming? the tag wiki is very clear as to what a list is. — Nifim 7 secs ago
For the record, I did not delete your last comment. It was deleted by users casting flags (primarily "no longer needed"). It hit 3 flags, and was automatically deleted — Zoe stands with Ukraine ♦ 40 secs ago
3:57 PM
@Lundin You are surely being disingenuous by associating the customer tag with the list and algorithm tags. The former has only 202 questions and no usage guidance, while list and algorithm each have over 100,000 questions, and precisely specified usage guidance. And, unlike customer, I doubt that most would view list and algorithm as "useless noun" tags on SO, even if you do. — skomisa 7 secs ago
I don't understand why "lame" on the part of asker is considered just "unfriendly/unkind", but the same "name calling" by the OP(Juros) is considered "rude". — TheMaster 25 secs ago
4:35 PM
When we introduced this question series in 2015, we said "By comparing status quo vs. aspiration we can see how developers perceive available programming tools." The questions and the way we look at the data do reveal a perception of the technology. While the terms Loved, Dreaded, and Wanted are strong terms to describe the emotions felt, and the questions as posed don't directly map to these emotions, we've felt they are lighthearted enough that people understand that developers don't run away from the Dreaded technologies, but aren't making excuses to build more things with them either. — JNat ♦ 50 secs ago
That being said, we're planning on revising the framing of the question and data that comes out of it for future iterations of the Dev Survey. Plans aren't defined yet, but our initial thinking is that we'll show results using the old/historical way and a new way(s). This way we're able to introduce something new, while not completely removing data points that people currently reference/track. Thanks for the feedback! — JNat ♦ 42 secs ago
@TheMaster That is an "apples and oranges" comparison. When a comment is rude, it may be flagged for one of the reasons at a higher scale. In the former case I mentioned a specific flag option, but I would have flagged that other comment as unfriendly/unkind all the same. — E_net4 - Mr Downvoter 1 min ago
Isn't a
multidimensional-array
in C just a single array with convenience syntax to access its square dimensions via multiples of each dimension? Internally it's just a 1-dimensional array with size created by multiplying the two dimensions. It's not an arrayofarrays
. The pointer table would be an arrayofarrays
(which could be jagged) — Daniel Widdis 7 secs agoIf you think a question is not useful and a user hasn't put in the research, there's a button right next to the question with the tooltip "This question does not show any research effort; it is unclear and not useful". Use it, then the system will know and limit such users from asking more of them. Providing minimal guidance to someone who wasn't willing to put the work in rarely helps, and then going into an argument helps even less often. — Erik A 1 min ago
5:19 PM
We all get annoyed by people who don't put any effort in. But the solution is to either a) downvote and move on or b) if you're feeling charitable, constructively help them improve the post rather than admonishing them for their lack of effort. — user438383 36 secs ago
5:32 PM
is a unique data structure which is always square
. Personally speaking, I would be more convinced if you had a authoritative reference on this restriction as a definition of multi dimensional array, in a wide variety of languages. — TheMaster 31 secs agoThe dimensions of a multidimensional array don't have to have the same size, so they are rectangular rather than square. — Andrew Morton 1 min ago
Burninate [arrayofarrays] since there are already the other tags covering "rectangular" and "non-rectangular" multi-dimensional arrays for the more specific cases. — Drew Reese 1 min ago
@Kaiido Seems to copy a normal space (on Chrome/Windows). See: meta.stackexchange.com/a/380178/348196 — 41686d6564 stands w. Palestine 35 secs ago
StackOOM is now using StackOverflow's favicon, which is causing some problems as I skim through search results. I click SO links because they're useful, and this nonsense site (which, I'm fairly confident, is not correctly attributing the answers anyway, and which definitely doesn't have the right to use SO's logos) keeps tripping me up. — Silvio Mayolo 1 min ago
If you really want to leave a comment to point out they didn't do their research you can do a quick search on SO, pick a suitable duplicate and then ask: Can this [question](link to question) help you solve the problem? if they get back with: yes then you or other close voters / dupe hammers can close vote the question. That is a better world for everyone: you don't get annoyed, our related content gets better linked; the question can be dupe voted and doesn't get answered; and the OP learns they won't get any fast-food here. — rene 58 secs ago
@Makoto what makes you hesitate to call it a queue, other than the fact that it's just for diamond moderators? — Samathingamajig 25 secs ago
6:45 PM
Nested array" has already been decided to point to "jagged array" if I understand correctly [nesting-array] is synonymized to multidimensional array. See stackoverflow.com/tags/multidimensional-array/synonyms — TheMaster 1 min ago
I agree. I wouldn't post the exact same answer. When the answer is edited to be completely different, I don't see a problem in deleting the original and posting a new answer. — tony19 39 secs ago
7:05 PM
7:20 PM
The question was voted to be deleted by a moderator and/or community users, the author of the question, likely had no part in it's deletion. — Security Hound 59 secs ago
7:32 PM
7:54 PM
OP's second comment falls into flaggable territory, but it is so unbelievably tame compared to your rant of a final comment, where you called them a slacker who "asked a dumb question" and "wasted everyone's time" because they "didn't show the most basic attempt". You didn't even just call them personally a slacker, but grouped them in with a supposed group of "people like you". That was in no way, shape, or form acceptable in any way, and I'm at a total loss for how you came to the conclusion that it might be remotely passable. We respect people here, in all cases, period. — zcoop98 22 secs ago
@KarlKnechtel Yeah... I agree with that for typo questions. Forgive my ignorance, but isn't there a "vote to undelete" option or something to keep it as a signpost. But I totally agree with what you've said. You would know more about this than I would, but IIRC mods can disable voting on a question by locking it, so that might work to make it a signpost. — cocomac 1 min ago
At higher levels of reputation, viewing and undeleting "deleted" questions becomes possible. I just don't think it's worth the trouble now to undelete, reopen and re-close for something that might not funnel a lot of views even if it's a "good" signpost. — Karl Knechtel 20 secs ago
8:40 PM
@PasserBy "You clearly have a problem in your mind that's more than that, and there's no way to tell what it is" - Spot on. — Ted Lyngmo 22 secs ago
8:57 PM
You already show you think it's possible, you outline an "approach I can imagine". Also you are not clear about just what the requirements are. Including, "caching" is not only not clear, it isn't the right word, that is for data not code. Moreover "optimized" (let alone "extremely") has no specific meaning outside detailed context (and tends to be chaotically dependent on details) let alone across languages. Also the post is disorganized. — philipxy 1 min ago
9:15 PM
There's a decent chance this is a stuck tag as well, though we won't really find out until we burn it, and wait for the system to nuke it — Zoe stands with Ukraine ♦ 56 secs ago
@philipxy
"caching" [...] isn't the right word, that is for data not code
. - So codecache doesn't exist? — Kelly Bundy 1 min ago
1 hour later…
10:27 PM
This question arguably belongs on meta.stackexchange.com rather than meta.stackoverflow.com.... — Karl Knechtel 52 secs ago
10:45 PM
"Solutions to typos, syntax errors, or logic issues tightly coupled to specific code aren't useful in any other context and are thus closed as "caused by a typo"." Oh, so idiosyncratic logic errors do count as typos for this purpose. I don't think this is clear from the term "typo" or from any of the UI framing text. — Karl Knechtel 8 secs ago
What should we do when the question doesn't ask about a library, but simply asks "how do I do X?" and the only reasonable answer is "it is not feasible to write the code yourself, but library Y is the industry standard for solving these sorts of problems, and in this case you would just use
Y.foo()
"? — Karl Knechtel 17 secs ago@Raedwald it's a trick to get users to try to debug the code. In many optimistic cases, this process results in "I have a few lines of code like so, and I expect the output to be X because of <reasoning>, but it is Y instead. I can see the exact point in the debugger where the computed value doesn't match my expectation, but why is this result computed?" — Karl Knechtel 8 secs ago
While code isn't necessary to understand the Perl question, I feel like some examples would be helpful for making it look like the right question for people who find it with a search engine. Although in this particular case, it might also increase the risk of people deciding to close it as caused by a typo. — Karl Knechtel 1 min ago
I feel like this entry should include some kind of reference to stackoverflow.com/help/dont-ask. — Karl Knechtel 1 min ago
IMO, "Answer" has a technical meaning on Stack Overflow - it refers specifically to an attempt to answer the question (whether or not successful, but intended as such), written in the answer section and not as a comment or edit. That arguably justifies the capitalization. — Karl Knechtel 22 secs ago
The purpose of closing questions is to prevent answering them on the current state of the question. If the current state of the question does not allow for good answers, this clearly should happen as quickly as possible. That's why closure is designed to be reversible. — Karl Knechtel 16 secs ago
11:30 PM
As the person who placed the bounty, I'm quite amazed by the debate it has caused. For anyone who is wondering, yes, I should have probably opened a new question with more details rather than giving a bounty. But I try not to open new questions unless necessary. Next time I'll get it right ;-) — coderama just now
11:45 PM
The edit history shows the question was re-opened nine hours ago. What are you going on about here? — StoryTeller - Unslander Monica 25 secs ago
After the question was re-opened, it received close votes, and was again marked as duplicate of that other question I linked. There is literally no reason for people to be voting to close that question and marking it (trolling it) as a duplicate of a question with a "never use regex on HTML" answer. — trusktr just now
@StoryTeller-UnslanderMonica After the question was re-opened, it received close votes, and was again marked as duplicate of that other question I linked. There is literally no reason for people to be voting to close that question and marking it (trolling it) as a duplicate of a question with a "never use regex on HTML" answer. I ended up answering my own question with a perfectly-valid answer. — trusktr 30 secs ago
Why don't you reacquaint yourself with how meta works, instead. — StoryTeller - Unslander Monica 46 secs ago
How does it work? People have emotions, then they close valid questions? That's how it works? — trusktr 11 secs ago
People are not the ones being emotional. And editing your rude dismissal of me does not make it go away when I'm literally on the page talking to you. — StoryTeller - Unslander Monica 38 secs ago
I called this post a rant, which it certainly reads like. — StoryTeller - Unslander Monica 1 min ago
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