12:11 AM
@Braiam but artisanal things are all the rage these days. Why not artisanal tags? ;) — Daniel Widdis 24 secs ago
3 hours later…
3:22 AM
Considering new users are already having trouble with the existing process, making the process more complicated seems like a sure-fire way to lose users. — Mast 11 secs ago
2 hours later…
5:14 AM
5:54 AM
1 hour later…
7:07 AM
8:04 AM
Some more related questions: meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/396620/… meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/404191/are-my-edits-needless ; Alas, there is somewhat of a tendency for people to have bad reactions over this. — E_net4 the comment flagger 16 secs ago
"I frequently see Contributors point to existing answers (to different questions) that apply to the OP's question - but a different question remains a different question, even if they have the same answer." And that is why we dupe close. So that all the different ways to ask for basically the same issue do point to the same answers. — MisterMiyagi 19 secs ago
8:19 AM
Re "Always leave the campground cleaner than you found it.": It could have been made up by Uncle Bob. I have never been able to find the source for it. Perhaps Uncle Bob derived it from the founder's "Try and leave this world a little better than you found it"? — Peter Mortensen just now
@ClickRick fair enough. Although making the company do something about review queues in terms of managing audits (specifically, bad ones) is going to take another 6-8 years. Far from being sure adding voice in comments will make much of a difference, though (the company hardly reads those) - a better way is probably voting/making specific proposals regarding audit management. I'll try to find a couple of those on MSO. — Oleg Valter is with Ukraine 1 min ago
2 hours later…
10:41 AM
@DanielWiddis I still can't understand what has that anything to do with software development. — Braiam 31 secs ago
11:24 AM
And I still have an upvote for it :) Another SME here - please do, seems like we do not have enough users with the required score to see it through. — Oleg Valter is with Ukraine 7 secs ago
12:14 PM
@RuudHelderman a fair point, but then it is going to change to "but it ain't gonna because nobody is going to define what is going in and what isn't" :) it is still asking too much. Even if someone would do the work for them and come up with a massive feature request that lists all the checks that need to be done, it's still not gonna. Because implementers will have to verify it. — Gimby 1 min ago
I'd say the main etiquette is to think before you do, and after that the word really has no more meaning. We have rules, but if you follow the rules dogmatically then you're already in the wrong because you have to judge case by case what is right and wrong. Alas, due to the nature of the site (swamped), people tend to shoot first and ask questions later when it comes to judging content. We're a victim of our own success in that respect. — Gimby 40 secs ago
12:47 PM
@CodyGray Your comment is probably the best so far, because it takes a clear stance: "Our quality filter is not machine-based, but human-based." A lot better than being closed as a dupe of a question that doesn't even mention machines. — Ruud Helderman 30 secs ago
@CodyGray I have no doubt humans are better at recognizing unsafe code (although this Q&A made me wonder). Just like humans are better at testing than machines. But that has never been a reason to abandon automated tests. I will accept an answer that claims: "static code analysis is not mature enough to assist humans in spotting vulnerabilities." (Notice I used the word "assist", not "replace".) I think so far, only Gimby has raised that argument. — Ruud Helderman 1 min ago
@Gimby I must admit I was wrong in assuming that professor Sami had been working on some validation logic and rules. Without rules (for any given programming language) plus the organization or committee to maintain the rules, this whole idea of mine is useless. — Ruud Helderman 37 secs ago
1 hour later…
2:24 PM
3:06 PM
@ErikA I think you are combining topics. I'm saying that we only need assembly, and we do not need local-functions nor nested-functions. The language is enough in all cases. — Braiam 33 secs ago
1 hour later…
4:31 PM
@Braiam: Most people disagree with your idea that tags other than language aren't useful, so most also won't agree with other arguments based on that position. Especially for thinks like "local functions" where the two words occur separately in 59 million results vs. 20 questions with [c#] [local-functions], tags are highly useful. (There is no [local-function] tag so of course 0 hits for that.) Of course I'd normally search with google so I could require "local function" to be an exact phrase, which might help some. — Peter Cordes 18 secs ago
"So that all the different ways to ask for basically the same issue do point to the same answers." Am I wrong or are closed questions are not searchable? If they aren't, then it's the problem I highlighted in my OP: if someone is searching for a solution using imperfect, but common, keywords, but questions containing those same keywords have been closed due to having similar answers, they are less likely to find the answer and instead post a new question. (Conceptually - whether or not this specific question is a case of this) — Adam Smooch 19 secs ago
5:14 PM
@AdamSmooch Every not-deleted question is searchable. While closure makes deletion more likely, it is not a necessity that closed questions are deleted. — MisterMiyagi 1 min ago
Thanks for clarifying - +1 and deleted my previous comment (unable to edit 🤔) — Adam Smooch 1 min ago
5:32 PM
@CodyGray: The reason it's an aside is that it's not an answer to the question, it's just my opinion on the matter. There's always subjectivity to the matter on this, in that - to be blunt - there are more places to get answers that can be more copy-paste-learn-friendly to a user. Someone who thinks that they are actively helping someone learn a concept by withholding their ability to take the code and play with it directly is...I dunno, at best misinformed? — Makoto 1 min ago
@CodyGray: There's other sentiments of giving someone like a student Just Enough™ to work with but not enough to wholesale cheat on their homework, and there's also a desire to not let some worker try to outsource their work on us, which I get and agree with, but I have to stress that in my personal opinion, we're not going to be all things to all people, and the kind of "help" we provide and the value it provides is not something that we individually can quantify. If someone wants more meat, sure I would hope they get it from here. What are the answers giving now? Mostly copy and paste. — Makoto 39 secs ago
1 hour later…
6:39 PM
This is META not the main Stack Overflow site but regardless it would be off-topic over there too. — Paulie_D 10 secs ago
3 hours later…
9:47 PM
@KarlKnechtel Another user took a closer look after I remarked that it was interesting that two were deleted on the same day, and it appears that some (large) batches of deleted posts aren't getting removed from search. Keep an eye on the MSO homepage for a report soon... — Ryan M ♦ 29 secs ago
2 hours later…
11:21 PM
I'm going to refrain from manually fixing these, as 1) it may be useful to have a list for staff investigation, and 2) there's way too many and fixing a handful of them is a drop in the bucket anyway. — Ryan M ♦ 6 secs ago
It's also interesting that when they appear in search results, there's no indication that they're deleted. Normally, deleted posts have a pink/red-ish background and the (newly added) "Deleted" label. — 41686d6564 stands w. Palestine 58 secs ago
11:41 PM
Might also be worth noting that all 39 questions listed above were created between 2012 and 2013. This could be relevant. — 41686d6564 stands w. Palestine 49 secs ago
@41686d6564 my guess would be that that's related to how they were queried via SEDE, rather than anything meaningful. This answer has a couple from that date created in 2021 and 2022. — Ryan M ♦ 1 min ago
Ryan is correct the query is sorted by post id so the first 100 posts that I searched are guaranteed to be the oldest posts. — Henry Ecker 9 secs ago
« first day (1112 days earlier) ← previous day next day → last day (615 days later) »