12:01 AM
@Tyler, no, I'm not ascribing meaning where there isn't any. Are you suggesting that upvoting and downvoting are divorced from the value assessments folks make when reading questions and answers? — decuser 55 secs ago
...I find any questions or answers that are on the border (+1, 0, -1) as dubiously helpful... I know that's your experience, but it doesn't really make sense. Older answers have more upvotes, but they haven't likely improved or even changed much over time. Questions whose tags have relatively light traffic tend to get fewer votes of all kinds. So vote totals are a function of quality(of course!), age, and views, not just quality — President James K. Polk 1 min ago
You ask 'why'. I suspect that one reason for code-only answers is lack of fluency in English. In effect, people who aren't confident in their English are communicating through code. — President James K. Polk 8 secs ago
@PresidentJamesK.Polk - I said it was my experience (SO user since its inception), you are free to disagree. I find what I'm looking for quickly and easily. — decuser 36 secs ago
I realize in retrospect, that answering and responding to your comments may have contributed to taking us off-track. Is it possible for us to get back to the question itself - do you know of any studies? and leave off the running commentary about motivations and personal heuristic evaluation, either you do know of studies, or you don't. Thanks to those of you who provided helpful hints on where Stack Exchange papers are referenced and the data set. — decuser 53 secs ago
That is a highly unique room culture that is not at all consistent with what Stack Exchange envisioned for the role of room owners, @Makyen. It is essentially elevating inherent limitations of the chat system (the inability of room owners to effectively moderate content) to a feature, where room owners have to do that moderation of content (and diamond moderators have to moderate content in the limited way that ROs can moderate content). That may be desirable in one specific case, but really doesn't make sense in general for chat rooms on SO or SE. — Cody Gray ♦ 47 secs ago
12:51 AM
@TylerH Yes, of course it's the answerer's responsibility, but I'm not remotely justifying the behavior; I'm just explaining it. Lundin is correct in stating that "Generally one should refrain of posting a new answer to these kind of super-active old questions with tons of views and answers". — skomisa 46 secs ago
1:23 AM
1:50 AM
One other metric you might consider when comparing the two questions is that the older post has 688k views while the newer post has 217k views. Assuming these two posts are duplicates choosing the post with over 3 times as many views as the canonical might make sense as this is the post most people are engaging with. (I acknowledge you don't think these two posts are duplicates which is a separate issue to the direction of closure) — Henry Ecker ♦ 1 min ago
2:26 AM
Your Qt is a bit "unclear", why do you want with that Data...? // But I have some "personal" Experience with Downvoting, so..., what do you want to know...? — chivracq 23 secs ago
2:40 AM
@idiot Yeah, It's pretty annoying. There's not a quick fix, and the mods can't really do anything. The system isn't even reputation based. Just try to edit as many questions as you can, and see if that helps. — Blue Robin 41 secs ago
2:55 AM
Hello Karl. I believe the key motivation for actually asking here is what I ended with, the feeling of arbitrary and unfairness. I hope you understand how, from the other end of the website, seeing just the result can feel that way. I want to thank you for taking the time to explain. Knowing how you had thought about this topic and why you did things this way is probably the best I could have hoped for. — spectras 35 secs ago
Sure thing. I got that impression, but I was ready to explain pretty much anything anyway, from the moment I realized it was my decision being called into question. Aside from defending my decisions and actions, I want to share my thoughts on the process anyway, in the hope that it helps other curators. — Karl Knechtel 48 secs ago
I hope people don't downvote this question simply because they agree with my actions or think I shouldn't be called into question. It's important to have discussions like this, and I welcome review - as I just finished editing my answer to clarify, it's much harder to get feedback on these things than it ought to be. — Karl Knechtel 20 secs ago
1 hour later…
4:01 AM
Well, now I understand it, I do not question it anymore. I do not entirely agree with the idea that a question that can be answered by combining two others is a duplicate, as I think asker's issue can lie in the decomposing/combining thought process. But I respect that point of view. And I believe the consistency that results from your dedicated effort to polish canonical questions matters much more than my personal take, so I am happy to leave it to you. — spectras 30 secs ago
1 hour later…
5:11 AM
Genuine question about your disclosure: how does it benefit you for the question you answered to be reopened? You can continue to get rep even though it's closed, right? — camille 29 secs ago
5:23 AM
6:03 AM
@camille the "This question already has answers here <link>" panel sends people away before they read it. Not all people for sure but a significant part I reckon. After all that is why it is there. — spectras 32 secs ago
I think the
is:question
is redundant here as hasaccepted
returns only questions anyway. — cigien 49 secs ago@cigien contrary to what you might have heard, I prefer not as much magic when something works. Yes,
hasaccepted
implicitly filters for questions only. And I don't like it. Means user:me is:answer hasaccepted:no
searches for questions only yet that isn't at all obvious from the search terms. I prefer being slightly more verbose even though the search term is redundant. Less magic happening that way which, IMO, is clearer overall. — VLAZ 22 secs agoDoes this answer your question? A list of my questions without an accepted answer — cigien 1 min ago
6:28 AM
6:41 AM
Although this is a known bug, I don't reproduce in this particular case. I don't know if that's because, as a moderator, the quality filter isn't applied to my edits (although I think it is). Either way, the post now looks correct. :-) — Cody Gray ♦ 5 secs ago
7:08 AM
@CodyGray Thank you for the edit, it looks much nicer without the little code blocks in the table. My guess is "generator" must be one of the words that trigger the code recognition... — andrewb 7 secs ago
7:35 AM
@CodyGray I don't want to bother you with this but I did some more testing and it appears it's actually the pipes without anything between them that trigger it. putting |||| on 3 rows trigger the error. Putting something between the pipes (ie. |a|a|a|) on just one of the 3 rows clears the error. — andrewb 1 min ago
2 hours later…
9:16 AM
You could just add an empty string to the search
""
, example (searches for [java] ""
) — Lino 18 secs agoPretty much the same people that leave a review on Steam like "This game is garbage". The grace us with their presence, but don't linger long enough for us to appreciate it. There is no point to try and reason why, that just leads to name calling and finger pointing. Code-only answers are against the rules, there is little more to be said about it than that. — Gimby 25 secs ago
It seems if you put some invalid option after
is:
it just displays both questions and answers. So you could use something like is:any
— Abdul Aziz Barkat 1 min agoDoes this answer your question? Old question marked as duplicate of a new question — mkrieger1 1 min ago
@nicael that's fair, but Articles are really few compared to the amount of Q&A. — Andrew T. 32 secs ago
Yeah but still, author clearly mentions 3 post types and would like to search only among 2 post types, though there’re not really many articles right now, it’s still a valid concern — nicael 54 secs ago
In this question
is:(q|a)
is mentioned (short for is:(question|answer)
which seems to be working and would exclude the articles, so do exactly what I want. I didn't find it officially documented but maybe you still want to add it to your answer... — Corrl 20 secs ago@Corrl no, that doesn't work either. It's considered invalid and still returns Articles. — Andrew T. 46 secs ago
@AndrewT. I saw it, I tried it and it seemed to be working. As commented above an invalid options seems to be setting the options to not deleted so showing everything, that's why it seemed to be working — Corrl 10 secs ago
@spectras this is why you should assume good faith. Stack Overflow is complicated and unorthodox. Nothing wrong with asking for an explanation of course, there is no point in having to wonder about it. But if you don't approach it from an "is this wrong?" perspective but more from a "why was this handled this way?" perspective which is essentially the same question but without a pre-baked conclusion locked in, it just leads to more enjoyable meta posts that have more to do with explaining and less with redirecting. Look at this wall of text poor Karl had to write! — Gimby 33 secs ago
1 hour later…
11:45 AM
What do you mean you aren't allowed to edit one of your existing questions? What error do you get when you try to do that? — Larnu 29 secs ago
"It says "You can’t post new questions right now"." That means you cannot post new questions right now. It says nothing about editing your question to improve it—in fact, that's precisely what the system is (apparently unclearly) trying to get you to do. So, you should totally do that. You do not need to ask a new question in order to edit one. — Cody Gray ♦ 50 secs ago
Until the quality of your content is improved. Though you'll be able to post one question every 6 months. This is all in the linked duplicate, @Lisa . — Larnu 29 secs ago
Again, it's all in the linked duplicate; is there part of the linked duplicate you don't understand? Which part? — Larnu 41 secs ago
12:36 PM
@KarlKnechtel You can view anonymous voting information with SEDE. For example, this query. — wizzwizz4 11 secs ago
1:11 PM
@Lisa - You were NOT question banned from a single mistake, or even a single question, that wasn’t well received. Question bans are a result of a continued pattern of asking poorly received questions. — Security Hound just now
You are not accounting for late answers here. I regularly find solutions in late answers which because of the fact that they are late answers did not really get voting attention so they are often stuck at 0 or 1 point until I come along. Late answers tend to document the special cases, the sneaky, the outliers or simply are the one that did not answer as quickly as possible but provide the answer with a history behind it. The unsung hero answer. — Gimby 32 secs ago
If you would, post this as a separate question. Blocklists have to be done by staff, and we'll need an appropriately tagged questions for that if we do it. — Machavity ♦ 42 secs ago
I don't find it honest to say it is caused by a continued pattern, this is not guaranteed accurate in the current implementation. The site never forgets what you did since the moment you signed up, all deleted questions keep counting for example. So it is more of a combination of the amount of questions you have, the scores on those questions, the amount of questions you have deleted and the total reputation score that you have. — Gimby 1 min ago
1 hour later…
2:45 PM
Indeed, @Gimby , if it were based on a continued pattern, some "high reputation" users wouldn't be able to ask anymore, as they currently are living off the "luxury" of their 1 question with a score of 300. — Larnu 9 secs ago
3:05 PM
@Gimby to be perfectly honest, I just write like this naturally most of the time. — Karl Knechtel 59 secs ago
Honestly I think you are drawing a false dichotomy between "specific" and "general". The kind of generality we want in canonicals is stuff like, asking about a sequence rather than a list, for a problem that happens to be solved the same way for any sequence and doesn't have meaningful list-specific optimizations. But we want specificity in the sense that special requirements (e.g. "preserve order" while removing duplicates) are called out, and assumed not to be required by default. — Karl Knechtel 32 secs ago
"And sure, anyone with a gold badge can "unhammer" the post just as quick, but closing/re-opening over and over should be avoided." It will actually only allow one "cycle", then I have to get someone else to help. — Karl Knechtel 7 secs ago
3:28 PM
@Gimby - In my experience users who are question ban have one or two things in common, they almost always have a series of deleted questions, and of those questions that have not been deleted (the remaining questions) typically have very few votes. The system also indicates there is a problem before that last question is submitted. — Security Hound 43 secs ago
3:46 PM
I disagree that this is a duplicate. The other question asks if it's OK to close an older question as a duplicate of a newer one. The author of this question obviously knows that it's OK, since they're asking why a newer question was closed as a duplicate of an older one but with a lower score. — Donald Duck 52 secs ago
4:21 PM
4:33 PM
The user interface is sufficiently clear. Trying to edit a deleted question results in "You cannot edit your own deleted question. Undelete before editing.". — Peter Mortensen 36 secs ago
The user interface is sufficiently clear, I think. Trying to edit a deleted question results in "You cannot edit your own deleted question. Undelete before editing.". Or maybe it is the word "editing"? Does the median user know what it means? — Peter Mortensen 6 secs ago
@KevinB if we are in the spirit of the better content being the canonical then the duplicate target should actually be closed as a duplicate of this one, as Karl's answer is far more descriptive and better quality — WhatsThePoint 1 min ago
@Sublow: if you can't tell the difference, then what is the point in trying to find one? xkcd.com/810 — jfs 58 secs ago
Though it is consistent with pressing "Edit" on a deleted question and dismissing the "message box" without reading it. — Peter Mortensen 1 min ago
I would likely flag those comments as no longer needed in a heartbeat — Nick stands with Ukraine 33 secs ago
It's noise at best, and should be flagged as such by using a "No longer needed" flag. If it's a repetitive issue, then you could raise a custom mod flag on one of the users posts and explain the problem; a mod may choose to reach out to them and ask them to stop. Stack Overflow isn't GitHub, and it strives to have answers here; that the answer is available elsewhere is irrelevant. — Larnu 1 min ago
"On the other hand, it feels like StackOverflow is being used as a redirect rather than a place to find answers to technical questions." or is it the case that the questions should have never been asked on SO in the first place? If it's really a support matter for a library, then I'd expect it to be over at the correct place for this. Which isn't the Q&A format of SO. — VLAZ 44 secs ago
@VLAZ the questions generally speaking comply with the SO standards. I am more inclined to think that the library maintainers are trying to push users to ask the questions towards their official support site. As I mentioned, that is reasonable for concrete stuff such as bug reporting. But I am asking about general Q&A like any other tag. — Eduardo Páez Rubio 43 secs ago
In the more general case (where the external producer may be GitHub or commercial or any other type of producer, and where it seems like the type of problem the vendor should be equipped to deal with), I tend to prompt people with whether they contacted the producer's support team first. Sometimes that's a no (SO is faster and bigger audience), sometimes that's a yes (they are unresponsive or gave unsatisfactory answers). — Stuck at 1337 55 secs ago
The first change in #3, seems to be going from an accurate description of what collectives are, to the marketing spin that claims collectives "brings developers together to collaborate and learn from one another, as well as connect with subject matter experts from the community and the organizations that help build or maintain a technology product/service", none of which it actually does. — Kevin B 59 secs ago
6:03 PM
6:21 PM
Do you know of any studies on the value of downvoting? Is unclear? I seriously doubt it. It's a simple, clearly asked question that were I to ask you, in person, you would look foolish to everyone around you, if you suggested that it was unclear. In an anonymous forum, you're free to downvote and denigrate the asker, but in real-life, you'd certainly be free to ask why the question was asked, but eventually, when you realized that it was a simple question, with a simple answer, either yes, I know of a study and here it is, or no, I don't, you would answer it. — decuser 45 secs ago
Many have tried, and failed, to understand what goes on in the minds of low reputation users. It's an art, not a science. — Larnu 38 secs ago
6:48 PM
@VLAZ Short for "am I the asshole"; see reddit.com/r/AmItheAsshole - we don't need it — Zoe stands with Ukraine ♦ 36 secs ago
7:11 PM
FWIW, I agree that the dupe target you chose has a much more focused MRE, which is very important for a canonical. — PM 2Ring 32 secs ago
@camille If someone visits a dupe from a search engine link and they aren't logged in, then they get automatically redirected to the dupe target, they don't even see the original page (although it will be listed in the Linked questions, but that list is generally very long on canonicals). OTOH, that doesn't affect most registered users, since we're generally logged in, so it has little affect on votes, but it does affect the viewcount, since ~90% of site traffic is from unregistered people using search engines. — PM 2Ring 32 secs ago
7:40 PM
You didn’t do anything wrong, dont waste your time on poor questions and users who don’t care :) — user438383 24 secs ago
8:03 PM
I'm not following the logic in "Assuming CDK means Curse's Development Kit is no longer appropriate, as this is a unix library." Do people not use UNIX any more? Am I the only one left? — miken32 39 secs ago
8:43 PM
The post author has the right to refuse your editing help. In this particular case, however, I think the edit is slightly off, or at least I can understand why the OP might think so. The apparent premise of the question is that the issue is at the
sprintf()
calls, and your edit pointed to the variable initialization instead. You are right that that's where the key action occurs, but the the OP probably would not have asked the question, at least not in the form they asked it, if they recognized that. — John Bollinger 47 secs ago9:16 PM
9:35 PM
@JohnBollinger Thank you for that. I have added additional context to my answer to point out the undefined behavior of the addition operation, for which there is no requirement for a diagnostic. — jxh 21 secs ago
I disagree with disallowing it. I have been using a ton in my programming, but mainly for data wrangling and have always tested the answer and go back to make sure I understand what is going on and why. I think it should be allowed to be posted but with a tag that it was AI generated and not allowed to be voted as the best solution. If stack users contributed more and more to the learning of the AI tools it would become an incredible tool...but I do think stack should get compensated for this...maybe a partnership — d3hero23 16 secs ago
Yes, what's the value? I don't get it. It can't be the recommendations, those could be determined by say gold tag badges. Why not just let sponsors sponsor tags? Why the need to make a community that's artificial? — Cornelius Roemer 1 min ago
@AndrewMyers where I disagree is, if you have good knowledge on the question asked and can specify the correct inputs to chatgpt you will get a solid answer most the time. At least 90% of the way there and if you have expertise then yes you can assure its accurate. As long as its being moderated and not autoposted I don't see it as an issue. Stack could introduce a negative reputation score to sift out people that just post to get their scores up and dont care about accuracy — d3hero23 1 min ago
10:18 PM
My understanding is they want collectives to be what they're describing them as; "a collective brings developers together to collaborate and learn from one another, as well as connect with subject matter experts from the community and the organizations that help build or maintain a technology product/service.". Of course, there's a lot of disagreement around whether or not what collectives currently are matches this description. I don't see where the collaboration is, how we're connecting with experts, or how people are being brought together by collectives, for example. — Kevin B 33 secs ago
10:31 PM
So the "The Actions For You page" is like "Review queues" but filtered for the collective's tags. That may cannibalize those who are reviewing away towards collectives. — Cornelius Roemer 38 secs ago
10:43 PM
Exactly what @chivracq wrote: I have no clue what you are talking about. What do you mean by "methodologies" and "disciplines" in this sentece? User and audience research revealed that general areas of practice with high potential were: programming languages, methodologies, and disciplines. — Cornelius Roemer 24 secs ago
The use of validate here sounds like you are biased. Why not use test which is more neutral as to the outcome one expects? You seem to know you want collectives so you are finding ways to argue that they will be successful. Top down management? Sentence referred to: We hypothesize that the answer to all of these questions is “yes”, and selected topics that would help us validate that. — Cornelius Roemer 19 secs ago
It is forum behaviour. It is call to action and an attempt to address someone (like in a letter or email). — Peter Mortensen 22 secs ago
11:15 PM
Are you not able to see the banner on the question that explains why it was closed? — Kevin B 56 secs ago
11:28 PM
It was closed because it is off-topic. Questions related to how to find a job in IT should not be asked on StackOverflow. The "so-called" moderators have given you the reason. It is right there in front of you. You might not like it ... but you need to accept it ... and find somewhere else to ask that question. — Stephen C 58 secs ago
Recognized Members are those who can recommend answers and approve articles proposed by non-Recognized Members. As for the why, it's devised as a means to drive engagement. Note that I'm not making any statement to whether it actually succeeds at that. With that said, I fully agree that coopting the initial pool of RMs sort of contradicts the very definition of these Collectives: "Community-led". Thought it's unclear to me how practical the alternatives would be. As a partial remedy, the RMs are supposed to transparently define how new RMs are added to the group. — blackgreen ♦ 11 secs ago
"Below question was deleted without any explanation." - The question you linked to was out of scope here at Meta Stack Overflow. That is the reason it was deleted. If you were trying to submit that question to Stack Overflow, it also would be out of scope, how you get a job in the IT field is NOT within scope at Stack Overflow nor is it within scope at Meta Stack Overflow. — Security Hound 33 secs ago
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