00:12
Presumably, the prof will see (at least screenshots of) the questions as part of marking the assignment. If the message is visible in the comments or answers, the prof should see it. — user7868 45 secs ago
5 hours later…
04:57
Assuming that the question isn't closed, sufficiently downvoted, and deleted before the professor gets a chance to see it. Questions like this have a have a life expectancy of minutes in some of the busier tags. — user4581301 10 secs ago
This seems like a misrepresentation of what happened. There were tons of comments on the question engaging with the OP to discuss the shortcomings of the question. The general question asked here on meta has ample duplicates, is in poor shape and still people did engage the OP. The downvoted meta answer you refer to doesn’t even address the question, it’s general commentary on a hypothetical question that wasn’t asked even adding a narrative that doesn’t match what happened (the collective SO hive mind and their dupe that wasn’t actually suggested ). These Q&As have real shortcomings. — MisterMiyagi 41 secs ago
05:49
"I'm mainly curious to see what peoples responses are to this enigmatic post and whether it generates any ideas or interesting perspectives / ideologies" - my response is: please focus less on stringing fancy words together, and more on basic sentence structure and presenting clear, coherent ideas. — Karl Knechtel 52 secs ago
"Along the way, we gave a few answers, and those were pretty dispiriting, too." - no, nobody said either of those things. And to be quite frank, you come across as ranting rather than having any interest in establishing policy. — Karl Knechtel 37 secs ago
06:17
@Iagicarus It might be! As long as you can faithfully and succinctly reproduce the error, seeing your code, errors, and other information might help someone else with the same problem. It really comes down to "how much do I want this question ban lifted?" The more this matters to you, the more effort you should put into improving the posts you have, and vice versa. — Anerdw 54 secs ago
06:31
Why was this closed as a duplicate to some FAQ with no explanation given? I'm not going to report SO bugs on some external github page - turns out I'm not getting paid to weed out bugs on this commercial site, but do so as a favour. — Lundin 36 secs ago
06:44
The FAQ says to report the bug externally. What exactly do you want SO to do about it? — cigien 42 secs ago
@cigien Pay me better, if they expect me to do that. This site isn't some open source project. — Lundin 47 secs ago
@cigien The system is: bug reports are reported on meta below the bug tag. There is no need to change the system. — Lundin 23 secs ago
This question is similar to: Policy: Generative AI (e.g., ChatGPT) is banned. If you believe it’s different, please edit the question, make it clear how it’s different and/or how the answers on that question are not helpful for your problem. — gre_gor 32 secs ago
07:14
I would regard both as equally easy to miss. You are in a situation where you want to type n the box; you ignore what's outside the box. — tripleee 8 secs ago
You probably need 2 accounts, one for questions that will be totally voted down through the floor, and another account where you actually help other people with answers. — steb 13 secs ago
@tripleee I can see that. Then again, it looks like users are reading the words "What did you try and what were you expecting" - there's a chance that the other placement is at least a little better. Or maybe this is all just naivete! — Anerdw 5 secs ago
@gre_gor I don't believe this is a dupe, this question predates the LLMs which prompted that policy change by years. It concerned answers from a ML system far less advanced than the GPT-based models we see all over today. — Hoppeduppeanut 40 secs ago
07:46
"determine the average for a user asking for help and that same user helping others" The average what? Days? Days since first post? Days since sign up? Reputation? Posts created? Something else entirely? — Thom A 54 secs ago
@Hoppeduppeanut That policy is about "ChatGPT and other generative AI technologies", which includes less advanced models. — gre_gor 44 secs ago
08:18
"Why was this closed as a duplicate to some FAQ with no explanation given?" Can you elaborate how the duplicate didn't answer your question? The answer states "Therefore, any bugs and feature requests regarding the actual syntax highlighting code cannot be handled by Stack Exchange and should be directed to the team behind highlight.js." What about that does not answer the question you are asking here? What are you expecting Stack Overflow to do, when it's explicitly stated that bug reports for Highlight.js don't belong here? — Thom A 20 secs ago
The best you could be asking is "Can someone else in the community make a PR for highlight.js so that the syntax highlighting respects the changes made in the C language recently." That isn't a question for Meta. — Thom A 15 secs ago
Incase others don't see the history, this was closed as a duplicate of What is syntax highlighting and how does it work?. As an FYI to the OP here as well; closure reasons explain themselves. For duplicates, just like on Stack Overflow; it is up the the author of the post to explain why a post isn't a duplicate of another, not for those casting a VTC to explain. If you feel what you need to do is not adequately explain in the linked post, please edit your post to explain why. — Thom A 8 secs ago
Note that "I don't want to raise an issue on a different site", isn't a reason as to why it's not a duplicate. — Thom A 43 secs ago
"...I'm mainly curious to see what peoples responses are to this enigmatic post and whether it generates any ideas or interesting perspectives / ideologies...", ChatGPT? — Augusto Vasques 30 secs ago
@ThomA "Meta consensus" by various volunteer users in the so-called community does only apply to discussions, tag moderation etc. Not to support errands or bug reports. — Lundin 32 secs ago
@ThomA The point is still that this is a commercial site, not an open source/non-profit community. How the commercial is implemented internally is none of our business. If they chose to use open source projects internally, good for them! I don't care. Writing a bug report as was done here is the official way to report bugs. If there's some meta FAQ with info - good - but it's not an official statement by the company. Staff doesn't even seem to have been involved in that post, apart from an edit by animuson back in 2014 which I think was before he got recruited. — Lundin 50 secs ago
This isn't a [discussion], @Lundin, it's a [bug] report; and the question that this was closed you what to do. — Thom A 18 secs ago
@ThomA "This isn't a [discussion]" Yes that was the argument I was making indeed. Read the comment again. — Lundin 6 secs ago
So your post is not "Please fix highlight.js", but "Please use a different syntax highlighter"? Then, again, please edit your question to demonstrate that; that isn't what you propose here; you simply state you want to highlighting for C fixed, and to fix that you need to go to highlight.js. — Thom A 16 secs ago
@ThomA "This isn't a [discussion]" Yes that was the argument I was making indeed. Read the comment again. — Lundin 41 secs ago
@ThomA Broken record at this point, I already replied to that argument. "Furthermore, as noted in the question C++ has supported this for 10 years now and the bug is still there. SO can therefore not rely on some inactive open source community to fix their bugs, they have to fix them themselves. Perhaps swap out that lib for another. Again, I don't care how they fix it." — Lundin 38 secs ago
So, again, please edit your post to propose you want to change the library. Perhaps link to a library you know that is comprehensive and is "regularly" updated. — Thom A 13 secs ago
@ThomA Again, I have proposed nothing about any library. I'm reporting a syntax highlighting bug on SO. Fixing the site isn't my problem. Suggesting how SO staff best design their site or which libraries they pick internally isn't my business nor my problem. Again you seem to mistake this site for some sort of community-driven non-profit one. — Lundin 15 secs ago
"I'm reporting a syntax highlighting bug on SO. " Then I go back to the duplicate. The problem is you don't like the answer; that doesn't make it a duplicate. — Thom A 23 secs ago
Since 2014, I try not to answer pure homework questions anymore with a full answer. Often the question gets deleted almost instantly after answering. Some of the answers took some time and effort and some even contained some nice formulas. So the sad thing was not that much that the answer was removed, but I could not even check it back. — willeM_ Van Onsem 33 secs ago
@Sayse: my experience is that a lot of them just copy the answer verbatim, hand that in... and delete the SO question to remove traces. — willeM_ Van Onsem 35 secs ago
09:14
This question is similar to: What is syntax highlighting and how does it work?. If you believe it’s different, please edit the question, make it clear how it’s different and/or how the answers on that question are not helpful for your problem. — cigien 29 secs ago
09:47
if they're voting on each others posts the accounts can be suspended for voting manipulation — WhatsThePoint 23 secs ago
Or similarly, if there is no centralized supervision and everyone and their mother can start up an university, that is also a problem. Ignoring it because we don't want to point fingers doesn't make the problem go away. — Lundin 9 secs ago
@RyanM While I fully agree, that particular region is making it so very hard not to get prejudices, as there seems to be a centralized problem with the entire education system. If bad habits are forced upon institutions from a centralized place such as some Ministry of Education, then that region does have a local problem which ultimately does affect posts from that particular region. -> — Lundin 18 secs ago
@WhatsThePoint in this case they seem fairly good at not voting on each other's accounts (or possibly few of the accounts have the reputation to upvote). So it's something to watch for, but not an issue here — DavidW 56 secs ago
Meanwhile, the question has been re-asked on Computer Science: cs.stackexchange.com/questions/169419/…. And has answers (at least, some of them) about advantages of binary over decimal and vice versa. — Tsyvarev 36 secs ago
@user7868 If the question is in a state sufficient for being handed in, there is no need for the professor to care about advisory comments that such questions are unsuitable. — MisterMiyagi 46 secs ago
FWIW I agree with @RyanM that the region is a distraction here - it's a big geographical region with a lot of universities, and only a very small number seem to set this kind of assignment (and even then, it's probably a specific professor who thinks it's a good idea). — DavidW 18 secs ago
@Lundin If bad habits of forcing students to post complete junk to Stack Overflow were forced upon schools by a central authority, there would be more than a tiny handful of incidents. Same for if a lack of centralized supervision of schools were somehow causing instructors to do this, since plenty of regions like (to pick on the one I live in) the United States have large swaths of largely unsupervised coding schools. A number of instructors that can probably be counted on one hand does not a pattern make. — Ryan M ♦ 54 secs ago
As for downvotes on your answer, part of them are probably because of "Floating point is broken" topic: it smells like you blame others for closing questions as duplicate for the canonical. This topic is absolutely unrelated to the discussed question on main, because OP is perfectly aware that floating-point math is imprecise. (But for some reason OP insists on wrong estimations for errors when calculate 1/3. And that wrong premise adds substantial part to "bad" status of the whole question). — Tsyvarev 38 secs ago
10:57
Comments aren't answers either; that post is off-topic on Stack Overflow, however, people continued to, effectively, debate the problem in the comments, which is not what comments are for. That post has all kinds of different problems at this point. The way it went, the whole things would have been better off on Reddit or, worse, on Discussions. — Thom A 40 secs ago
11:46
question count / answer count = "help" ratio
. or what exactly are you looking for? — Lino 32 secs ago12:22
12:33
@DavidW if the students are annoyed about the assignment - which, for any given assignment, some will always be - there will probably be some that gleefully forward the comments to the prof — lucidbrot 21 secs ago
@KarlKnechtel My overarching interest is, as always, to help people past their difficulties and misconceptions, and learn to program better. This attitude quite frequently brings be into stark contrast with SO's policies. This thread is a useful reminder that I should spend less time on SO, that I really don't belong here, because I fundamentally don't accept the site's stated goals. — Steve Summit 58 secs ago
@Tsyvarev You blame the OP for their wrong estimations. I'd like to help them understand. If every OP understood everything perfectly from the get-go, we wouldn't need SO at all. — Steve Summit 14 secs ago
I wouldn't know what you are talking about. There is only one type of comment in Stack Overflow that I know about. The one we're looking at right now. Where you create them does not matter (although I would be a little careful in a review queue, they can cause an audit failure if I remember correctly). — Gimby 54 secs ago
@SteveSummit People have repeatedly tried to help the OP understand. That’s why we can now say they insist on wrong estimates - because they were repeatedly told that and why those estimates are wrong, yet they, well, insist on those without any obvious reason. — MisterMiyagi 55 secs ago
@U.Windl One can trigger the system to post a canned comment. There is no way to write comments tailored to the situation anonymously. — MisterMiyagi 45 secs ago
1 hour later…
13:57
In the meantime, while you await feedback here and decide what to do next, can you please revert the tags to the original functionality (AKA showing the tag wiki excerpt on hover of tags)? — TylerH 19 secs ago
If only they implemented a parent tag/language feature instead of stuff like this, the Python and other language version tag issues could magically disappear overnight — TylerH 43 secs ago
Yes, on the internet all-caps has long (at least since the Usenet days in the 80s) been equated with shouting, which is tantamount to being rude. newrepublic.com/article/117390/… — TylerH 40 secs ago
14:37
People learning how to be devs. Professor gives braindead assignment. Community then decides to punish askers by downvoting their question and telling them they're doing it wrong. Welcome to being a dev on Stack Overflow I guess? Seriously though, this screams a situation where StackOverflow staff should get into contact with the university and professor and explain why this isn't acceptable. Punishing clueless kids just out of high school (or equivalent) doesn't feel like the right answer. — AlbertEngelB 6 secs ago
14:49
@AlbertEngelB fair point, if they ever come back to SO years in the future, they could potentially already be question banned because of something they were told to do by an authority figure, where not doing so could be putting their entire livelihood and education on the line. Even making new accounts would be considered ban evasion. — ipodtouch0218 19 secs ago
15:39
15:50
16:07
Not chatgpt i just have problems communicating, as @Security Hound has pointed out stack overflow is not a forum, although the tag description of "discussion" confused me a bit. As judging from down-votes I won't continue this further. Thank-you for your time. I do enjoy stringing "fancy" words together as i like to practice my vocabulary a bit due to my difficulties communicating and i think it hosts a bit of playfulness, however this may not be the place for that it seems. You all seem quite... aggressive and quick to judge? This is most likely just me though, I'm a tad antisocial, thank-you — Bobbymcbobface 46 secs ago
16:27
I'll say one thing for patterns. When I was a student... if I didn't have to do something, I didn't do it. The less time spent on school work, the more time I could spend on playing video games. I don't think I was very unique in that respect although other people would have had other interests. But I had to do the work, I had no convenient buttons available to me to get other people or software algorithms to tell me what to do. Modern students do. I can't really blame them for hitting the buttons whether they were instructed to do so or not. I'd have done it too, I'm pretty sure of it. — Gimby 55 secs ago
16:49
That evasion seems to be possible by design though, given that "until they either have a published "successful" question or a few published "neutral" (not negative or closed) questions". Or did this particular user account not have the necessary amount of promoted questions to fulfil that rather lenient requirement? — Gimby 44 secs ago
17:03
I mostly agree with this answer, but "You aren't even really here to get an answer" sounds provocative, unfair and incorrect. Ultimately, the goal of this site is to get answers. The way we collect useful info here is by ensuring your content helps some concrete person; otherwise we could use blog-style posts. The fact that someone can take advantage of this site and get answers in a selfish manner is actually a win for the community (or at least supposed to be so). — anatolyg 44 secs ago
@anatolyg as a question asker, one's job is not to get an answer. Getting answers is an incentive, as you note. But it's not the point - which is why, for example, self-answered questions are welcomed. — Karl Knechtel 12 secs ago
17:32
@steb Question and answer bans are separate IIRC, so OP probably doesn't need two separate accounts. Also, creating a second account is seen as a form of circumvention and can get your second account question-blocked. — Anerdw 37 secs ago
@steb what Anerdw said is correct: your advice is likely to be counterproductive regarding automatic question blocks, and could even lead to manual suspensions from moderators. Please don't advise people to try to evade system restrictions in ways that violate the rules. — Ryan M ♦ 23 secs ago
@lagicarus Our tooling suggests to me that you are no longer blocked from asking questions. — Ryan M ♦ 32 secs ago
18:20
@Robotnik because when minor version reach 3 digit it will generate huge amount of traffic. — talex 42 secs ago
18:30
@AlbertEngelB downvotes aren't a punishment mechanism. neither are close votes. — starball 51 secs ago
@Kangarooo I don't think a count of votes would be especially useful. Score is far more useful. — Ryan M ♦ 53 secs ago
19:15
@Bobbymcbobface: It is your post which is unclear. It could be the result of your "problems communicating", or it could be that you don't understand the purpose of Stack Overflow and its meta site. Downvotes and closing just express unclearness (and other problems) of your post. Why do you name us "aggressive" for your fails? Note, that it is not required that your alone should write the perfect question: we will be happy to improve the post by fixing grammar errors and some other minor things. But we cannot fix your post because we even don't understand what you have written. — Tsyvarev 25 secs ago
I think this is just how the search works, isn't it? You would need to adjust the query to search for [java] and [c++], instead. Just adding multiple tags is like writing multiple words: any single word/tag could produce a match. — TylerH 32 secs ago
@TylerH no, in search "and" is implied when you have
[a] [b]
. You can see the regular search results do have both tags. But the SG items in the list seem to do an "or". Moreover: Using "and" in the search field always does a regular search instead of a tag search - you can force a tag search with and
in it in some ways but just searching [a] and [b]
is actually performing a regular search instead. — VLAZ 38 secs ago@TylerH see [vugu] which has one question. Searching
[vugu] [go]
returns that single question. Unlike [vugu] or [go]
which returns 73k matches. — VLAZ 51 secs ago
1 hour later…
20:33
"...the tag description of "discussion" confused me a bit..." -- Meta is different from the Stack Overflow main site as some discussion is allowed here. "...As judging from down-votes I won't continue this further." -- again, meta is different. Down-votes often mean a disagreement with the poster's premise. You are asking for our judgement when posting here, and so shouldn't be surprised when receiving it. "You all seem quite... aggressive and quick to judge?" -- Again, when posting on meta, you are quite literally asking for the judgement of others. — Hovercraft Full Of Eels 34 secs ago
20:50
I thought I responded to this: "Therefore "a lot of other users think you should report this at some github" is a subjective opinion" animuson isn't some other user, they are a staff member; the policy isn't from the users of Stack Overflow it's from Stack Overflow itself. — Thom A just now
1 hour later…
22:13
@CodyGray Perhaps you want additional emphasis on a specific portion of something that's already bold. — Ryan M ♦ 22 secs ago
22:28
@Lundin While you're correct that animuson was not staff in 2014 (they were hired in 2015), they have edited the post several times since, most recently in 2020. — Ryan M ♦ 51 secs ago
Bold, italic, and all-caps. Not to mention an emoji/icon. What's next, @Ryan,
<blink>
? At some point, you just have to rely on the reader caring at least a little bit. — Cody Gray ♦ 36 secs ago22:52
Is there anything at all that would stop SE Inc. from using deleted answers that are of some arbitrary quality value, though? It's already been dual-licensed to the company by way of just posting them, and according to the TOS, applies "even if such Subscriber Content has been contributed and subsequently removed by you". — Hoppeduppeanut 59 secs ago
@Hoppeduppeanut there is not. In fact, there is nothing stopping anyone with access to such answers from using them, as they're still licensed under CC BY-SA even if deleted. — Ryan M ♦ 28 secs ago
A couple of things to note here. First and foremost, the described "protest" is completely against the rules and will be reverted by moderators. Second, this "protest" is completely ineffectual, for a variety of reasons, so there's really no point in doing it, even if it were allowed (or you didn't care whether or not it was allowed). Third, AI models aren't going to be taking the jobs of anyone who can post high-quality Stack Overflow answers any time soon. — Cody Gray ♦ 24 secs ago
23:34
23:49
I don't believe you! The only way I will believe is if you prove it by deleting this answer. — President James K. Polk 5 secs ago
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