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1:15 AM
0
Q: After 6 years, a question was closed as a duplicate in favor of a lower-scored question. Should it be the other way around?

spectrasQuestion being closed: Reading file using relative path in python project Has a score of 124. Has an accepted answer with a score of 205. Has next answers with a total score of 56 Yet after 6 years it was closed as a duplicate by a single person (no voting as that person has high reputation). Q...

 
 
1 hour later…
2:17 AM
@NewPosts it concerns me, yes. (i.e., you don't need to inform me about it :) )
 
3:02 AM
actually it was quite enjoyable discussing that.
 
3:29 AM
I've been noticing a lot of people trying to make code fences using single-quotes rather than backticks. Do people not know what a backtick is, or where the key is, anymore?
 
Probably.
 
 
2 hours later…
5:40 AM
@KarlKnechtel I noticed that as well. It seems more common recently. I suspect the new editor is somehow involved. I've not tried to replicate it.
 
6:03 AM
0
Q: How to check for answers I haven't accepted?

MentalistI just came across a question I posted that went unanswered for three years. Then when it finally got answered I must have missed the notification, because it has now been answered for one year. (I just finally accepted it.) In order to prevent this kind of thing from happening, is there a way I ...

 
6:39 AM
0
Q: Stackoverflow will not allow me to post this table (code not formatted as code error)

andrewbWhen I post the following table into an answer on stackoverflow, it gives me the "Your post appears to contain code that is not properly formatted as code. " error. I was able to circumvent this by surrounding all the entries with backticks but I'm curious as to why SO thinks this is code. Op...

 
> Okay, so I am new to JavaScript. I wasn't able to get the above to work for me. So I started putting it together myself. Here's my idea (about the same, different and working syntax):
Ah, yes. I think I figured it out. So, the reason "the above" didn't work for you and what you put together does is because you wrote Java code. Whereas trying to use JavaScript won't really compile.
Well worth the nine upvotes it has.
I better save up, so I have some votes left for the day.
 
6:55 AM
^ commented + α
 
It's been up for over a decade at this point. It got its first downvote four years after it was posted. Since then another four upvotes before today. I don't have much hopes of a comment being of much use.
Also - is that an alpha?
 
ah yes, that's alpha. sometimes used to indicate "and more things" in Japanese...
6
Q: Meaning and translation of "プラスアルファ”

TommyA friend asked me to translate into English a short text. The context is Tokyo being a global city where people gather and experience a variety of lifestyles and values (価値観), and where art, culture, beauty, etc are combined together. I came across this sentence: 日常生活に+アルファのステータスや価値観を発信することが...

 
7:18 AM
That's interesting! Never heard of it, neat :)
 
7:49 AM
Hmm... dunno why YouTube suddenly recommended me a recent video posted in 2023 demonstrating that "SO is" ... well, you know the continuation.
 
8:19 AM
@AndrewT. Another one?
 
it's a 17-minute long video, the uploader was posting as "a noob", but when I saw the question, it was not surprising...
 
I think I found it.
Alas, the topic is usually a successful echo-chamber on YouTube.
 
8:39 AM
@AndrewT. Have you ever opened the other one? YouTube has some odd ideas about what I might like based on very old history.
I noticed when it happens that it's usually recent(-ish) content related to rather old(-ish) watch history of mine.
"You once watched this video on Eminem conspiracy theories, surely you'd like this even more outlandish conspiracy theory video."
 
Of course I did :) I believe the one that was last posted on MSO.
 
Yeah, I meant more like - was it on your current account or anything.
But that would explain the recommendation.
@E_net4theidiotdownvoter Word of advice: do not scroll to the comments. They tend to be even worse than the average for YouTube.
 
yeah, just surprised because it's so "eye-catching" among the rest of the recommended videos that I'm really interested in (you won, YouTube...)
 
YouTube is good at eye catching, yes.
It's how it got me to watch the Eminem conspiracy video.
Also I remember it got me some video about software development and why object oriented programming is bad. The person who made the video took some slides from a presentation and started to critique the code. The code which was barely 5 lines because that's how much you can fit and still have it readable on a projector.
Also, code that was quite clearly illustrative in purpose. Rather than "This is proper OO code which you should be using in production". It was more of "Here is an OO concept, the following slide has some bullet points and the speaker explains why you'd want to use it and how to apply it"
It was an hour long video. Somehow I think I made it to about half an hour before I just stopped it for being super annoying.
 
@VLAZ Eminem conspiracy theories? Now I'm intrigued!
 
8:54 AM
@CodyGray Oh, sorry to get your hopes up. The conspiracy theory was that Eminem died and was replaced with a lookalike. The reasoning was "look at these not super sharp photos taken by paparazzi. He looks different before he went to rehab and after. Eminem must have died!"
 
Hahaha
He died and became pixellated.
 
And yeah, the Eminem who was probably 50% drugs by volume before rehab did look different. After rehab he looked more, you know, "not constantly on drugs".
@CodyGray Both the before and after pictures were fuzzy-ish. Like you can tell he's paler in the before ones. And on some of the pictures you can see the bloodshot eyes. The after he looks more...well, normal. But there isn't a huge amount of details to really go with.
Also, different lighting on them and such. They are, after all, a rather eclectic collection of photos of Eminem just doing stuff IRL. Not specifically him posing for photos.
 
@VLAZ Funny. The only "Why OOP is bad" video that I got recommended is this. Haven't watched it though.
*recommended by YouTube, that is
 
@AndrewT. Yes, that might be the video. The first comment on the video is "The biggest takeaway I get from this, is that this man really, really hates jumping around. He wants to read the function in one place. I can respect it." and yeah - I think that was the crux of why it's "bad" from what I remember.
 
9:06 AM
If you have to jump around very much while reading object-oriented code, the wrong abstractions were chosen. It's as simple as that.
It may well be that poorly-done OOP is worse than poorly-done procedural programming.
 
0
Q: How to show questions and answers in search results

CorrlIf searching for a [tag], the results show only questions. The help page gives the options is:question, is:answer, is:article but I would like to see both questions and answers. I tried [tag] is:question or is:answer but this shows only answers Search options answers only not deleted So how to...

 
@CodyGray Agreed. One of the pillars of OOP is the encapsulation, so you don't have to care about the abstraction. If you do then it's clashing with the fundamentals of OOP, doesn't it?
 
I would say so, yes.
 
 
2 hours later…
11:15 AM
OK folks, I entered the crap hole so you don't have to. My quick notes on that recent toxic video about Stack Overflow's toxicity.
 
Take a shower.
 
11:33 AM
The complaint about the Help Center containing too much content and too many pages is completely valid. It absolutely makes sense that someone focused on the goal of asking a question would feel like all of that is "TL;DR". Even if they tried, they're unlikely to get out of it any of the critical information that matters.
Noting that you're new to a technology is not necessarily unnecessary cruft. It can be useful information to someone who is trying to write an answer that will be useful.
Questions do not need to contain attempts. Users who ask questions here are not required to have read the official documentation. Reading that and providing relevant references is, in general, the job of the answerers, not the asker.
 
Fair, but the "can someone please help me" just reads as asking for one-on-one guidance. And an attempt would have helped either come up with a solution before asking or with a baseline for answers to work with.
 
Looking into the profiles is not something I perceived as an attempt to demonstrate that the people had large egos, but rather to highlight the apparent contradiction of people accumulation reputation for supposedly being helpful, yet those people not being at all helpful to him, as a newbie, who asked a question.
Now, granted, this reflects his confusion about what the purpose of SO is and the meaning of reputation, but our Help Center did nothing (even if he'd read it all the way through) to disabuse him of that notion, so... that's really our fault.
If you think about it objectively, what he shows as our process for question-banning new users is really unfriendly.
@E_net4theidiotdownvoter Err, no it doesn't. You're reading way too much into that.
 
*headscratch*
 
Literally everyone who asks a question is wanting someone to help them.
 
So at least we agree that the statement isn't very useful in a question.
 
11:37 AM
You are projecting your experience with helpless morons onto everyone who asks a question using "normal" phrases, which isn't fair.
Yeah, I agree "can someone please help me" is a useless phrase that doesn't belong in a question.
However, I do not agree that its inclusion is necessarily the mark of a low-quality question, or a low-quality user.
 
@CodyGray It's usually unhelpful. Maybe pointing out you're well-versed in a technology can be useful. Sometimes. But for most questions "I'm new to X" is at best a signal that it's most likely a duplicate.
 
It's just how people talk. It's like "what is the best way to do this?" It doesn't mean they're trying to ask for opinions. It just means that they don't want a bad solution to their problem, because who would?
 
Again, that's fair. I do want to build the right arguments.
 
Really, although that video does contain some wrong information, it is, in my opinion, one of the most level-headed representations of the SO experience for a "new" user (i.e., someone not familiar with our model).
The person either is not or at least is not pretending to be an unreasonable person. Most of what they do is reasonable stuff that a user unfamiliar with how our platform would think to do things. And the fact that we don't provide them any guidance otherwise is our fault, not theirs.
He's practically lead by the system into deleting his original low-quality question and posting a new one. And yet... that's precisely the wrong thing to do!
 
@CodyGray But back to this: should the help center explicitly say that comments, downvotes and close votes do not provide reputation?
 
11:41 AM
Again, that's not his fault. The only way you could argue that it is is if you say he should have comprehensively read the entire Help Center (and at least a few things on Meta) before taking any action. But I hope that if you're reasonable, you'll realize that is an unreasonable expectation.
 
There was a lot of emphasis on justifying some behaviors through gamification, which is just wrong.
 
@E_net4theidiotdownvoter Err, maybe, but that's really missing the point. The point isn't for people to stop complaining based on a misunderstanding. The point is for users to stop having a bad experience because we set them up for failure.
 
@CodyGray Absolutely! It always comes down to a clash of expectations. I guess we can treat everything else as kind of a symptom.
 
See, the issue is that people are trying to figure out why SO isn't working the way they think it should work. So they come up with stuff like "oh, it's about points/egos" because that is, on face, a reasonable explanation. Of course, it's not really true, but rather than telling them why that theory is wrong, we should instead be focused on preventing them from developing theories about why the site doesn't work like they expect it to...
by correcting their expectations and providing better guidance.
Yeah
That's really my whole point. I watched this exact video some time ago, and while I was frustrated with certain aspects of it, it was also eye-opening. It's like a doctor watching a medical drama screaming at the screen that they're getting the medicine/science wrong. Well, yeah, sure, except that nobody but you knows that or cares about that.
If you have to be an expert in SO in order to effectively utilize SO, then something is wrong. You can be a purist or dogmatic about it, and insist that people educate themselves, but that's just not realistic.
 
-1
Q: You can’t post new questions right now

LisaI am not able to ask questions. It says "You can’t post new questions right now". I would like to edit my question and improve it, but does not allowed me. Anyone can help? thanks in advance.

 
11:45 AM
Sure, people can't be lazy or morons. We can't help people who are. But I really don't think that someone who is focused on asking a question in order to get help with a problem that they're facing, and thus avoids reading a bunch of irrelevant-looking noise in the Help Center article(s) that they're linked to, should be dismissed as lazy or helpless.
@NewPosts See? What?! I mean, we could just flip the bozo bit and say this person is an idiot, but something is fundamentally wrong when so many people can't figure it out. Right?
 
@CodyGray No way. Name calling is a no no.
 
Heh
 
@CodyGray That often comes around as an argument towards "SO is toxic". But it's hard to make a compromise.
 
The thing is that Stack Overflow's model is quite confusing for a new user. I remember being confused how things work despite reading the help center. Maybe what we need is one of those interactive tutorials (with all the fancy popups explaining things) those other sites have. But rather triggered each time a user experiences something new.
 
Yeah, all the "toxic" stuff is a red herring.
Just like all of the "welcoming" stuff.
But we need to figure out why we are failing to communicate how our site is supposed to work to users who are hoping to use our site.
There will always be a certain subset of users whom we will never reach. That's just fundamentally the case, whether we want it to be or not. Therefore, you'll always be able to decry us as being toxic or unwelcoming or some such. But it doesn't mean we are.
The issue is that, in most cases, users just have trouble getting started and have a really bad experience, but once someone explains it to them (or they finally take the time to go through and read everything in the Help Center and on Meta), it clicks, and they become happy and productive users.
 
12:00 PM
I notice that these videos generally don't talk about flagging stuff. They call out unfriendly comments but then they don't know they can flag them?
 
Are comment flags even available to the person making the video?
 
Yes, that's a surprising yet very common occurrence.
 
It's 15 rep to get flag privilege, right?
 
@VLAZ On posts by the own author, yes.
 
People seem to see the upvote button on comments, but somehow miss the flag button immediately below it.
Or... not understand what it means and should be used for.
 
12:01 PM
Maybe a mention about flagging in the tour would go a long way.
Maybe this was originally not even considered for the tour, because letting new users flag stuff in their own posts was only introduced in 2018.
 
Well, also, we do get a fair number of totally bogus flags from new users, especially on comments.
Things like, "not the answer", "doesn't answer my question", "not helpful", "misunderstands the question", etc.
None of those are flag reasons. Obviously, comments are not an answer to the question.
The confusion between answers and comments is also something that afflicts the vast majority of YouTube videos about Stack Overflow (with the notable exception of this one we were just talking about, which, I'm not going to lie, is probably what made me listen to it more credulously than most of them).
 
So, more upfront information about flagging may seem like an interesting direction.
 
@CodyGray Confusion by comments and answers is, unfortunately, hard to eliminate. A standard forum just has "posts". Well, you can think of an "initial post" (question, if you will) and follow up posts (answers, if you will) but point is, it's a flat list. Then services like Reddit came along. They realised that not all posts are equal. Some related to other posts in the chain.
So, what Reddit, or Discourse, or others do is that they represent each post as a tree. A post can have direct replies and each reply can have replies itself. Each can then serve as the new head of a tree. And this is where SO comes in and has sort of both. But not quite. Some content goes under other content - posts and comments (SO terminology). They aren't the same.
It's also not made clearer by comments (remember - an outsider may think of them as "posts") have upvotes. Like other posts do.
 
The distinction between answers and comments is a tough one. The tour is already pretty clear about it.
 
We've done a good job I think of making them clearly visually distinct.
It could certainly be a whole lot worse (i.e., more confusing).
 
12:12 PM
@E_net4theidiotdownvoter And I feel that would lead to giving "toxic" complaints more ammo. "Look, it's so bad, that the tour tells you that you'd be getting toxic comments!"
 
Meh. Or it'd take the wind out of them. We acknowledge that there are sometimes "toxic" comments, but moderators deal with them when brought to our attention.
Let's be honest, technical people are apt to post some pretty unfriendly things. That's what you get when you spend most of your time talking to machines instead of people. Compilers aren't exactly "welcoming". So I don't think we are going to have much success with pretending that no rude comments ever get posted on SO.
I mean, besides that, welcome to the Internet.
 
@CodyGray Yes. And unfortunately no. If you're coming in with the mindset of "these are posts related to the answer" then de-emphasising them fits. Reddit "fades out" long nested chains. Some other places even make the nested posts "smaller" and the current head of the tree + direct descendents a larger size. Which does look a lot like a Q&A page on SO.
 
Er... I'm having trouble parsing that
 
@CodyGray When exactly have complaints about "toxic" been reasonable? I've seen many of the "SO is toxic" explanations off-site which point to the welcome wagon blog post and use it as fuel for their rhetoric.
 
That was leaning a bit too far into it...
Just acknowledging that it's the Internet and rude stuff happens here, but we have a way to deal with it and clean it up.
 
12:18 PM
@CodyGray Uh, it's also confusing to write. Let's simplify - there are other systems where you have equal-typed "posts" and they can be nested in trees. Some of these systems represent these posts similar to how an SO Q&A page is - there is a main post (head of the tree - level 0 - question on SO) and there are direct descendants (level 1 - answers on SO). And they take more emphasis. The posts that are nested under these (so level 2+) are de-emphasised visually when shown in the view.
This is similar to how comments on SO are shown.
Thus, if a user comes in with the expectation that comments = answers, it's not necessarily immediately obvious that the expectation is wrong.
 
Hmm. So the way we represent comments visually (by de-emphasizing them) implies a tighter connection to the post, which makes them look more like answers than actual answers, which are represented with a visually equivalent weight to the question?
Yeah, that's certainly paradoxical.
 
@E_net4theidiotdownvoter If anything, I can see the frustration of being a new user and receiving... non-ideal interactions. I only hate the most when he got an answer that mentioned the documentation and then made an excuse "My bad for not reading the docs. I'm a noob, okay?"...
 
@CodyGray Pretty much this. I think it's better to be transparent on the fact that there are policies and mechanism in place to handle rudeness, especially considering that posts and comments here are moderated in a fashion that other platforms could only dream of.
 
@AndrewT. What I empathise a lot with is that the close messages are often not great. The system level ones like "Unclear" or "Needs focus" lead to help pages which are quite unclear and lacking focus themselves. Without showing clear and actionable things to do to improve a post. The "Needs focus" in particular talks a lot about asking multiple questions even when that's not necessarily the problem.
At least from the asker's perspective. They asked a single question "How to build an entire operating system". One single question. Just not very focused.
 
12:41 PM
@VLAZ Yeah... I want to fix this. It is something I'm trying to work on internally, as I have time. Unfortunately, other things keep taking precedence.
 
@AndrewT. That part sure rubs curators the wrong way. Someone admittedly not having checked the official documentation and then complaining that their question is poorly received reminds me of that comic strip with the bicycle guy putting a stick in the wheel.
 
What's wrong with not reading the documentation?!
If everyone read the dang documentation, curators wouldn't have anything to curate. We'd have no questions and no knowledge base.
 
If the documentation is good enough, we are just replicating what's there.
Besides, people will find that documentation through searching anyway. So one may indeed argue that a question which is easily answered by the docs is not very useful, and vote accordingly.
By voting, I mean the up/down votes. This isn't a reason to close the question, sure.
 
@E_net4theidiotdownvoter Yes! That's been one of our missions since literally the site's launch.
 
We are not running out of questions, much in the contrary. The site works best by filling in the gaps and tackling focused, harder problems.
@CodyGray Um, what?
 
12:50 PM
(Granted, the idea of making that video is to know the interaction on SO, not factoring The Effort™)
 
We are here to build a repository of quality questions and answers. And that quality is assessed by the community through voting. I don't believe that there is a problem in people making that assessment based on whether the answer is easily available elsewhere.
Especially when that elsewhere is the official documentation for that technology.
And again, I emphasize on the "easily available", because some documentation may be carpy indeed.
 
@E_net4theidiotdownvoter One of the missions when the site was launched was for us to contain answers to all questions about programming, including the most basic ones that are already covered by the documentation.
They're supposed to be quality, but there's nothing about them not being simple.
There is absolutely a problem in people making the assessment about a question being suitable for this site because the answer is easily available elsewhere.
Nothing outside of this site matters.
If it's not a duplicate of something already answered here, it's a welcome addition to this site's knowledge base.
How are we going to have comprehensive coverage if we don't allow things that are already adequately covered elsewhere?
It's the same reason we don't allow link-only answers. Not even to official documentation.
 
@CodyGray Understandable that it would take time. By the way, the Not in English close reason I think has pretty good explanation. It's the generic ones that have a problem for being too generic. They just come across as "there is something wrong with the post but we won't tell you what". Which, to be clear, SE is complicit with. However, curators get the blame for it.
 
1:06 PM
@VLAZ You mean the reason displayed in the blue box, or that big old long Help Center article that I wrote?
That, it's been pointed out, non-English or limited-English speakers could almost certainly not read...
 
For Not English - both.
 
Unfortunately, the generic close reasons are the ones we cannot fix. What we can fix are the site-specific ones. So that's what I'm focusing on.
 
@CodyGray Then we just wait on that answerer on the MSO announcement to provide translation in all languages, so all non-English speakers can also enjoy the guidance.
 
The guidance for opinion-based, lacks debugging details, and seeking recommendations is all terrible. It's terrible for both the person whose question is closed for those reasons, and it's terrible for the people who are voting to close questions (leading to a rampant misuse of these close reasons).
@VLAZ Haha. We're still waiting on the Spanish and Portuguese SO mods to come through with their blurbs.
In the meantime, blackgreen wrote both of them (turns out he's a language wizard; I had no idea), and JNat reviewed and contributed to the Portuguese blurb (as a native speaker).
But yeah, we'd hoped the mod crews of those sites would provide them like we asked them to and like the Japanese and Russian SO mod crews did. Dunno what happened.
 
1:21 PM
@CodyGray I feel that you read beyond what I said now. I said people are free to downvote such questions they find not useful, not to reject them out of the site.
 
 
1 hour later…
2:49 PM
 
3:01 PM
I'm curious why I did not get lifejacket and lifeboat badges for this answer, which I thought was at -3 at least (if not lower) when I answered it. Does that badge have a wait timer for at least 24 hours before awarding?
 
Don't know. Is my reading of the badges wrong? You need to answer a question with a <low score> and then the question needs to get a <high score>? But...the question's score is even lower now than when you posted.
So, is my reading wrong? Or did the badges trigger incorrectly?
Oh. I see my reading is wrong on what you wrote - you didn't get the badges.
In which case - I think my reading of the badge requirements is correct - you need to answer a low scored question and the question needs to flip its score and go positive (different threshold for the two badges). But that didn't happen.
 
Oh, duh
The question has to go positive
I forgot that part
I was thinking back to the old badge, Reversal, where you just had to post a positively scored answer to a negatively scored question stackoverflow.com/help/badges/95/reversal and just skimmed the lifeboat/lifevest explanations
well bummer
 
3:17 PM
Modflag the question and explain that all the downvotes are wrong. A mod will review it and remove the downvotes, thus making the score positive.
 
no chance of that question going positive
@VLAZ I know, I will write in the flag description that the upvotes are leaving the post open for SQL injection, that will get Dharman on the case ASAP
2
 
"Hello all! 🎈🎈🎉🎉👏👏 All downvotes are WRONG. They are hurting my learning. Also all downvoters cannot answer the question. Please remove them in advantage thank 🙏🙏"
 
Good use of emoji
 
Not enough "toxic"
 
you should generate a sentence with ChatGPT for good measure
 
3:22 PM
Maybe just attach a screenshot of my monitor where I have the message written in the box.
 
Now you're talking
 
3:36 PM
If only there was, like, this overarching entity with resources that could be spent to improve the tools the community has so that it doesn't rely so heavily on unpaid overworked volunteers for improving the new user experience
(i know they're making staging ground, and i think that's great, ofc)
but like
this has been a problem for 10, 12 years
I would have expected us to move to a more accepting system/design a long time ago. It's clear the dev community wants both a knowledge base and a help center. there's plenty of both askers and answerers who try to treat it as the latter, even though we aren't designed for it
I'd prefer a process where these low tier questions that aren't fit for the knowledgebase to still be able to receive the help they need, while simultaneously not sticking around long enough to cause any long-term issues with search/quality.
there's clearly answerers who'd love to help these users
 
@KevinB the design I'm working on would be a 4-tiered system of content
 
i don't think there should be multiple entry points
but allowing "experts" to categorize content behind the scenes could be useful
 
essentially: tier 1 = canonicals being explicitly and actively curated by SMEs; tier 2 = stack overflow if everyone actually understood how it's supposed to work; tier 3 = stack overflow as it is; tier 4 = the ninth circle of help-desk hell
 
tier 1 should just be articles, and we should be able to directly interface with them in Q&A
 
not exactly sure what you mean by articles. like, in blog format?
 
3:42 PM
One small change I would like to see that would allow for easier development of more complex systems down the road is adding meta data to tags that classifies them as 1st tier or 2nd tier tags; 1st tier tags would be any language or platform that can exist on its own without depending on some other language or platform to be used and asked about. 2nd tier tags would be everything else
 
@TylerH yes, I have also had this idea
 
like an answer without a question, that, as the canonical, can be referenced from a question in a highly-visible way
 
1st tier tags would then always show up 'first' in the list of tags ahead of 2nd tier tags
@KarlKnechtel Yes it's a popular demand of users
 
not necessarily to close the question, but as an assistance to the question
 
@KevinB Like documentation, if you will
 
3:43 PM
yes, but without the reputation system
 
Peak Wikipedia tier?
 
experts who are creating content for the good of the community/network don't need reputation to to entice engagement
 
I'm not sure why you don't want that content to have a question "header"
certainly it needs a title of some sort, in order to drive direct-from-search-engine traffic
 
i'm not sure forcing it to be titled with a question is always the best
for ones where it is they can always open the article that way
 
what I like about canonical questions is that some common problems really do have multiple, rather different, reasonable solutions. so it's a place to collate those answers
basically, my pythonista "special cases aren't special enough to break the rules" sense is tingling
many existing canonical Qs are like 1 or 2 lines and it works just fine
 
4:18 PM
//user already logged in error
if (await User.findOne({ email })) {
  throw "User already exists. Please login";
}
 
Needs more waffles.
 
Mmm, waffles
 
well commented code where all the comments are wrong
 
4:52 PM
1
Q: Continuously redirecting to external site for official support

Eduardo Páez RubioI have noticed that many questions with a specific tag on StackOverflow are receiving a lot of comments by the same user that contain a link to the official repository from that open source library. This user (I am not sure if he is part of the maintainers) is asking to go there and formulate the...

 
5:02 PM
> Defined by tags, 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.
 
0
Q: We’ve made changes to our Privacy Notice for Collectives™

Cesar MWe’ve just made a few adjustments to our Privacy Notice for Collectives™. They were made to make the notice ready for the upcoming expansion of Collectives into new areas of practice - as well as streamline and make some points clearer. There isn't a ton of impact to users here or significant dep...

 
5:19 PM
> Somebody help me – banana 3 mins ago
 
6:16 PM
0
Q: OP undid an edit to the question title

jxhI attempted to edit the title of this question to make it more specific to the problem being asked. gcc compiles what it shouldn't See: https://stackoverflow.com/revisions/75388661/3 The OP changed the title back. So I added a comment to describe the purpose of my edit. I am pretty sure I did not...

 
6:45 PM
@NewPosts What? Why create and give it a tag wiki? What is "aita"?
Sorry, tag excerpt only, no wiki.
 
@VLAZ I regret googling it...
 
Sorry, didn't know
In my defence, it could have been "Ariel Invents Toothbrush Attachments".
 
But I guess the answer is "yes", for creating that tag :p
 
lol
 
 
1 hour later…
8:22 PM
-2
Q: Which IT technologies and skills are currently in demand to get an IT job in less time?

EswarI recently graduated in INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY. I know a little bit of SQL and Python. Which It technology or tool should I learn to get a job in short time in USA? I tried Artificial intelligence and machine learning, but I felt it takes lot of time to get a job in that field.

 
 
2 hours later…
10:40 PM
0
Q: How to click a template image inside an image in selenium using python

Lalitha PadubidriI have a use case where the entire page is returned as a single image with inside body. For example single image is returned when I access google search page with only one element for the whole page. I need to find the location of the 'Sign In' in that image and click. I tried using OpenCV in p...

 
11:16 PM
-1
Q: Why is it so difficult to get post a question in StackOverflow

EswarWhy is it so difficult to get post a question in StackOverflow. It needs a tag?? Why do the so called moderators don't give an explanation for deleting the question? Below question was deleted without any explanation. https://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/423103/which-it-technologies-and-skill...

 

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