I noticed that the Dark Reader Chrome extension doesn't work here. The extension converts sites into using a dark mode like theme.
This is the first site I come across where it doesn't work! Why not?
$5 says they had it disabled on stackoverflow.com because they have the native dark mode enabled, and unless you do some tricky stuff, that includes meta.stackoverflow.com
@CodyGray OK, yeah - I don't use Ubuntu. And it's because it comes with a similar level of crap as Windows. But at least the terminal works to change things.
The colon tag is getting a bunch of pun updates. And I also had to edit it because it had references to some of the older puns in the body of the question.
MPLAB C18 is a C compiler for PIC18 microcontrollers. The tag c18 has been around for a long while for this purpose.
When the C17/C18 version of the C language was released, we noticed this naming collision. It wasn't clear what to call this C version, because __STDC_VERSION__ is 201710L but the ...
Please have a look at:
Rule of Three/Five/Zero on cppreference
This can be thought of as a single rule, or aspects of a single rule. It used to be called "The Rule of Three" because of three relevant methods, then the "Rule of Five" because two additional methods joined this set with C++11, and "...
For years I've been using Stack Overflow for all my programming problems. And although most often the answers are good. Often the answer is too old (Angular 2018 for example), some things have changed, and because I'm experimenting with it, I fixed a few of those errors.
So I thought let's make a...
I'm trying to figure out what the sense of the tags themselves is. For whether merging makes sense. From what I understand, it's some rule of thumb of what you need to implement in your class. But when would you be asking about that rule of thumb? Or would you just be asking about a more specific thing, like a destructor.
Right now it seems to me like having a tag for golden-hammer or yagni - these are general things that, for lack of other guidance, can be used as a basis. But I don't envision any useful question related to them. Because I wouldn't be asking about YAGNI, I'd be asking about a specific thing.
@ZoestandswithUkraine Exactly what I gathered. From my knowledge of C++, you can implement a subset of them but unless you're absolutely certain you don't need the rest, you should also do the rest. Because they'd be invoked in different circumstances. And implementing all of them just makes sure the code behaves correct in all common circumstances.
The answerer states that this is a comment but to me, it looks like an answer as it includes a lot of explanation. This is the link to the review.
There are many downsides to this post such as the usage of links without including the important details, and not including a direct answer(by which I...
@VLAZ The tag is useful for asking questions about the rule. Not just in random cases where the rule might happen to apply.
And, even if it's true that there's no benefit in having a [rule-of-n] tag, there's no harm in doing that merge and then, if we decide it's appropriate, later removing the consolidated tag.
I would be inclined to agree, without even looking, that the rule-of-* tags are commonly misused
Whether that's a reason to remove them or declare them useless... meh. I'm not convinced yet.
I had completely forgotten about that answer/proposal, so I actually looked at einpoklum's recent question with fresh eyes, so to speak. I was going to make a joke about what we should call the new, proposed, combined tag... [rules]?
But re-reading my own answer/proposal, I still think that merging into [raii] makes a good deal of sense.
Any question about the rule of n will actually just be a question about the RAII pattern
And while you might argue that most of the questions that end up with that tag don't really need it, I would probably counter by saying that it's not doing any harm
Currently the [argo] tag means
Apply to questions regarding thoughtbot's Swift JSON parser, Argo. For questions about the Kubernetes workflow tool, use [argoproj].
But the thing is, since Swift got its own native JSON parser, all others fell into obscurity.
The last time this tag was used for Ar...
Using the search operator is:article yields a result set of 18 Articles (as expected), however, the total shows "23 results". This does not seem to be correct — even the Stack Exchange API returns only 18 items from the /articles endpoint.
If the search returns deleted articles for members of a ...
walkthrough has around 60 questions at present.
Here's the walkthrough:
Does it describe the contents, is it unambiguous?
It's hardly related to any content possibly asked in the question, and no, a walkthrough can be anything (though more commonly related to a "guidance" or "tutorial").
Is the...
I suggest that there should be a distinct stacks tag to represent the Stacks blockchain.
At the moment, if you attempt to put in a tag call stacks it automatically shortens to stack.
How would one change this?
In the issue #129 of the Overflow, descriptions of "Interesting Questions" (as well as "Links from around the web") contain ' (likely not limited to in the general case) HTML entities in rendered text.
Credit goes to KevinB for spotting this in the first place.
it is never truely decentralized. data needs storage. Routing needs connections. if what we currently have isn't decentralized we'll never have a web that is
I was attempting to tag a user using the @ sign in a comment.
also in the comment was a snippet of code that included the @ sign.
It caused an error that said
Only one additional @user can be notified
@VLAZ ah, this thread, thanks! Yea, seen it, and even wanted to comment "WTF was this tagged as bug", but decided that I don't care to interact and just edited it out
hmm, guess not then? Since that would imply no passage of time (hence no distance) and be more akin to overwriting positions of all [insert atomic unit here] of an entity
@KevinB depends on how it is implemented. If it is Star Trek method where they scan your body and create a new one, destroying the old one in the process, then no it probably is not travel
if it is moving the same object to a new location somehow, then yes it is transportation or travel
@KevinB I suppose, yes, as an entity's position N time units ago is not the same - otherwise you'd be jettisoned in the vastness of space if you were to just "rewind" the time somehow significantly.
communicate is sitting at 130 questions.
Almost half of these questions are about python's subprocess module, usually code using the Popen.communicate method. Of those, the overwhelming majority are already tagged subprocess and/or popen, but a few aren't, so this tag occasionally leads to mis-t...
@KevinB well I read once that the beam me up thing literally destroys your body in the process of creating a perfect copy, and then sends the information to the ship's beam me up thing and then constitutes a new body