Is there a list somewhere that show what languages are supported for syntax highlighting and what the keyword for it is? For example, for c#, do you use c#, or csharp, etc.
@cigien I agree, but I'm disappointed. I wish we could actually teach with canonicals, even if we don't discuss.
meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/419739/… I would have hoped for more discussion here. Too many people think the simplicity of the question is a reason to close the question in itself, and don't look for duplicates
more concerningly, sometimes the question is frequently asked but no clear canonical emerges
(perhaps, every attempt to make a canonical gets people thinking the canonical must exist somewhere else?)
meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/388663 a related problem here is what to do when OP has misdiagnosed the problem (this is different from having an XY problem, because it relates to debugging questions rather than "how to solve it" questions)
hmm, I guess there was adequate discussion, just you know, in comments
it makes sense that the question wasn't well received overall.
@KarlKnechtel That was part of my reason to write that answer. Put the bit that everyone agrees with in, then follow it up with "but also people are too happy to crap on basic questions even when they're valid"
We got tag tips, they are little guidance flavor that is supposed to try to nudge you into asking better questions when you use some tags on the site. Well, I doubt askers are reading it because it's muted:
Given that it's in the right side of the screen where users are used to have stuff they c...
Currently, if a user flags a comment with the "Something else" flag option, and that comment matches the regex to be deleted by a single flag, the comment is immediately deleted and the flag marked helpful, with no moderator ever seeing it. I believe, but can't immediately verify, that it also c...
I stumbled upon this question
Ok that was a horrendous pun.
Now, in all seriousness, I stumbled upon the question above and I was left thinking, is there a minimum length to consider a question 'a good one'? This question seems... fairly self explanatory as it is, but my first reaction was to th...
By the time I got to the following question this morning it had two close votes on the grounds of "needs clarity or detail". Создатель карточки Trello More specifically though I opened the "Community Specific" reason dialog, anc under other appended "because it's not in English".
Now though the...
Prior to 2017, the top bar used to show a count of pending suggested edits to 2k+ users. Then, the top bar was completely redesigned to remove any numbers related to reviewing, and instead only show an occasional alert dot.
According to data analysis performed at the time, the removal of this cou...
There are many [export-to-*] tags:
export-to-csv
4884 questions
16 asked this week, 62 this month
export-to-excel
3460 questions
5 asked this week, 37 this month
export-to-pdf
624 questions
7 asked this month, 52 this year
export-to-word
100 questions
9 asked this year
export-to-text
76 ...
I assumed it was a pun related to the use of the word "stumbled", but when I read the linked question, the dots didn't connect. There was no pun around "stumbled".
Today - Thrusday, 11 August 2022, I just noticed that Darin Dimitrov reached 1 million points of reputation on Stack Overflow.
Darin Dimitrov have love writing code and really passionate about it.
and he is MVP since 2011.
He have been using Microsoft technologies since the early 1990s. His prima...
Same thought process. I thought "stumble" was somehow related to the question. Perhaps if the question title used the word "trip". But I don't really see anything.
I know that I gain and lose reputation when people vote on my posts. For example, when one of my answers receives an upvote, I earn 10 points and receive a green notification in the top bar.
However, sometimes I see my reputation score increase or decrease without any reason given in my profile....
@NickstandswithUkraine Badges. You were talking about badges. It can result in badges. No, it doesn't result in actual change or improvement. (Although, apparently, it can result in the introduction of more review queues!)
@CodyGray Huh, you're right. We've been remarkably consistent. Apparently the rest of you lot are more attentive to taking those down in a timely manner than I am.
Let's welcome Darin Dimitrov...
...to the list of the top 5 highest-rep users of Stack Overflow:
Jon Skeet
Gordon Linoff
VonC
BalusC
Darin Dimitrov
With over 21,000 valuable answers provided, it's no wonder they reached this point.
What's unique about this is that if you check, you will see th...
I'm confused. The 4th person to reach 1M was BalusC (I think), and the reception to that announcement was very positive meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/409154 +305/-16 votes for example. Is there some magic threshold where 4 is the last time we congratulate, or has there been some major shift in the community's attitude towards rep recently?
I wouldn't object if all the other congrats posts were closed for that reason as well. Unless/until that happens, I'm going to vote to reopen this one.
I mean at some point it's got to stop. 4 seems ...fairly arbitrary, but...I guess that's what meta has decided? I'm not opposed to slapping historical locks on all the others.
I just answered a question and i keep on asking myself should I have added example code.
The user askes why his code was not doing what he expected.
I added an answer explaning why his concept was not working.This answer
I could correct the code to give a working example, i did not because in my ...
I think it's important to be consistent. Closing and deleting a specific congrats post when the others are alive and well is just weird. Either 1) let the up/down votes signify to other users that these announcements are not appreciated, and eventually people will stop posting them, or 2) a mod steps in and closes/locks all the congrat posts. I can see option 2 being considered a bit heavy handed (at least without a clear community consensus, which there isn't currently), so I'd go with 1.
@E_net4thecommentflagger That's not entirely true. Many of the rules, policies, discussions, etc on meta are precisely so we can all be consistent, at least more so than humans would normally be. It's not perfect, of course, but it's a good goal to strive for.
The search for the tags png transparency irfanview yields a single result missing two further results that are found without the [ ]. No further filters applied.
@cigien It is nearly evident from observing the history of questions and answers on Meta Stack Overflow that the sentiment towards certain ideas have indeed changed over time. This is reflected not only in plain u/d votes but also in CVs and del-votes.
I bet if we did some research we could find that the majority of this users answers occured first or nearly first, disproving the importance of the "What's unique about this is that if you check..." bit
@E_net4thecommentflagger To clarify: by consistent I don't mean that we need to stick to what we've been doing. If the attitudes towards things have changed, that's fine, we should change the guideline, etc, but then the old stuff should also follow them.
@cigien The community decided we've had enough under half an hour ago. Remembering the old ones should be closed takes a bit, and isn't an excuse not to draw a line in the sand
@cigien That is sometimes done. But it has to be done manually through dupe-targeting, locking, etc. And some previous questions may be overlooked. Not to mention what Zoe said. This event happened just about now, we have no reason to push a retroactive change immediately.
So far, it seems like most of them have also cast close/reopen/delete/undelete votes (assuming that everyone who cast such votes also cast an up/down vote).
Wouldn't it be better to have one of these with an answer saying we don't want any more of such posts? Sure, we shouldn't be encouraging earning lots of rep, but closing/deleting such questions is how we make that point? This seems like a very childish way to "draw the line in the sand" if that's the intent.
Yeah, all those are better options. The canonical "Why is this event not so special?" does run the risk of it being negatively received, which means we wouldn't really be able to justify closing them as dupes. In fact, I'm not even sure there's a problem to solve here: the pessimistic projection is what, 2-3 of these posts a year? Surely meta can handle that influx.
@cigien I'd leave out the "why is this not so special?" and just make it a happy congratulations post with a CW lock, with a note explaining "My congratulations post was closed as a duplicate, what gives?" or something like that.
@RyanM That would be reasonable. It would have to be explicit that it's about rep-related congrats, as we don't (presumably) want to disallow all congrats posts.
@KevinB It depends on what you mean by "handled negatively". If you mean downvotes, that's fine, but closure/deletion as "super-downvotes" isn't IMO. Again, if the previous posts are also closed/locked that would be fine as well.
not everything that should be closed is always closed, it's not uncommon for popular things to skirt the rules
This meta post, and ones like it, aren't about meta. they're "meta" in that they're not trying to solve a problem that would be relevant on SO main, but they're about SO, they're not about meta, they're not solving a problem or discussing a feature, it's literal noise by design, similar to the pile of trash we get every winter
The sole purpose of these posts is to worship someone for reaching a rep threshold
Excessive use of delete votes is one issue, but casting opposing votes frequently is even more problematic IMO. Of course, it'll happen now and then, especially when the post is edited substantially, but it could even happen because the user changed their mind. But, a regular pattern of casting opposing votes suggests that the votes are not really being cast in good faith.
@cigien I think you can tell the same way we can: checking the review results.
That works equally well if the review is complete; if not, we can take a shortcut because we can grab the review directly from the post and complete it ourselves.
Ah, from the review history. Thanks. So meta.stackoverflow.com/review/reopen/30756 it looks like they voted to leave it closed in the reopen queue, and then voted to reopen.
Okay, I decided to historical lock all the congrats posts I'm aware of.
(including the ones for non-rep stuff)
Logic: they are useful for a moment in time, and then we "archive" them. In particular, I don't wish to see close/reopen/delete/undelete fights on the rest of them as well.
I just run into an issue when I was flagging a question.
Solidity Transaction Issue
This question was asked on StackOverflow, but belongs on the Ethereum.
In the Community Specific flag section, all i saw was these 5 options, none
of which were relevant.
Is there an issue with the flagging syste...
When saving profile changes in dark mode, the confirmation message is white.
It actually made me blind and I'm considering a millions lawsuit... but if you'll fix it or give me lifetime free coffee it will also do.
Thanks for addressing this! However, it is slightly concering that this slipped past testing. Revealing vote data is a non-insignificant breach of privacy, given that we've always emphasized that votes are private. While accidentally granting this access to moderators is better than leaking it to the general userbase, I wonder what went wrong in the testing process that this went live in this state. I'd hoped that any changes touching access to private data (even aside from PII) would be thoroughly tested before releasing to production. — Mithical9 hours ago
The Bounty tab seems to have gone back to the void.
Is my account suspended in any way?
EDIT: it's not actually just the bounty tab. below is what I used to have (perhaps 1 week ago)