« first day (1305 days earlier)      last day (654 days later) » 

01:44
How can I find the questions that most recently had their list of duplicates edited to include a specific question?
I'd ask that one in rene's SEDE room
 
1 hour later…
03:06
-2
Q: My account is locked over 6 months, can i create new question?

latexfortiAfter 6 months, can you unlock my account? I will ask more detail in new topic. Thank you

...yes, but you have to wait the six months...
03:23
...or longer, if you also did something that gets your account deleted...
03:50
@RyanM btw: I've noticed a pattern of you being rather modest about your subject matter expertise in meta discussion. What exactly do you consider your strengths when it comes to programming?
Android, Java, and Kotlin are my areas of expertise
Otherwise, I have approximate knowledge of many things
I never did end up looking in to Kotlin. :/
It's nice! Has its flaws but overall notably better than Java.
 
1 hour later…
04:52
(I mean, that's how I view C#, even if its creator doesn't)
05:46
@ZoestandswithUkraine But the lookup isn't the issue. It's running the set of regexes against the incoming content (so the claim goes). It's understandable how that might cause performance issues. I continue to be stunned that SmokeDetector is able to do this so efficiently, despite the extremely large set of regexes that it tests posts against. Compiling the regex obviously helps a lot. I don't know if SE is doing that. I just don't see what a HashSet has to do with anything, or how it'd solve any problems here.
@E_net4 But all of this, per usual, misses the point, which is that the documentation merely provides an answer to the question, and the fact that the question has an answer doesn't make it off-topic or otherwise unsuitable for Stack Overflow. (If anything, the opposite.)
@CodyGray wait are you saying we're supposed to be posting answerable questions here?
@VLAZ Completely inappropriate. That borders on harassment/threatening. There's virtually no case where it's acceptable to demand in a comment that a user delete a post. If it needs to be deleted, then raise a flag on it for an appropriate reason. Otherwise, express your opinion via voting and move along. If you have some constructive feedback to give, that's a reasonable thing to post in a comment, but "This is trash" doesn't belong in a comment, and neither does "Please delete this", no matter how nicely you phrase it.
"There's virtually no case where it's acceptable to demand in a comment that a user delete a post." notable exception: when it's off-topic and you're telling them politely (and correctly! that's important!) where to post it intead.
Such dew-flecked unicorns are almost never found in the wild.
And, really, I'm uncomfortable with even that, because a single non-moderator user should probably not be making the final call on the on-topic-ness of a question.
@VLAZ you got bitten by the Stacks Editor:
@RyanM I'd say OP was bitten. But I probably should have checked as well.
Everyone gets bitten by the Stacks Editor.
@VLAZ theirs displayed the right regex! technically.
@CodyGray I was going to say because that wouldn't look good at that size but actually I'm wrong; it does:
@RyanM Wow, yeah. Nice!
@RyanM Well, yeah, I mean... it's a lot simpler than most company logos, which are regularly reproduced at small sizes. Every program you run on your computer manages to have a semi-recognizable icon that is only 16x16 pixels.
@VLAZ "Burnt orange" :-)
06:26
Rather than just total score (upvotes - downvotes) for participation in a tag, is there any way I can see the effect of a tag on my reputation? Can I see the net effect on my reputation of upvotes and downvotes on my provided questions and answers, vs other sources (people accepting my answers, my edits getting approved back when that was required, -1s for downvoting stuff)?
(Pure curiousity, of course. It won't change my behaviour, I just started wondering because I was trying to understand what the UI was showing me)
related: stackoverflow.com/tags/python/topusers it seems really ugly to me that the stats on "percentage of questions in the tag that get answered" stats is stuffed here
@KarlKnechtel You can probably do a SEDE query to extract such information. But I don't think there is a way from the site alone.
makes sense
Also, the tag score is not necessarily correct. I mean, you could take the score, multiply by 10 and you'd probably get a near enough figure. You can search user:me is:answer accepted:yes to get the count of accepted answers and multiply by 15.
It won't account for downvotes but the difference should be small in most cases.
With that said, tag score only counts score on answers, not questions. So if you have a question in tag X and it's at +10 / 0 and an answer on tag X with +5 / -1 only the answer score is taken, so your tag score is 4.
also user:523612 deleted:1 score:3.. for deleted posts where you potentially kept the rep
06:50
Hmm, you might be able to put something together without SEDE. Not sure whether it's any less work, though. 1. search for user:me [whatevertag] 2. extract the IDs of all posts from the results (scrape it or maybe just from the browser console) 3. get the /reputation dataset, filter to the rep changes for only the IDs you have and then calculate the sum.
Sounds ugly but I assume some bash trickery can do it relatively simply. I just don't know the correct incantations for the ritual. Probably wget the search page and the /reputation page, then process both with sed/grep/awk and/or actual HTML parsers.
07:13
>the /reputation dataset
what on earth am I looking at, and how are people supposed to be aware of it?
@KarlKnechtel "what on earth am I looking at" all rep changes you've had as a text file "how are people supposed to be aware of it" you need to take the "minor arcana in SE" elective. That or be able to communicate with the gods and ask for guidance. I don't know of an easier way.
I think I personally stumbled upon it when going through a rabbit hole in meta (one of them, at least). Which evidently works. But I also won't recommend it as it can easily cost you your sanity.
To be honest, though, I've only checked /reputation a few times. Recently I figured I could actually get an accurate count of how much rep I lost due to casting downvotes with it: grep -e '[\\(]-1' dataset | wc -l from Bash works. Mostly did it out of curiosity, I don't really track rep lost. Just at one point figured that the downvote count in the profile doesn't accurately translate to lost rep.
Heh. I could teach that elective.
The first column is the vote type. 1 is for acceptance of an answer; 2 is for an upvote; 3 is for a downvote; 9 is for a bounty award.
If a score is in square brackets, that means that you've hit the rep cap, so you got less than the expected rep for that event. Parenthesis around the score means that you got the full expected rep for that event.
235
A: How do I audit my reputation?

Jeff AtwoodMake sure you are logged in, and visit: https://sitename.com/reputation For example: https://stackoverflow.com/reputation https://cooking.stackexchange.com/reputation https://serverfault.com/reputation https://gaming.stackexchange.com/reputation https://superuser.com/reputation https://meta.st...

07:36
@CodyGray I must say, I never actually noticed those. The only useful information I tried to extract is downvotes. And I just matched anything with (-1 in it. Interesting information.
Well, of course not; you haven't taken the elective yet.
08:27
@CodyGray I'm saying that regex should be replaced by a hashset in this context
Ah, I see. Well, that's certainly a design change. How would you match all tags starting with a particular string, like "python"?
@CodyGray Do we have any actual applications of that today?
Dunno, but I think the regexes are actually being used as regexes, not just a slew of literals to match against.
In a meaningful way though?
What is meaningful anymore?
08:32
One that can't be replaced with literal lookup :p
09:00
Should this edit suggestion be reverted? I can't see any improvement, or worse, it introduced irrelevant tags?
@AndrewT. Yes.
That should probably be posted in the Bad Stack Overflow Reviews room.
Ah, I forgot that room
@AndrewT. Kind of looks like the automated audits which show random changes to a post.
09:20
speaking of, guess how many times those have been failed in the past week
09:31
over 7 days my guess would be 100 times. A bit more than 10 a day.
And when I represent it as "10 a day" I feel like It's an underestimation.
Okay you have a lot less faith in humanity than me
also I just mean the gibberish suggested edit ones
which have been failed 13 times in the past week
Oh... OK. I thought you asked because the number is high. 13 seems quite low to me.
Barely two a day.
remember that they are complete, obvious nonsense
that's out of 136 attempts btw
10% failure rate
I see where my expectations were wrong - I thought there were a lot more of the gibberish audits over the course of a week.
> The code is reproducible, somebody has literally reproduced it. The error is not reproducible. I do not know how to reproduce it.
Background - OP was told that there was no MCVE.
10:18
0
Q: Reputation too low to comment on stackoverflow

Fritz HerbersI have a reputation of 39 and are unable to comment. I was able to comment in the past, so might it be that the reputation decreases after a while? My focus is mainly on Github, where I regularly post. In the last two years I tried to comment on 4 posts to notify people on glitches I found when u...

 
2 hours later…
11:54
0
Q: Is there a way to recover my answer to another users deleted question?

nielsenA few times I have experienced that I spent time writing an answer to a question only to find that the question was deleted. This seems to cause my answer to simply disappear from the universe. Is there a way I can still access my answer? Btw., in those cases I suspect the deletion was done by th...

 
2 hours later…
13:25
Has anybody had to re-confirm cookie choices since the "strictly necessary" button rollout? And I don't mean when that showed up maybe a couple of times at the time of release - how about in the weeks after?
I was presented the dialog several times. Eventually checked and the cookie written with my choice (the strictly necessary) is set to expire in a week since confirming. And indeed. That was last week. I waited to see whether it'd be renewed, perhaps but I did get the pop up again.
I wonder if it's just my browser or is that the intended behaviour by SE.
14:18
Isn't last time due to an additional cookie?
@VLAZ Install uBlock Origin
You'll never see the dialog again
@ZoestandswithUkraine I have it. In fact, I have several addons: uMatrix, Privacy Badger, DuckDuckGo Privacy Essentials, and HTTPS Everywhere. I wonder if one of those started limiting cookies or something, because I also have a problem with a cookie expiring on another site and it seems it shouldn't be.
Really? And it isn't blocked?
Do you have the extra blocklists enabled?
@AndrewT. Ah, you're right. That's when the dialog did show a couple of times at rollout.
@ZoestandswithUkraine Yes, a couple. But evidently not one that blocks the dialog.
Might be one of the annoyance ones
14:31
Could be. I have none of those enabled.
Yep - very first one "AdGuard Annoyances". I deleted the cookie, got the dialog, enabled that filter and the dialog was gone.
You're welcome :p
I'd still like to find out if something on my machine is trying to limit the life of cookies. On GameFAQs you can change your colour scheme but it resets on me every so often. Which means that it goes from this gorgeous look to this light mode scheme.
The latter is the default.
For reference, if you are wrong you can also use this colour scheme.
@CodyGray yeah... sounds familiar... :-(
0
Q: Can't access profile page - Oops! Something Bad Happened!

LarnuFor some reason, I can't access my profile page, when I try I get the following error: Oops! Something Bad Happened! We apologize for any inconvenience, but an unexpected error occurred while you were browsing our site. It’s not you, it’s us. This is our fault. Detailed information about this er...

@NewPosts New badge, new bug?
14:48
1
Q: Staging Ground Beta 1 Recap, and Reviewers needed for Beta 2

Yaakov EllisIn December, we announced a beta test for the Staging Ground and opened up registration for reviewers to participate. The beta test (Beta 1) ran from December 8, 2022 through December 22, 2022 and included the participation of 50 reviewers. In this post, I will go over a recap of the beta test (i...

Yep, the SG beta badge.
That's pretty good comedic timing for the announcement to show up.
lol
> participation of 50 reviewers.
> There were 52 users accepted as reviewers
> we conducted a survey of reviewers, receiving 27 responses
> 42% of Reviewers indicated
> 58% of Reviewers
What is that a percentage of? And how many reviewers were there?
42% of 27 = 12.69 and 58% of 27 = 15.66 so that doesn't fit
42% of 50 = 21 and 58% of 50 = 29 so those figures make sense, however that's now more than the responses
Math is hard, let's go meta-ing
I guess the survey is multiple choices, and there's some rounding?
"somewhat easy" or "very easy"... "very satisfied" or "satisfied"
15:07
It was probably just a Likert scale: 1-5 on how stongly you agree kind of thing. You can still just choose one of those. So, if 5 people chose "very easy" and 7 chose "easy" that's still 12. You divide by the total and get the percentage of "very easy or easy".
There isn't an overlap that will skew the results.
Unless the stats here are drawn from multiple questions.
or they just used 2 significant digits ¯_(ツ)_/¯
Could be. But if we take the theory the percentage is of responses (27) then there isn't a number that fits. 11 / 27 = 0.(407) recurring. That doesn't round to 42%. 12 / 27 = 0.(4) recurring which also doesn't round to 42%.
(also maths is hard. 42% of 27 is 11.34 - not sure what I mathed above)
15:30
The "recommended answer" tool is effectively useless for solving the old outdated answer problem, given that every answer posted by a recognized user is automagically made a "recommended answer"
15:41
> I remember that I created the same question once again, in the hope the moderator is not around.
lmao
Yes, look both ways before asking a bad question
16:00
lol
What if we were hiding in the ceiling?
16:18
@NewPosts I really didn't realise who often I went to my profile page until it was gone.
@ZoestandswithUkraine "And here we can see the ceiling mods. Ready to drop onto their prey at a moments notice."
17:10
@VLAZ Most types of mods are unknown to the public. It's about time we got documentaries for us :p
17:50
This is weird: Why doesn't this revision show that anything was changed? a revision seems to have removed two spaces at the beginning of a line. However, the diff doesn't show it. Yet, I tried sciencing this on SO and the diff does show the removal.
In #2 I added EXACTLY the whitespace between the second to last and the last paragraph to be the same as the RPG.SE post. It adds some whitespace at the end of the line. I wanted to make sure it's not something there. Then waited for the grace period to end and in #3 I only deleted the two spaces at the beginning of the last paragraph. You can see the removal in the diff.
Same thing with this Worldbuilding post. Wanted to test off-SO to be sure. Yeah. Weird.
18:01
Also same on RPG.SE. I think I'll chalk it up to gnomes living in the diff checker.
18:38
Onto other news: should anything be done over this title edit of a canonical? From "Is floating point math broken?" to "Why does floating-point arithmetic not give exact results when adding decimal fractions?"
I don't like the latter because it's not about addition. However, I can see that the former isn't quite as instructive, either.
There was a previous attempt to revise the title at revision #17 and it was rolled back in #19
18:52
@VLAZ will 0.2 - 0.1 == 0.1 also return false?
@TylerH I was just going to say yes before you edited :P
lol
I agree something should be done but I have never had to deal with any floating except CSS floating
so I don't know which one is right.
I think a Meta thread is probably appropriate
But that one - no. Consider multiplication, however. And division. (x / 100) * 100 might be not equal to x
But changing the operations works:
In fact, the reason I saw the title was changed is because I came accross a question which was asking why (18392.19 * 10 * 10) === (18392.19 * 100) wasn't true. And it was closed against an unfamiliar to me "Why addition is broken" title. Which turned out to be the old "Is floating point math broken?"
I think a flag is warranted but I think mods will hesitate to act without a meta thread to back it up
I'm writing one. But I need to come up with a good title.
19:01
At the very least, we should roll it back and let the user###### person know the issue is not specific to addition so please stop trying to use that title
And by "good" I'm looking for a bad joke. I'm taking suggestions.
@VLAZ "Please float some good canonical titles by me for this post"
:D
"Let's not sink this post's SEO just because its floaties are broken"
OK that one is pretty bad
"Please float some less broken canonical titles for this post"
@TylerH Hmm, I misread the history. I thought it was two different users who suggested the new titles. Not just one.
19:15
Yeah, isherwood suggested a different title a while back (2019) but it was still generic in terms of the type of operation being used
"Why do inaccuracies occur in floating point math operations?"
honestly the user has only changed it once and rolled it back once, it may be worth trying to change it again from a separate user. Maybe they'll get the hint?
we could leave a comment and say 'This isn't just about addition; please don't suggest an inaccurate title. This is a very well-traveled canonical; if you want it to have a different title, please discuss on Meta first.' or something
TBH, I'd hather have a meta consensus. Or...you know, something. Because in a year or two, somebody else will probably try it.
Well, maybe. It's an occasional but still fairly rare thing where someone tries to change the title of a big canonical in a way that is harmful
a claim for which I have no empirical evidence, granted
It's also worth considering that the question was about JavaScript only from 2009 to 2014.
Yeah, then language agnostic as it's applicable in most languages. Then somebody added the tag alongside .
Java, C#, C++, Python, etc. all produce the same results. The reason is they all use the same IEEE 754 floating point representation. Which has the same inherent flaw.
Well, some languages have other floating point representations that don't suffer from this. But IEE 754 ones do. E.g., in Java you'd want to use BigDecimal to handle floating points.
too bad all 5 tag slots are used
may be useful
It had the tag at one point.
19:25
I feel like is redundant and should be synonymized to
Maybe. Not really sure what the latter would really encompass, to be honest.
That or
they are different ways to talk about the same thing
also accuracy and precision are two different things
I can see a reason to deal specifically with accuracy. But I'm not sure what [floating-point] will be about besides accuracy.
@VLAZ it seems like a catch-all for any question about floating point numbers
whether the question is about accuracy or something else
"What is the 6th digit of Pi?"
19:27
google has that answer
I'm just not sure what other things you'd be asking about. Also, I've not really spent any time pondering floating point math other than the brokenness (since it comes up very often as questions).
@TylerH I rolled it back. The proposed title was overly restrictive as it does indeed apply to all math operations. I'm not opposed to a title change to be "less clickbaity" but not that specific one.
@HenryEcker Ugh, I just posted. And you made a liar out of me! I'll roll back your rollback to make my post correct again. (/s)
I would say "when dealing with decimals/fractionals" instead of "adding"
0
Q: Please float some less broken canonical titles for this post

VLAZThere was an established canonical that deals with floating point arithmetic with the catchy title "Is floating point math broken?". The "was" used because now the title is "Why does floating-point arithmetic not give exact results when adding decimal fractions?" See the revisions of the post. #2...

19:37
> floating point math is weird
> af
"Floating point math 😿😿🤬"
Yes! More emojis!
Wait, I have a better one: "😿.1 + 😿.2 == 🤬.3"
> math is failing
@VLAZ ugh
@HenryEcker Thanks
19:43
How do I stop notifications from my own post. Help.
delete it
It's only annoying because I mark one as read, then I have to refresh, to get the next one, to mark it as read, then refresh...
Oh, just adblock the inbox
It's almost like the stacking notifications aren't very good.
the inbox isn't very good
19:45
It even broke after 4 notifications! I couldn't mark the fifth one as read because I couldn't refresh the inbox - the button was gone. I had to refresh the page to mark the last notification as read.
if only reading the comment would mark it as read
If only.
@VLAZ isn't there a 'mark all as read' option
@VLAZ at least it's an updatepanel so you don't have to refresh the whole page, just the notifications box
I'll be honest - I know there is. I just don't experience the stacked notifications often, so I wanted to see exactly how annoying those are. Answer: a lot.
@TylerH I guess you hadn't caught up in the chat to the place where that wasn't even a saving grace. :D ... D:
> jQuery - On change method JQuery bug - JQuery
19:50
Needs more jQuery
@KevinB I'm surprised they didn't have one instance of Jquery in there
Probably in the body of the question.
they did at least tag it properly
ish
given it wasn't even a jquery bug
Why does my event not trigger? Because... you aren't performing an action that should result in it triggering
though i guess we don't have a pebkac tag
Would probably be "too mean"
I wanted a cluebat earlier
 
1 hour later…
21:18
0
Q: All the [lint] and [linter]s need some [static-analysis]

cafce25I just came along linter and it seems to me it is just a soft synonym of static-analysis I propose we make it a proper one. From the tag wiki: NOTE: It is recommend to use the tag static-analysis instead. While searching for prior art I also came along lint which has been discussed before and d...

 
1 hour later…
22:30
0
Q: Suggestion: Make it so you can widen the #mainbar div with your mouse to make it easier to read answers that overflow over the page

MicroIt would be a great feature to make it so you can slide the right edge of the #mainbar div to the right in the web browser so that you can more easily read code that overflows and goes to the next line. As an example, take a look at this answer and how things go off screen: https://stackoverflow....

23:00
0
Q: Revenge downvote on my question

DeltaIVI asked this question: how can I select all columns of a dataframe, which partially match strings in a list? The question initially had two answers, one of lower quality than the other. I upvoted the best answer, and tried to accept it, but I couldn't because of the 3 minutes limit. When I came b...

23:31
@NewPosts For somebody with 16k rep on Stats.SE, correlation and causation seem to be muddled.
Answer deleted at 2023-03-02 22:51:06Z while first downvote is from 2023-03-02 22:40:05Z. It's highly unlikely that the user who deleted their own answer were the ones who downvoted. Well, there is still a chance but rather slim.

« first day (1305 days earlier)      last day (654 days later) »