@OlegValteriswithUkraine It's... somewhat unclear if that's a ban evasion account.
The question ban system could really use some more transparency.... some users end up in a question ban without ever being warned. And it's not really clear from our rules governing sockpuppets if asking questions from multiple accounts when none of the accounts are question banned is acceptable or not.
Given the policies, it seems that that would be OK up until one of those accounts hits a question ban. Then any new question asked from any of the other accounts (for the duration of the ban) would now constitute q-ban evasion.
Go to your user page > Settings > Email Settings > Tag Watching & Ignoring
(Page: https://stackoverflow.com/users/tag-notifications/XXX)
There is no space between Add a tag and Done.
Additionally: The buttons are working, but when the input box is hidden, Done is useless and when the input box i...
@HenryEcker hmm, granted, this one might not be one of the cases - I started to doubt my initial interpretation when Dharman started patiently commenting there suggesting what to do :)
Burnination notices have gotten some excessive spacing at the top and bottom:
This has also applied retroactively to completion banners:
I have not checked the featured burnination notice, but I assume it's the same thing there. If not, yay?
This is caused by the excessive, empty <p> tags ...
> Announcing one's sexual fantasies is not polite in my book. You say gendered does not mean sexist, if so, what is gendered? I do not want to be immersed in sexual fantasies as a constant barrage, and I see too much of that for my tastes.
@OlegValteriswithUkraine Meta SE. The new CoC thingamajig.
It's interesting how they are quick to take down and suspend accusations of ill intent, but not as fast to take down things they want to explicitly admit being violations of the code of conduct.
@Enet4 oh, it's under that answer... missed it, sorry
on a related note, where on earth have they got the notion that gender is a historically inconsistent term? There's always been a clear distinction between sex (who someone is "biologically" [which, in itself, is commonly considered a reductive term]) and gender (who someone identifies as).
@OlegValteriswithUkraine Based on a video by professor Dave explains, it's likely based on the words for sex and gender being identical, causing confusion for people who fail to understand that English is fundamentally ambiguous and dependent on context
This has now been fixed twice. As of approximately 10.04.2023, the date some of the first questions were deleted, the bug has regressed.
Demo search; note that the search is inaccurate, and does include questions that don't meet the roomba criteria (or questions that do, but haven't quite roomba'...
@ZoestandswithUkraine as an ironic aside, my native language lacks a word to express "gender", however, that doesn't stop anyone from understanding the difference... On a tangent note, we use the same word for "sex" (in the sense above) and "floor" for some reason.
@NewPosts I see you decided you can be arsed to report it, @ZoestandswithUkraine :)
@CodyGray Well, some people cited you, which lead me to write a Meta post, and then, none of the assumptions came through, and, and Kevin and Tyler were quite annoying yesterday, lots of licorice, and that’s mostly it?
@CodyGray well, we only have a pair of glasses, a hat crab, a foxhound, a crazy Russian cat, a flying head, a wild carrot, a minecraft character, a visual bug, and an abstract geometric shape around, so I am also unsure who are they talking about.
@Andreasdetestscensorship I told the city about your habits, and they sent me a portable one, along with a flamethrower in case a plan B is necessary :p
@CodyGray Then you missed thermodynamics. Flame throwers heat up the air, which creates a pressure inside the sealed room. So obviously, Zoe is threatening to blow me up.
@CodyGray You came back asking for a transcript summary, as you’ve been gone from chat. So you had a knowledge cutoff, similar to ChatGPT.
But I guess my jokes aren’t always that understandable, like when ROs make jokes suggesting people to post AI answers on SO, I make a following joke, and I receive a big wall of unfriendly «don’t break the rules; you will be removed» in return.
Didn't I read that they said that the only reason it sucked is because all the people who noted that it sucked were not part of the A group in the A/B test?
So, now the A/B test is over, right, and we're all in the A group? So why does it still suck?
@Enet4 No, that can't be. I heard they were using AI. The CEO told me that always gets the right answer, at least if given enough time and training data. Haven't we waited long enough?
@OlegValteriswithUkraine No, this misunderstanding of jokes reminded me of something that’s been repeatedly annoying me, when an RO makes jokes, but can’t take jokes in return.
@CodyGray btw, are you sure they did go forward with the "AI"-generated list of related questions feature and not just with the "we made the list even more obnoxious by making you scroll even more" one?
@OlegValteriswithUkraine Well, I'm going by the "We are graduating the "Related questions using Machine Learning" experiment" question currently featured on Meta, which says "The machine learning model for related questions has been graduated on Stack Overflow."
@Andreasdetestscensorship Probably smart. I quite like most of the ROs, including the one(s) you're probably complaining about. :-)
@CodyGray oook, I think I need to reread it. If that is how it "works", it's horrifying (I just took a look at a couple more questions with the list - all have an equally nonsensical list of "related" questions).
"But was it really a success? [...] [W]e were able to check the data and determined that those who had reported seeing less relevancy in the suggested related questions were not part of the experiment group, meaning they were not seeing related questions generated from the ML model."
In other words, all of your complaints are invalid, all of your base are belong to us.
> For now, the related questions displayed on pages of questions asked since February 2023 will still be generated by Elasticsearch, but we plan to reduce our dependence on this search engine over time to suggest related questions
I am not sure I understand what exactly does it mean
So, I'm not entirely sure, either, but the way I interpreted that was that the list in the sidebar will remain the same as it always has, generated by Elasticsearch (although it may be changed to be more horrible in the future), but the new inline list will be generated using teh AI algorithm.
@CodyGray It's actually genius. Far more than I would have ever expected of the current crew. What you do is, you opt the Meta crowd out of the A/B test, then you can dismiss all of their complaints/feedback as "well, you weren't seeing the good version".
@user The guidance here about checking the url will still apply after graduation on May 22nd. At that point the vast majority of questions will be using the ML model, but a small number will still use Elasticsearch. — Sasha ♦May 15 at 21:05
Unlike fundamental types – float, double and long double – are the new floatN_t types in <stdfloat> introduced in C++23 going to be always IEEE standard binary floating point types?
The cppreference page for fixed width floating-point does mention the bits of precision and exponent, which matches...
I need to know if intmax_t is always "the same type" as uintmax_t except using two's complement instead of unsigned value.
Or putting this in formal terms, will the code below always compile in a standard-compliant compiler?
#include <cstdint>
// The important assertion:
static_assert(sizeof(std...
I used the related questions list to learn programming. While it wasn’t exactly related to the question I was reading, it had lots of interesting reads for me as a learner, and it was nice that the list favourized same-language questions. Now it’s just useless.
If it didn't fixate on a single, completely-unrelated topic, and draw all of its questions from that, then at least it might have a chance of finding one related question.
@Andreasdetestscensorship Well, no one said that the content it was finding was low-quality. No one has made that determination. it's just that it's completely unrelated to the question that was asked. In other words, not related. But, if, as you said, you're using the list to learn things, then you can just as well learn new, completely unrelated things, rather than related things, thus making you a more well-rounded programmer.
@Andreasdetestscensorship Did you already know that standard Verilog doesn't allow passing an array structure between two different modules? If you didn't already know that, then by being shown and reading that Q&A, you just learned something new that you didn't already know.
@OlegValteriswithUkraine That seems like cheating? Virtually all of the questions in the field where you're an SME are terrible.
@Andreasdetestscensorship Interesting. I just read that the brain has enough space to hold 2.5 petabytes of information. I think you might be underestimating.
@OlegValteriswithUkraine Ooh, fun! I can guess what the question is about, based on all the D3.js questions in the Related list? Hmm, lemme see... Python?
Except when you flag them requesting that they be deleted. Then I am contractually obligated to decline those flags with the reason that we do not delete questions that have received answers.
Considering that the current AI implementation can't even figure out the right language/tag, and that all of the titles it'll find in the training data are terrible, I think it's fair to assume that it'll generate a terrible title that has no relevance whatsoever to the question.
And... that'll be worse than what we have now.
But at least all the people who complained about not being able to use low-quality titles as a proxy to identify low-quality/uninteresting questions won't have a gripe!
Maybe if we run multiple iterations of the model in parallel, that will tell us all the things that the question is not about, and then we can aggregate those...