@KevinM.Mansour I think it is. I made it runnable as a snippet. But notice that it was the post author that rejected your edit, meaning they didn't agree with it.
@KevinM.Mansour If css is in a tag, there is no need to add it in the title. And rightly so. We don't want titles with "in CSS", "in Java", "using SQL".. it's in the tags.
I see. So they commented about the "ScrollBar", which looked not right to them. They could have "Improved edit", but I expect they got confused about their options.
@double-beep Are you sure that that's a deleted user, rather than an anonymous user?
I can't remember if they're different. In other words, I can't remember if edits by deleted users continue to show the deleted user's card, or if they switch to showing it as if it were suggested by an anonymous user.
@KevinM.Mansour No. Create a drop-down item in the toolbar. Clicking the button/icon itself would insert the default header (which would probably be H1); clicking the drop-down arrow button next to the button/icon would give a menu of options, including the other heading levels:
If you wanted to be particularly fancy, you could have the image/button default to the last used header level.
But that has its advantages and disadvantages. I certainly think it's sufficient to make the default option just be H1.
@OlegValter Semantic grouping as described is good. I'd insert additional space between the groups, or perhaps a vertical separator. Your advice on looking at what Word, etc. does is excellent. More people should follow standard practices in UI design.
@double-beep Would it be helpful if I also provided my scrutiny? :-)
@Scratte I don't actually have to nuke someone. I can find an existing one.
double-beep have forked the Suggested Edits script and added a user card for "anonymous user". If there's a difference between that and a deleted user such as a deleted user having a grayed out default username (as in user12695027) then it would be helpful to know, so to not hardcode with a magic "anonymous user".
Yes, that is a valid question. I do not think they are. I think the user information is determined at the time the suggested edit is created, so it's only "anonymous user" when the user suggesting the edit is actually anonymous.
If the user is deleted after the edit is suggested, the user card is displayed as normal, except indicating a deleted user. Just like under posts.
@double-beep well, let me finish sorting up my part of the mess, and I will push the branch back :) After that, I'll probably need a good break from ARC :)
@KevinM.Mansour well, that doesn't really matter - but given the limited space in your UI, I'd go for the short version
@KevinM.Mansour you mean the white backgound? Yes, I like me some simple-colored backgrounds :) Not sure I like the neon color scheme, but I don't like it in general, not in the project
@KevinM.Mansour I also think it is a good edit - it seems like the author of the post just does not know that we encourage good edits
@KevinM.Mansour no, that's not fair - we shouldn't have given post authors the ability to unilaterally approve/reject edits no matter their reputation (or whatever better metric you prefer). I firmly believe this is a mistake
@OlegValter Hard to follow the logic here. Post owners have a pretty substantial say when it comes to the contents of their own post. They have the ability to single-handedly make edits. Why not let them approve or reject?
@CodyGray mm, because I am not sure I agree that post owners should have substantial say :) To clarify what I mean: I do not think post owners should be stripped of the ability entirely but think their ability to accept/reject edits should be subject to the same requirements as editors (i.e. >= 2000 for unilateral edits, although I do not find rep a particularly good metric when it comes to determining ability)
after all, we do not "trust" editors under a certain rep level to make unilateral edits and subject them to peer review but then allow post owners of any skill level to reject them at will. It is a well-known issue that newish users (and sometimes not-so-new ones) are very protective of their posts and reject everything
@OlegValter But.. that would be detrimental to them editing their posts into shape. By the time the edit goes through the review, the post is long closed.
@CodyGray exactly, I am not sure I like that too much either :) But that bias aside, I think there is a difference: when an OP makes an edit to their own post or rolls back an edit of another, they do not affect that other user. In the case of suggested edits, the one suggested gets one more rejected edit - a negative consequence for doing everything as expected of them. Not good by my standard
@CodyGray or that... Actually, I do not recall how it looks like when there is a suggested edit on one of your posts. Do you have a reference to take a look?
@Scratte do you have any stats on how many suggested edits are important to get the post edited into shape? If anything, from what I've seen in the queue, there are minor edits floating around that actually make it harder for the post to get reopened
I don't think I want to mess with the logic at this point. I will when it breaks :)
@OlegValter Yes, but I imagine there's be substantial more load on the suggested edits as well. And what should we do with those if we don't think the post becomes on topic? Then the user will first have to convince editors that are even less likely to know the technology.
@OlegValter That I agree with.. a rejected edit that was a good edit is not very motivating.
@CodyGray yeah, I don't say it's uncommon, it's certainly not unheard of - just that I see some potential for confusion. Although if made with the context in mind (i.e. remembering that the last time you made a header, you chose to style it with bold and a certain font-family), it is a powerful feature, I must agree
@OlegValter Um, that wasn't what I meant at all. Merely that it would remember which header level you'd selected from the associated drop-down menu and store that as the default option for the associated buttcon.
@Scratte yes, I think the system that can issue negative signals for good behavior has poor design (*in that regards, yes, real live has an awful design :))
You all know Microsoft Word. Think of its font color buttcon.
It saves the last-used color, so if you click the buttcon directly, that's what you get. If you want something else, you can use the drop-down menu to the side of the buttcon.
@CodyGray ah, ok, sorry, I think I overthought it - yes, Word's (or Docs's) color picker behaviour is a good example of the feature - and yes, it works nicely. Not sure I've seen header level being memorized before, though
@CodyGray thanks! I think that the extra spacing between groups should appear naturally once elements are grouped (but yeah, for some reason after grouping controls semantically, some decide to group the groups). Maybe a barely noticeable separator will make those stand out as groups even more (not sure if that's easily achievable under the current color scheme, though)
@CodyGray yeah, read that article - not sure I agree: of course, making the user choose straight away (especially when the options are ambiguous or may be unknown to a new user) is not a good way to do things. However, I believe giving a user that wants to make decisions an outlet to doing so is good design. If I open a "settings" view, I expect it contain enough options to customize my experience and become disappointed when it is barebones.
LOL!.. That Windows toolbar taking up half the screen! :D
One of the things that I noticed that people sometimes do not do on purpose is hitting the "Insert" button. It would be nice for those if the system told them about it.
@Scratte mm, that does not look like good design to me :( You show a giant dialog the first time -> annoyed user presses "do not show me anymore" -> the user is once again unaware of this happening
@OlegValter Not these kinds of users though. They have no idea that they even pressed the button. It's right next to "delete" and they just accidentally hit it.
We have some software that pops up a message box prompting for permission to quit. (Yes, it's a known anti-pattern. No, I haven't won the fight to have it removed. It isn't even asking to save unsaved changes; there's no "save" option in the software at all. Every change is implicitly saved.)
And I cannot tell you how many times I watch people trying to close the software, getting the dialog, immediately clicking "No" or the "x" box, and then wondering why it didn't close.
So they try again... hilarity ensues. (But only on my part; not on theirs.)
@Scratte yeah, yeah, I know - been there myself. The status bard should probably just be made more prominent, or a non-intrusive message / notification should show up (somewhere in the corner of the screen) indicating a mode switch happened
for a good case of what happens when you add an in-your-face notification with an ability to dismiss it see no further than SE's own "please consider commenting" for accounts with low rep when they downvote :) or the GRDP consent screen mess, or the review queue "learn more" popups
@Scratte did you start leaving more feedback under posts? :)
@double-beep - re: auto-updating scripts - well, yeah, after reading the Q&A, that's exactly what I was thinking about: an @updateURL header pointing to the dist folder with the script. Then, for me, it's just a matter of pushing to the repo from the IDE. I only copy-paste when A. Testing is not set up (after all, sometimes jsDOM + Mocha is too much hassle for a 15-min script), B. There is a need for visual testing (I don't use the managers - everything lives in devtools snippets for me)
@CodyGray No :) I've never done that. But I rarely comment and downvote at the same time. Though I've often seen a comment from someone else right at the time I downvote :D
@OlegValter Maybe we're talking about two different things. I'm thinking of the header in the manager that has a file in the @required directive.
@Scratte so, to clarify - why not keep 2 distributions? One with the @updateURL header pointing to the test file and another "production" one that points to what end users get?
@OlegValter I could do that. But since I'm reluctant to install an IDE and there's a nice syntax highligher in the manager, I've had no reason to do this.
@CodyGray Yes, but not as nicely as the manager. Notepad++ does have syntax highlighing for JavaScript, but I don't even need to change window with the manager, the test post is in the next tab.
@CodyGray mm, it does not "need" to be - but I always write mine to be able to run with or without a manager (i.e. if you post the code in the browser console, it will still do what's expected of it). This means that I'd like to accommodate those who use other means (like devtools snippets) or make the userscript loaded as an external script with @require header. In the latter case, serving a minified file reduces the bandwidth used
I can see how loading it with a @require header might let minification save some bandwidth... Except that, as we learned in here earlier, @require items are cached locally.
You can add a @reguire file://...local file and then the manager will load that on every run. You just need the header in the manager for this. Then you can develop in the file in whatever IDE you like.
@CodyGray That's two different topics ;)
One is during development. The other is distributing a minified version :)
@CodyGray it's more of a "why not" part, to be honest, because the build step does it for free. Even if it's cached, it's still done the first time it's loaded (and its not guaranteed that the file is always cached). And I too know at least some users who prefer to download minified versions - so then, why not? I serve all versions - minifed, unminified, old browsers, new browsers
Although I, too, often use the userscript manager for making changes, because I'm usually only tweaking something minor and thus benefit from the easy access to a refresh preview on the live site.
@OlegValter I guess that's valid, because it's easy, but it does seem kind of weird and pointless. I suspect that the people who download minified forms are doing it because they think it will be faster. Cargo-culters, essentially. No valid reason, and thus not a valid data point.
Well. My script is 4000 lines and growing (since someone wanted extra stuff like links in titles and tooltip.. :-), so if they don't car to look into the code, I can understand downloading the minified.
@CodyGray Huh? That I started tweaking stuff? Or did you reply to the wrong message?
@CodyGray mm, that's why I said it's not particularly important - just that it takes more effort to convince a person to do things your way than accommodating them :) Just that since it does not cost me anything, even time, why not serve different versions?
@CodyGray in my experience convincing (actually convincing, not dominating them until they agree just to make it stop) someone their way is the wrong one takes too much energy and creates more divide than necessary
@Scratte I saw Makyen telling you that he essentially does the same thing, except he prefers to use a text editor that he's already comfortable with. Which I totally get.
@CodyGray Yes. I've had a few existential developer's crisis with this, since someone wants to teach me a better way of doing it. Which is why I went to ask Makyen (in my mind the userscript writer). I thought of asking Samuel, but they seem to be busy with other stuff.
I don't believe that is the case for other things, like code formatting, or deployment, or whatever. But for which editor you use and how you write it, yeah, nobody cares except you.
@CodyGray I'm not completely friends with Vi.. but I'm probably more a Vi person, than an Eclipse person. While it does make things easier, it also does thing "for you" that I'd like to understand myself.
and besides, I know I am trying to slowly convince @Scratte to switch to IDEs, unit tests with jsDOM (choose your poison), and such, but I realize that if you don't use that on a daily basis, it's a pain to learn from scratch. I had to do everything by myself - and clearly remember this not being a very pleasant experience at first (who am I kidding - for quite a while) - like I am looking at a nuclear reactor control panel with no idea how it works
For example, as I've mentioned before, Visual Studio on Windows is exceptionally handy, due to the built-in debugger. So if I'm actually going through the whole edit-compile-debug cycle, yeah, that's a lot handier than switching back and forth between a text editor, a compiler window, and a debugger (especially since that debugger is probably GDB, which sucks, but even if it's WinDBG, which doesn't suck).
@CodyGray neither bad - they are just that, tools that aim at boosting productivity and reduce errors. If one makes you slower or causes pain, to hell with it
@CodyGray I know, but I'm suppose to be a Java-developer. I'm sure there's a JavaScript plugin :)
@CodyGray When I'm in an office where everyone is using it, yes. But I really only use the editor and I general turn all tips off. The only real advantage is being able to directly go to the classes in the standard library.
Isn't packaging and deployment built into the IDE, too?
I don't actually know. I've never used Eclipse for more than a few seconds.
(Someone had it installed on a computer and was using it to edit C source code. I spent literally a few seconds with that thing, before I switched over to Notepad++ to do the edited I needed to do to fix their problems.)
Ahh.. yes, but you see it's like when rebasing in git goes awry. Then what? If you don't know how it's all connected, you can't fix it if things go bad.
Ermm.. I'm talking about someone else pushing their rebased and merged version to the repository (obviously some users don't check the final diff before they push)
@CodyGray The link died sometime after August 2020 - edited :) P.s. My highest-scoring one is literally how to change repo metadata on GitHub (in the GUI no less) - was so ashamed for even answering it that made it CW from the get-go.
@Scratte (A) Making a copy of the .git folder usually doesn't end well; you need to clone the rep. (B) While it's true you have a backup, it's no reason to futz around with the command line and increase the risk needlessly.
Apparently, this was asked 5 years ago:
Set focus on email address field on the Login Page
If you're like me, you hate using the mouse.
I keep my browser secure on my work computer, so I have to re-login into things manually on sites, like Stack Overflow and I always have to use my mouse to selec...
@KevinM.Mansour when I started fixing the pluralization issue, I noticed you have a timing bug when updating the preview: you rely on innerText to count chars, but sometimes it can be empty when the handler fires, I suggest moving to the already present text variable
also, a suggestion: add another count for number of chars with spaces - should be easy to add, but it is sometimes useful (for those who need the text to fit into a char-limited field)
@KevinM.Mansour basically, the only things you are missing is chars with spaces, num lines, and paragraphs :) Which are all easy to add - your setup seems to accommodate for that
Currently My To-Do List: Fix https://github.com/msk-apps/msk-markdown/issues/8 Make Dragable Seprator. Add Chars with spaces, num lines, and paragraphs counts. Add Headers.
@OlegValter I think I found one var of yours. It may have been me creating it, but it was in the middle of code I took from a pastebin of yours. It made me smile :)
I have to be honest - there is at least one legitimate use for them nowadays - I work with a platform that can only see exposed APIs from dependencies if they are global declarations (i.e. either top-level function, or var, or Object.assign(this, { myExport })). I hate it but have to comply