@Scratte That's been fixed now. We can see pending delete votes in the timeline now.
And, no, of course moderators cannot see the individual up/downvotes that a user has cast. Votes are confidential.
Certain CMs and developers can see individual votes for the purposes of investigating vote fraud, but, only for that purpose, they must specifically opt in each time, and even then, there are some neat precautions taken. For example, they cannot see the users who up/downvoted posts that they made.
What was the other question for me? Can mods see which audits someone has failed? Yeah, we can see everyone's complete review history: all the reviews they've done, what decision they made, whether it was an audit, etc. Reviews are not confidential. In fact, that information is essentially all public. Most everything mods can see when it comes to reviews, regular users can also see. Mods just have it all collated in one place, so it's easier to find.
I just mean every human have a different point of view. Also maybe he can't describe what he is trying to say. Also some people English is not their main language. but I am sure there is a reason for what he is saying. if you have a notice or something that you feel that is wrong you might say that you don't feel this is correct to do and ask Why he see that is correct.
In my opinion, I think deleting his Stack Overflow account wasn't a good choose. Stack Overflow needs him now as moderator to clean or moderator.
@Scratte Yes, I remember that being introduced to the main site, although I have never used it and don't really understand it. My question was more of, "Why did they include that on the Review page(s), and if they were going to include that, why not the rest of the links that normally appear alongside it?"
@Scratte He shows up silently in SOCVR? Just like me? <3 ;-)
@Scratte I'm not sure that's true. I think I give out both positive and negative feedback nearly equally as often.
@Scratte Missed that. I were just reading on Meta then I found post about Election. When I were reaing that post. I found the link. Thank you. This page is in every Stack Exchange.
I can't say anything for the quality of the code. I'm not a webdeveloper.. so I'm pretty sure it can be cleaned up. I just know that it runs and it doesn't seem to slow down my browser in review.
@CodyGray Heh.. I suppose not. I still need to make at least a few more changes and then consolidate the GUI into it before releasing it. I'll also need an API key. I've been using the dummy test key so far.
Otherwise, I'm partial to just a "k" prefix, then naming them normally. Which would be CapitalCamelCase, since they're global, like functions and types.
@KevinM.Mansour That is not the same. When you write text to another person, then do not use CAPS. In code for a global variable, it's normal. It's a sign that this is a constant and it can be used anywhere.
SCREAMING_CASE is certainly ugly, but it's meant to be ugly, so you can easily see what is a global. Remember, you shouldn't be using global variables unless absolutely necessary, so making them scream at you is good punishment.
@CodyGray Any scope. CapitalCase is for class definitions like class MyClass {.. MyClass myClass = new MyClass(); .. } the variable inside has lowerCase.
@KevinM.Mansour Then in line 4268 you'll see console.log(userscriptName + "Oops.. something bad happened.."). And you'll wonder where that variable came from.
Your comment there is understandable.. when you've already found the variable. You do not see that in line 4268.
So instead of writing console.log(userscriptName + "Oops.. something bad happened..") // userscriptName is a global variable. You just do console.log(USERSCRIPTNAME + "Oops.. something bad happened..")
@KevinM.Mansour The uppercase constant is a normal convention for a lot of developers around the world. I don't care that someone that doesn't know about it finds it ugly. I find it ugly too.. I'm still going to use it because of its signal. It's noticable for a reason.
I mean... in some of these "stringly-typed" languages, that's exactly what happens when you write an indexed loop.
What? You don't think that that string object ought to be automatically parsed and coerced into a simple integer type on each iteration of the loop? You heathen! Go back to C!
I understand Cody's point but it doesn't make sense to write code in capitalized letter to make sure people will understand that is global variable. So maybe Javascript Programmming Language developers will change function to FUNCTION and when I ask them Why you change? They will say to understand it is function.
I've used that in my JavaScript too.. which is a bit silly, since I don't create any classes in my script. I didn't check the convention though. But I suspect it's what I'm doing.
@double-beep I didn't intend for a GUI at first. I figured it would be more understandable to people to put in "Yes".
I've tried to see if I can make the GUI script depend on the other script locally, so that it could be optional to install too. But it doesn't seem to be possible.
Right now, the script that you see doesn't read from localStorage, so the GUI doesn't even influence it.
I'm not sure what I'm going to do about that yet.
But if I changed it to true/false, and someone puts in "false", it would register as true, no?
@KevinM.Mansour I don't want to make it @requires url because I expect that would just reload the script that's already installed. I'm not even sure how that would work.
@double-beep They don't.. but yes, true. I also made it "lazy loading", so the modal elements aren't created unless the user presses the icon.
@KevinM.Mansour Heh.. but that script does a lot more.. and more effectively, I think. That's Makyen's work, which is much better than mine.
But I also don't see a problem with two full scripts. One with a GUI and one without. It's just not my preference. I'd like one script and one "add-on".
@Scratte You are good. You have learned a whole new language in one yaer and you built on of the best chat rooms and built great scripts so far. You have done great wor. :)
@CodyGray Yes, but I can do that to fewer original lines as well, no? :)
@KevinM.Mansour If I have a build process, I can put the components into separate files and have the build combine them. Then I'll only ever have to maintain code in one place, while the distributions will be separate install-able scripts.
@KevinM.Mansour Thank you :) I think it's not me that built this room though :)