@AnnZen You are not eligible to nominate yourself in the election as you are missing the required badge: Convention. If you really must know, your candidate score is 21 (out of 40).
The 40-point candidate score is calculated this way: 1 point for each 1,000 reputation up to 20,000 reputation (for 20 points); and 1 point for each of the 8 moderation, 6 participation, and 6 editing badges
Je parle un peu francais aussi, mais il et un langue difficile. No point in removing that. ;) It's rather me that should censor my lack of skills in French.
@CodyGray yes! I use discord for student communications sometimes (when they request it) and gaming but seeing it with "continue this disccusion...." after comments are moved always drives me a little :\
Examples of election FAQs I can help with: - how does the election work - who are the candidates - how to nominate - how to vote - how to decide who to vote for - why should I be a moderator - are moderators paid - what is the election status - when is the election starting - when is the election ending - how is candidate score calculated - what is my candidate score - what are moderation badges - what are participation badges - what are editing badges
@AnnZen You are not eligible to nominate yourself in the election as you are missing the required badge: Convention. If you really must know, your candidate score is 22 (out of 40).
If you want to make an informed decision on who to vote for, you can read the candidates' answers in the election Q&A, and you also can look at examples of their participation on Meta and how they conduct themselves.
Examples of election FAQs I can help with: - how does the election work - who are the candidates - how to nominate - how to vote - how to decide who to vote for - why should I be a moderator - are moderators paid - what is the election status - when is the election starting - when is the election ending - how is candidate score calculated - what is my candidate score - what are moderation badges - what are participation badges - what are editing badges
@quantme There are currently 21 moderators on Stack Overflow. With this election, we will be adding 2 more. (None of the existing moderators will be replaced/changed by this election.)
Welcome to the election chat room! The election is in the nomination phase and currently there are 6 candidates. I can answer frequently-asked questions about the election - type @ElectionBot help for more info.
An election is where users nominate themselves as candidates for the role of diamond ♦ moderator, and users with at least 150 reputation can vote for them.
@Jean-FrançoisFabre You know what else is super portable by design? C. With the special bonus that its performance doesn't suck.
Honestly, C is significantly more portable than Java. Name a platform without a C compiler. You probably can't. But there are bunches of them without a JVM.
@cs95 That's correct. C has a concept of undefined behavior (UB). If you're lucky, UB will result in a crash. If you're unlucky, it will (appear to) work.
it depends on the application. With web servers for example, one can afford a hit in performance for better safety - type safety and thread safety - the bottleneck is the network. Java dominates
Not really a big deal. Nobody actually reads or tries to understand those errors. They just know from looks that it's a template problem, so they go fix their template functions.
Welcome to the election chat room! The election is in the nomination phase and currently there are 6 candidates. I can answer frequently-asked questions about the election - type @ElectionBot help for more info.
@CodyGray don't you love when a batch file goes wild? "access denied" all over the place, and in the end it closes after having deleted all your files?
try to perform a sleep command in batch. It needs abusing of the CHOICE timeout command, which syntax differs depending on Windows versions....
(really, though, despite my background in higher-level languages, I know enough C to recognize terribleness. There's probably some amount of UB in there that's beyond me, though.)
Welcome to the election chat room! The election is in the nomination phase and currently there are 6 candidates. I can answer frequently-asked questions about the election - type @ElectionBot help for more info.
@CodyGray You may be correct literally, but "In your sleep?" is a common slang used to express wonder when you do not believe what the other person just said. So I thought he underestimated Jean's capability to write sleep.py.
@ArdentCoder Uh... it is? I've never heard that before. In my experience, "in your sleep?" is common slang that means something is so easy for you that you could do it in your sleep (i.e., without thinking about it). Like, "I've been programming C so long that I could write strcmp in my sleep."
@CodyGray This is a diverse community, and thanks for showing me your meaning of that phrase. It's good to assume good intentions, but I also assume bad intentions sometimes.
@ArdentCoder You should probably stop assuming bad intentions. It is unfair, and it gets in the way of understanding (especially in a community which is, as you rightly point out, diverse).
4
If you're confused about what someone means, it's always OK to ask.
@CodyGray Cool, I never assumed bad intentions until so many bad incidents were directed at me by a particular user. As far as asking is concerned, some people do not like to be asked and tend to use the kick option instead of polite communication.
I wonder if those "bad incidents" might perhaps have been the result of a misunderstanding? If you are ever kicked from a chat room because you asked (politely) for clarification, please let me or one of the other moderators know: that is clearly a misuse of the room owner's power, and we will need to either have a word with them or remove that power.
@CodyGray Might be a misunderstanding and I do not reject that possibility. Hmm.. I was kicked twice at the same time - I understand the first one cuz I might have acted a bit trollish. BUT THE SECOND ONE - I quickly joined the room and to ease the atmosphere I said "I just wanted to know how it felt like to be kicked, take it easy :P" - and boom I got kicked again without any reason.
@ArdentCoder Well... a flippant response like that (although you may have meant it as a joke) can sound to a moderator or room owner like you didn't take the kick seriously and/or didn't get the message it was supposed to send (stop trolling).
Upon asking, the reason was - "I just felt that my message was not understood". I really do not know what was not understood, and the I and my stuff was simply too arrogant.
As general rule, "take it easy" as a response to being punished for an infraction of some sort will rarely endear the speaker to the person who exacted the punishment.
(that sentence ^ needs less flowery language, but I'm too tired to rephrase it right now...)
@ArtOfCode If you want to look that chat history, go ahead and check it - I really do not think I 'literally' trolled anybody there. I was new to their room and rules and was simply curious about everything and that particular room owner did not like my tone - so I assumed he might have thought me as a troll.
Right. "Take it easy" in response to a suspension sounds like "you need to chill out: you shouldn't have suspended me", rather than the typical meaning of "take it easy", which is basically just something like "cheers", "good wishes", etc.
And saying "I was just doing it to see if I'd get punished/caught" or "to know what it feels like" again sounds like you aren't taking the rules and punishment seriously. That's what I meant by "flippant".
To rephrase what you'd said slightly: Original: "Lol I just wanted to see how kick looks like, take it easy" Suggested phrasing: "Well, now I know what being kicked looks like. I'll take it easy now."
@CodyGray I honestly did not know of all these "take it easy" meanings. Now it contradicts the room owner's quality to "assume good intentions", that too without having a word before the second kick.
@ArdentCoder It perhaps would, if it hadn't already been established (in the room owner's mind) that you were acting trollish. Coming immediately back from a kick and posting something that sounded vaguely trollish is something that room owners are taught not to put up with, for the health of their chat rooms.
I'm a pretty flippant person myself, but I can be flippant while admitting I was in the wrong. It can be a tricky line to walk, but I've got decades of practice, and I'm doing it in my first language.
@CodyGray So are room owners only taught to kick people? There were no words from the room owner's side before the second kick which simply shows his negligence.
@ArdentCoder A verbal correction is typical for the first offense. A second offense is interpreted as evidence that the verbal correction wasn't taken seriously, so a kick is used. The kick is one of the few tools that ROs have for moderating chat.
As I already explained, if you come back from a kick with a flippant response that suggests you still didn't take the warning seriously or were going to continue the same behavior that got you kicked, yes, you get kicked again without any warning/discussion.
Welcome to the election chat room! The election is in the nomination phase and currently there are 6 candidates. I can answer frequently-asked questions about the election - type @ElectionBot help for more info.
@CodyGray You are simply calling it flippant though I didn't mean it to be like that. Why did the room owner not confirm if it was really flippant? I didn't even know the meaning of 'flippant' until now. @ArtOfCode What is being called 'trollish' here is my 'tone' about which I couldn't do anything but I never used that as an insult to anybody there.
@SamuelLiew I saw the 3A had a headphone jack, but I assumed it was the older model. The 4 doesn't. I didn't see the 4A. What's the difference?
@ArdentCoder The RO didn't confirm because you had already been identified as a troll, and as a room owner, it's better to kick suspected trolls than engage with them. This is how ROs protect the overall health of the chat room.
@CodyGray So you really label me as a troll? Just because of my 'tone' of speaking? And the 'arguments' were as a result of my previous day in that room about the closure of a post, which that room owner didn't like.
@ArdentCoder I'm not labeling you anything, because I wasn't there for the conversation and I'm not nearly interested enough to go back and try to find it. However, I think we've established that the RO who was involved did label you as a troll. This might have been jumping to conclusions a bit, but honestly, part of being a moderator or RO does involve jumping to conclusions. It's not an exact science: you're called upon to judge behavior. You don't always get it right.
If you're talking about SOCVR, discussion about the closure of a post is fine. I strongly encourage it. There are two major benefits to that room: (1) getting low-quality content closed/deleted, and (2) teaching people how moderation works. The second is, to me, at least as important as the first. So, I strongly encourage people to have discussions about reviews/closures in there, as long as those discussions stay constructive, level-headed, and respectful of others' views.
But coming in and saying, "WTF, dudes, you should have never closed this post. It was fine. What are you, a bunch of haters? This is what I hate about SO: all these neckbeards closing good questions!".... That's trolling and disrespectful. Not allowed.
@CodyGray Not that tone at all. I was not rude to anybody there cuz none of them actually closed my posts, it was someone else and I went there to just get the reasons of why my post was closed. But that room owner didn't like my appeal at all, one other room owner settled the issue and I simply left that place without messing with the kicky room owner. But the next day I reached 3K and joined the room in a happy mood, and that room owner still had problems with me cuz of the previous day.
Which did not turn good, and ended up me being kicked. Fine, I'll tolerate it. But the second one, after all the previous mess is extremely disgusting.
Although we should, sometimes it's hard to "forgive and forget". The best thing to do is to prove that particular RO wrong by becoming a productive participant, which I think you're already well on your way to accomplishing.
I really can't comment on specifics, because, as I said, I was not there and do not care enough to go back and re-hash specifics. I trust the SOCVR room owners to have handled it appropriately, even if not perfectly (no one is perfect all the time).
@CodyGray Yes, I really appreciate the room owners there except the kicky one. And Makyen is a wonder! He's a legend and unfortunately he wasn't there during that conflict
I hang out in SOCVR a lot, and I don't think I've ever seen anyone kicked. So...your accusation of "the kicky one" strikes me as a wholly inaccurate characterization. I'm not denying that it sometimes happens, and certainly not saying you're lying that it happened to you. But it's not like it happens all the time. It's not like there's some RO there with a hair trigger.
If the first impression was negative (e.g., it looked to them like you were trolling), they were probably less patient with you than they could have been.
I think you should be able to understand that, since you're having the same problem from the other side.
It would also, I think, help if you were able to write it off as a misunderstanding, in which you tried to communicate one thing, but it didn't translate to text well, and was reasonably interpreted as trolling, despite the fact that you did not intend it that way. Both sides could have acted in good faith. I don't know the RO in question, but if they're like most of the folks here, they'll forgive and forget if the incident (or anything like it), doesn't repeat itself
@CodyGray I would definitely understand that, but the problem is not "same" from my side. That person has high reputation and privileges and can boss around less-reputed users (using his first impression), but I have no justice using my first impression.
@RyanM Yes, I did follow around cuz nobody understood me except Halfer and Makyen. When I did not get justice, I kept attacking that person's comments whenever I had the time.
@ArdentCoder While I understand what you're saying, I have to reiterate what I said before: moderation is imperfect. We're required to make judgments about behavior, and that's not an exact science. At the same time, though, moderation is necessary. (And, naturally, ROs and moderators are selected from the users who have been around for a while and gained lots of reputation. It cannot be any other way.)
@ArdentCoder Yeah...and this kind of holding a grudge is not good. You shouldn't be following someone around attacking them. That helps no one.
Your pursuit of "justice" is misguided. They acted reasonably based on the facts that they had. Perhaps a little grouchily, but if I were in a position where I had decided to kick you (I'm not going to analyze whether the first kick was justified, but you are not complaining about that one), and I saw the message you sent after rejoining, I would probably have issued a second kick. After talking to you now, I can see that you didn't communicate the message you intended to.
Welcome to the election chat room! The election is in the nomination phase and currently there are 6 candidates. I can answer frequently-asked questions about the election - type @ElectionBot help for more info.
There are no further reparations to be made here. You've been allowed back in, and they've not taken any further action or, as far as I know, made any further negative comments toward you.
@ArdentCoder What helps the most is for you to forgive. Carrying around hate rarely helps anyone, and it definitely doesn't help the situation.
If you interpret all of that RO's actions through hate-colored glasses, you'll find a lot of things to hate. Note that this is not unique to that particular RO. If you view anyone's actions through hate-colored glasses, you'll find a lot to hate.
It is a very important principle that text chat is very bad at conveying subtlety. If you think your intentions aren't coming across, over-communicate them. Don't try to tell people they're wrong for interpreting them the way they did: you'll be spending a lot of time telling people they're wrong if you try that approach.