@CodyGray probably, needs some investigation - the feature has just been added, so there is a long way to go, methinks. I know what will be after @Catija, though :) 🥕
I'm sorry to say this, but... The election is happening at the moment, and 20806 users have already voted! I can answer commonly-asked questions about elections (type @ElectionBot help for more info).
Examples of election FAQs I can help with: - what is an election - how to nominate myself - how to vote - who should I vote for - how is candidate score calculated - what is my candidate score - what are the moderation/participation/editing badges - what is the election status - when is the election starting/ending - when is the next phase - how many positions are elected - who are the candidates - who are the current mods - what is Single Transferable Vote? - what is Meek STV?
You'll need to be more specific in your definition of the deity you reference. It means a lot of different things to a lot of different people. But to get to the second question, I don't think my religious (or otherwise) beliefs would change anything about moderation.
I mean, even if God shows up to ask a programming question, I think He would be held to the same standards as everyone else. Frankly, perfection should not be difficult to achieve for one who is divine.
Welcome to the election chat room! The election is happening at the moment, and 21156 users have already voted! I can answer commonly-asked questions about elections (type @ElectionBot help for more info).
Weird. I could see it and I was signed in. But I also some times open videos while signed in and they want me to confirm my age. Only I don't want to do that because I need to supply Google with an actual document like drivers license to confirm it. And I'm not really sure I'm up for that level of commitment.
@manro We are not electing political parties. The election is for the job of a moderator. All you need to know is how good is someone with a delete button :)
Now a question about programmatically generating QR codes expected by vaccination-checking apps to get into certain establishments might be on topic. Which ironically I was in another tab doing.
Let's just say I have a QR code that I'll need where I live in 4 days. I will let you guess whether I hacked it or actually got 3 shots that the QR code indicates.
I'm sorry to say this, but... The election is happening at the moment, and 21256 users have already voted! I can answer commonly-asked questions about elections (type @ElectionBot help for more info).
OK, I actually need to get some sleep if I have any hope of being productive at work tomorrow. G'nite all... and let me know what animal I get matched up with.
More seriously, the rating system works by giving you more rating for playing players with higher elo than you, and less if you play against people with less elo than you. You can gain elo just by playing them but winning is better. Conversely, the very highest elo players might lose rating just by playing a lower-elo player.
That's generally how it works. I'm not aware of the specifics of how the rating is awarded, just the general gist. Play and win and try to play within around your rank or higher is the idea.
And as Bhagrav says, it's general to games. Dota 2, Leage of Legends, Counter-Strike etc. have also adopted it for match making purposes by trying to get you to play against people with similar skills. Rather than matching extremely high skilled players with very low skilled players.
Yeah...it relies on one person maintaining one account. In chess it's usually just you everywhere. Not you under different names and different ratings.
I don't know, I write my GUI apps in C++ using the Win32 API. So, some things are a bit harder than they should be, but the end result is excellent, native, and blindingly fast. Once you get comfortable with it and/or write enough wrappers, the job is easy enough.
Welcome to the election chat room! The election is happening at the moment, and 21371 users have already voted! I can answer commonly-asked questions about elections (type @ElectionBot help for more info).
Commercially? A Windows GUI for a data-acquisition system. It interfaces with the data-acquisition hardware, allows configuring the system, acquiring data, plotting/visualizing and analyzing the data, etc. Everything else I do at work is either a command-line user interface, or it doesn't even have a user interface (e.g., firmware, drivers, etc.).
Web apps have terrible usability and horrible performance. They also suffer from a fatal flaw that they don't work when you aren't connected to the web...
@CodyGray Deleted questions can absolutely be reopened. They don't even need to be undeleted first. Though it requires enough 10k users to find your deleted question and hit the button.
@RyanM They aren't going to get reviewed for deletion, though. And... it's pointless?
(Well, I said that too quickly. There are so many bugs in the review system right now that I think deleted questions actually are getting reviewed. But, you know...)
That's another question for the candidates: Do you review the latest delete/undelete votes on the sites? If yes, what do you look in them to add your vote?
i have a question about the user stats.. i just randomly picked a candidate in the list and did some math.... according to the stats the candidate has done 38,90410959 edits, flags, votes, reviews every single day in his time on stackoverflow. When I just use the number of reviews the stats suggest that there has been more than 2 reviews per day. Ive done some reviews and edits and when you do it right, the numbers seem impossible... am i misinterpreting something?
The advantage of being able to reopen deleted questions is that it allows 10k users to cast both a reopen and undelete vote together, resulting in the question being simultaneously reopened and undeleted without an extra round of voting (as happened with @manro's question).
@BhargavRao there is a message about the election and when you click on it there is a list of candidates and their motivations and such.. the stats are listed there
@ohcibi Dharman runs a bot that does automatic edits about common problems. It's not hard to get high edit stats with that. Also does automatic flagging of comments that are easily identifiable as needing to be flagged. Votes are also not hard if you review posts actively all the time.
There is also a project run by volunteers that combats spam by casting user flags on it automatically. Anybody can sign up and their flags will be used by the system.
@VLAZ thanks for the explanation... so i was partly right, the numbers are faked but not necessarily with a bad attitude.. i wouldn't list those stats for the election in that case tbh
@ohcibi Why would you consider flags being raised by an automated system to be "faked"? These flags still contribute meaningfully to the improvement of the site.
@Zoe My point was that several moderator nominees are involved with automated improvement of the platform. Which reminds me - Ryan is involved with Charcoal, too. So, overall that shows great dedication from these users.
Not trying to imply the rest are probably less dedicated. I'm saying how to interpret these visible efforts.
What confuses me about Oreos is why are there so many of them. Everywhere. In everything. They aren't that bad but...there are better. And people make Oreo cakes and stuff when I'm pretty sure just getting the plain ingredients is much cheaper.
Reminds me of a sci-fi story where some guys find a machine that produces some material. But they can't stop it. And try to pawn off the production everywhere they can.