it's probably because the post is short and simple enough that anybody who looks at it can see that it's correct, and they get a warm feeling inside their belly for understanding something math-related:P
@rene Talk about our new Blog: Do we really need a "Tour" page? I mean, that page seems is just telling people blah blah blah, not blah blah blah (already said once yesterday).
I'd say that if you want to join this chat room, you better check all the FAQ so you'll understand what stuff we do, and what we don't do. What we like and dislike, etc. Only "Post cv-pls requests here" isn't enough I think.
However, can we just remove the "Tour" page, and tell the new people go to FAQ?
Hi guys. Quick question, how is it appropriate to accept an answer when I have no idea which proposed solution will work the best? E.g. "What is a good approach to scale this database design?" I, as the OP, am not in the position at that point in time to tell whether one solution scales better than the other one.
@Tamás Whichever answer helped you the most, you should accept it. If you're not sure which helped, you can accept which one you think is the best, or just not accept an answer
@Tamás Plop! That example question seems too broad in fact. It can be hard to choose one good answer over others when the question itself is broad / calls for opinions.
@PM2Ring Does it? I felt like it was more of a Linux question. Do you think it's on-topic then?
@Tamás You should never just blindly accept an answer, even if the person who wrote it sounds like an expert. You really should test it to make sure it works for you. If it doesn't, give the author some feedback. True, it may not be practical to test multiple alternatives for something like database scaling.
But if possible, take your time and test the solutions that you think sound good. And when you finally decide which solution you want to use, then accept it. FWIW, I've gotten some accept votes several months after posting the answer.
@Kyll It looks like a linux question to me also. But I've seen many linux based q's not migrated, even when they are not crap. I do not know whether you should though
http://www.thepoke.co.uk/2011/12/23/english-pronunciation/ "If you can pronounce correctly every word in this poem, you will be speaking English better than 90% of the native English speakers in the world.
After trying the verses, a Frenchman said he’d prefer six months of hard labour to reading six lines aloud."
Is it ok to give him an upvote to reward his good behaviour? We get tons of dupes on that topic in the Tkinter tag, and his code isn't a MCVE so it's not like there's much merit in keeping that particular question. But apart from the lack of MCVE it is a reasonably well-written question.
Remember, dupe questions themselves aren't inherently bad, it's dupe answers scattered all over the place that are the problem. Of course, dupe questions can be an indicator of insufficient research, but that doesn't really apply in this case because it's rather tricky to research this problem when you don't know what's causing it, and when you do know, then you don't get the problem. :)
For sure. Eventually SO will become a vast network of dupes with a trickle of actual good new questions. Hopefully, we will have better tools to find the best dupe targets and to prune away the dross...
@PraveenKumar there's no CV reason for "didn't even read the most basic manual", and we're not really allowed to yell RTFM in the comments, so... downvote to oblivion and move on. :p
@JanDvorak uh, in only C#? You don't ... but if you mean which would be the preferred technology stack in .Net I would choose ASP.NET MVC with Razor in the cshtml pages.