That feeling when you see a post in the Reopen Votes queue that could use some helpful advice on how to fix the problems, and you go to leave a comment, only to find that you have, in fact, already left that comment yesterday...
@RyanM Sort of similar to that feeling when you see a somewhat bad answer, but can't really put your finger on it and Skip and then see the "same" bad answer 5 answers later..
@DavidBuck I think you may get the flag declined. It's not the best answer, but it does answer the Question. It's not code, so there's no reason to transcribe it for users seeking an answer. Opinions may differ ;)
I would leave a comment asking the poster to please transcribe it into a proper answer.
I would probably write something like "While it seems to answer the Question, I'm unfortunately not very well versed in reading handwriting. I find your answer hard to read, and as such I'm not very inclined to read it. It would help if you provided with a transcribed answer."
@Scratte From experience, this is exactly the sort of post that I am likely to get declined on - it is obviously lacking, can't be searched, etc., but does contain an answer. I should have said VLQ not NAA as it does seem to that it 'has severe formatting or content problems' but it's hard to judge in a mod will agree.
@DavidBuck There's also the surprising element that moderators are individuals, and may have different opinions too :D Maybe you can retract your flag and reflag it.
IMHO that answer really isn't flagable. It is an answer. It doesn't have sever formatting issues so it also isn't VLQ. That leaves it in a state where if it is just low quality (no V) then you can down vote and/or delete vote it.
@NathanOliver Hmm.. it'd say the crossover is formatting issues.. and it takes me a long time to understand it, because I need to "decipher" it first. But of course that may just be my lacking reading ability.
VLQ is meant for gibberish, not something that could be edited. I can't see the picture so I only have half the information but just form the text of the answer there is enough there for me not to flag it.,
@NathanOliver we also use VLQ for non-English answers. In theory those could be edited into an English translation, but for some reason we don't do that.
I've come across a tricky case. 1. User copies an answer into a new answer. Highlight the text and verifies that it works. 2. Different users edits the answer to remove the obvious copy, changes the wording making it not a verbatim copy. 3. edit is approved.
What do I do? I removed my NAA flag on it, since it's no longer apparent that it indeed was an NAA. But it seems that every step on this answer just went wrong.
I did leave a message on the post prior to the edit approval. Are comments hidden to edit reviewers?
@Scratte I'm not sure, but probably either approving many very bad edits or one reeeeally bad one
but there aren't really any mods examining the edit queue. Sam spends a lot of time on triage but I think he doesn't check reviews in other queues that much
@Scratte oh I see what you mean about the blue notice. it's still there but the same color as the UI. I'm sure at least that is a bug... it should be blue still
@Scratte I'm referring to when you open the modal and see existing flags next to a reason (or close votes)
are you referring to the (n) to the right of the link that indicates there are already close votes?
if so I can't fix that with a user style (easily), it would need to rely on a user script that can lookup the number of close votes (if they don't hide it elsewhere) and then display it
@AdrianMole only if you vastly misunderstand it. The interface for curation is not for askers, but curators. Making the outcome friendly is a different thing that obfuscating the interface for curation
oops, looks like my styles to change the 3rd flag were a little too ambitious... flagging an answer now gives "should be closed" instead of "not an answer", heh
maybe this is an improvement, actually... I've always wanted to close answers
@AdrianMole ╳ You are not a privileged user. Please see the privileges wiki page for information on what privileges are and what is expected of privileged users.
Ugh, the closure option has been renamed to "needs improvement" in the flag window. Let's take what doesn't work in Triage and export it to the flag window! :(
@Machavity I think I said that too :) But it's actually the reverse of the trouble in Triage. People want things improved by author. That's why they picked "Need editing".. Now they're more likely to pick "Needs improvement" than the previous "Should be closed"
@AdrianMole Giving you privileges in Charcoal HQ is a decision I can make unilaterally. Privileges in SOCVR are something we get consensus from the ROs as a group, which may take a while, depending on circumstances which may have nothing to do with you. I've asked in the SOCVR RO backroom.
I kind of like the "Back" button and the "Flagging > Needs improvement > Community specific" now that I've noticed it. I never noticed it before and used to close it just to start over.
@Makyen It probably should be removed from the initial pane as well since we have the X and also the ability to close by simply clicking out of the modal
@AdrianMole depends on the change. usually, the answer is "no, don't edit someone else's code"
especially if the change would cause it to run where it didn't before
in some cases where there's an irrelevant typo or if it's an answer where some method or syntax call / prop name has changed and it's a popular 10 year old post, it's not so much a big deal
but in the case you linked to, either it's a superfluous change or it is enough to make non-running code run, which could be OP's exact problem and thus shouldn't be changed
Arrg... "should be closed" was replaced with "needs improvement" in flag dialog. I think someone mentioned this, but, dang it, that's just more confusing. At least leave it with something like "needs improvement (should be closed) …".
@TylerH Maybe it's my browser then. The font size on the first set of option is fine. Then when picking "Needs improvement" the dialog blows up in size and the content has an increased front-size as well.
@AdrianMole The only thing ROs can do wrt. chat messages is move them into another room where the RO has write access. Only elected moderators can edit or delete.
Maybe; I'm not sure. I only worked w/ Java in a high school "programming" class. Either way I'm not sure if "might be too much code" is sufficiently important for a bounty to be removed
Typically a question would need to be so bad that it needs to be closed immediately to warrant a mod manually canceling a bounty. Otherwise, just let OP waste their rep
I used to be able to just make sure I routinely clicked on the Hot Meta Posts, but now I have to keep a tab open to MSO and MSE and click to load new posts. At least on MSE, only about 40% of the new questions don't get deleted.
I guess I should camp in The Meta Room, but it used to be high traffic, so I wasn't really wanting to spend the time.
Recent question in Portuguese was closed, but an edit has just been approved translating it to English, despite OP saying he would take it to Portuguese SO. Should it be rolled back (in case the reopen queue accidentally reopens it) or ignored?
@Scratte Those are actually two separate dialogs, which just happen to be displayed in the same place. The first is the flagging dialog. The second is the close-vote/-flag dialog. When the close-vote/-flag dialog is loaded from clicking in the flag dialog, then the flag dialog is hidden and the close dialog displayed in it's place.
Counterpoint to "Needs improvement" being similar to the Triage issues: Closing is the appropriate action for questions that need improvement from the original poster. It leads newer users to the correct answer, rather than them thinking "well it could be good with a bit of editing, it shouldn't be closed"
I mostly like the improvements but oh god put the button back on the right and emphasize the votes remaining
Material Design guidelines specify that action buttons are right-aligned, with the positive action as the rightmost, negative as leftmost, and neutral actions in the middle
There's more.. notice what happens when clicking "a duplicate" on the first dialog.. and then "Back". You don't actually go back to where you came from.
if you put them in any other order I have a decent chance of absentmindedly misclicking, and putting them on the left makes me look twice, first on the right, then elsewhere
Consider, for instance, where almost every other button in similar Stack Overflow UIs is. New question button? On the right. Review choice buttons? On the right. Post question/save profile buttons? ...okay, those are on the left, but they're in line with a bunch of sequential interactive UI elements that you go through in sequence.
but yes I'll probably get used to it. I know I'm too picky about design.
@Makyen If you happen to get annoyed with yourself and find that you need to make it change with a style, you're welcome to post it along with TylerH's improvements :)
@Scratte I know they spend a lot of time and effort on making updates, it's just that it feels like they consistently don't do anywhere close to enough testing prior to pushing into production.
@Scratte Once you have close-vote privileges the difference between the two is not as noticeable, because you have a separate "close" button which brings up the close-vote dialog independently of the flag-dialog. Basically, me opening the close-dialog from the flag-dialog is almost always because I'm specifically testing that.
BTW On the various posts about inline editing: now I get it! In the review queues, if you try to edit a post, when you finish your edit and hit "save," you are no longer in the queue, but just on the post itself. So you can't then hit "I'm Done."
Are these recent UI changes just on SO, or on the whole SE network? I'm thinking of a bug report, but not sure to go with MSO or MSE.
@RyanM Yes, that was a good example. I can understand using the SO users to do a beta test in order to find all the places that were missed. It just feels like they pushed it into "beta" at a point when I would have considered it pre-alpha, or maybe alpha. Essentially, I would have expected them to have found a large portion of the issues which were reported prior to pushing it out to the masses.
Now, don't get me wrong. Something like that feature is going to need a beta phase where you have a lot more people testing. So, there are going to be things the developer misses. It just shouldn't be the things that are very commonly used.
@Makyen Maybe it's not the UI, but a different bug. I don't have review rights on any other site, so I can't check. Anyone with such privs in the mood to try editing something in a review queue?