@10Rep they were asked a slightly redundant question due to a misreading of the question, and decided that exploding at the person who asked it and saying they hate stack exchange was the correct solution
@RyanM @10Rep Please hold off on further discussion of the specific user/question. If you sense there's inappropriate behavior that needs addressing, feel free to mod flag it. However, we try to avoid targeted discussion of users as a policy here.
@TylerH Apologies, I was trying to stick to the content of the question, which included the comments section attempting to clarify things. I didn't look at the user beyond the specific interactions that occurred on this specific question. At what point should we stop discussing a question?
(This is not a comment about an author). That question has two conflicting notices - "Comments on this question have been disabled, but it is still accepting new answers and other interactions" and then "Closed. This question needs details or clarity. It is not currently accepting answers".
If the question is about that specific question where there might be two conflicting locks on it or some bug in the status, then all bets are off. I only how the system is supposed to work :-)
@10Rep FWIW, if you were trying to use the dupe I edited out of my message: I don't think that dupe is correct, because it will restart the runtime automatically
I don't think it's a dupe. I also don't think it's possible to programmatically terminate an instance without it auto-restarting, short of browser automation, but I don't know Colab well enough to be confident.
@10Rep Yeah, but if you think it should have been migrated when it was originally asked the it means you think it is a good question. So historical lock makes sense. If you said that the question should have been closed as off-topic and deleted when it was asked, then you could argue it should also be deleted now.
When off-topic questions are closed, they are eventually deleted. A historical lock is an alternative to deletion that preserves the contents of the Q&A, even though it is actually off-topic for the site.
The way I understand HL is "This post does not belong on Stack Overflow, but people found it useful and answers contain some valuable information. Let's not delete it"
@IanCampbell All that has been posted is a program description. However, we need you to ask a question according to the [ask] page. We can't be sure what you want from us. Please [edit] your post to include a valid question that we can answer. Reminder: make sure you know what is on-topic here by visiting the [help/on-topic]; asking us to write the program for you, suggestions, and external links are off-topic.
It doesn't appear to be tagged with Java. But not everything has to be about a programming language. SDKs, etc. are on-topic here. That one is borderline, but I don't have the domain expertise to make the call.
I agree that there is nothing to be done for that Question :) That wasn't my point though. When I see a SQL that's hard to read on a Question, it puts me off. I don't want to answer it..
I don't know, the close edit reopen data seem to suggest that having a community member edit a question for minor typographical errors before the OP makes another edit may be helpful.
@CodyGray if I want all the comments on an answer deleted because the problems they're discussing have been fixed in the answer, is it best to cast a single custom flag on one comment, no-longer-needed flags on every comment, or something else?
It’s been asked before. There’s no real consensus.
In that situation where there are multiple, otherwise-reasonable comments, I personally prefer a custom flag on the post with an explanation of why the comments are obsolete.
Yeah. Also because it’s not obvious sometimes why that group of otherwise useful looking comments should be deleted. The custom flag allows you to give an explanation.
We have a single button to erase all comments. If they truly all need to be purged, that’s easier. But if you flag individual ones, I need to bookkeep each one, because I’m persnickety about not accidentally deleting useful comments.
Plagiarism in questions is bad, because by claiming it as your own you claim to license it under SO's terms, which, by my understanding of copyright law, would not be an issue if you were simply "quoting" the code for reference.
I feel like you're trying to hold moderators up to too high a standard. They are only people. They are trying to do what's best for the site (usually).
I know we're all just people. Maybe I'm unreasonable in thinking that the standard should be higher. But.. they nuke posts and profiles, so I'd rather a higher standard.