« first day (2437 days earlier)      last day (1378 days later) » 

12:02 AM
For me, they really actually are all audits, because no one has asked an Android Haskell question in over four years and there are a grand total of 9 such questions ever.
 
Anyone knows why clicking on "improve this post" while being banned from suggesting edits doesn't show the amount of days? re this support question
 
That...really seems like it should show you...somewhere
Well, I guess it's an improvement from what it showed in April...
According to this, there is no way to know without asking a moderator.
 
12:28 AM
What's the correct way of spelling?
"sub array"
"subarray"
or
"sub-array"?
 
subway!
Nah, just array of array.
Or "second dimension array" as the cool kids say.
 
Not "sub array"
 
Could also be subset of the array (to use maths concepts)
 
It looks like "subarray" is significantly more popular than "sub-array," though I'd consider either correct
"subarray" nicely matches "substring"
 
@Braiam mmmm, really don't know.
@RyanM that's what I concluded from counting occurrences on google...(I don't have an English.SE account, or else I'd ask there.)
 
12:34 AM
Ha, I had already opened English.SE and was thinking about asking...want a link to the question if I do?
 
@RyanM Yes! That would be interesting!
 
dbc
@10Rep Actually it's a duplicate of Does PHP have short-circuit evaluation?.
 
@bad_coder After some additional searching around, I found this: english.stackexchange.com/questions/889/…, which suggests that "subarray" is correct, as it does not fall into any of the exceptions where a hyphen would be appropriate.
 
@RyanM That's compound words, not prefixes ;)
sub is a prefix (yeah, it's a truncation of other words, but don't let that mislead you!)
 
@Braiam Several of the examples (nonagression, un-ionized, co-op, semi-independent, anti-intellectual, reestablish, reedit) use prefixes. It also explicitly refers to prefixes ("For the most part, compound words that are created by adding a prefix are not hyphenated"), though that could be a more colloquial meaning of "prefix." Also, not directly visible on the page is that this question is marked as a duplicate of that one.
 
12:46 AM
@Braiam Well spotted. Compound words aren't words derived by prefix.
@RyanM morphology distinguishes the categories of compound, derived and inflected. Those answers conflate different morphological products.
 
@AdrianMole No, I can't see that you upvoted a comment. I don't really see how that comment does any good. There's no half-skipping in review. Your upvoting that comment "completed" the review, which left the system thinking it was a good answer that needed no attention. I very much disagree, and I was looking into how it got missed. I review banned one person for choosing "Looks OK" in LQP, but since review bans really are educational, I wanted to reach out to you here, because I knew you'd see
 
and now Adrian doesn't get to see the new banner, he was hoping to experience
 
@Braiam since there's not a clear rule, the best approach taken in linguistics is making an inventory of prefixes indicating common use per prefix and highlighting the most relevant exceptions that are lexicalized. (But it should be said, English morphology is somewhat unattractive to speakers of Latin based languages.)
 
@bad_coder That's a good point, though I don't believe it affects the end result. See, e.g., entry 5 for "sub" - none of them hyphenate the word.
 
@RyanM Sounds like you are competing with Zoe then for the most retags of [kotlin] questions also mistagged [android-studio]. I wonder who will win?! Stay tuned to find out.
@RyanM Yeah, going through and fixing all of them is probably not even worth it, honestly. As you said, the guidance going forward is extremely clear, and it's still not being followed. I don't know how to fix that problem.
 
12:59 AM
@CodyGray tag warning? Although I would phrase it a little differently: the tag excerpt has better phrasing.
 
@10Rep That's not a code review question. They're not asking for a code review. They're asking a very specific question about performance. There's nothing off-topic about it; it's perfectly legitimate for Stack Overflow. Dharman found a duplicate, which is fine, but it really doesn't need to be closed otherwise.
 
@CodyGray nit: dbc, not Dharman
 
@RyanM I love these little anecdotes of incompetence. :-) Yeah, the real WTF is why someone would turn off a power strip to a server, but I've come across much worse. At my current company, I have taken to putting "Do not turn off!" signs on things, or even, "Do not turn off.\n\nPlease leave this turned on, or you will be responsible for figuring out how to make it work again." Surprisingly, they don't work. :-(
 
@CodyGray My favorite activity is to erase white boards in conference rooms labeled "do not erase"
(Kidding, actually. But I'm always tempted.)
 
@RyanM I like their presentation (problem is when you find dictionaries with conflicting versions.) Also, the SE answers actually outright contradict some of the Marrian-Webster examples...
 
1:03 AM
@CodyGray I have no idea how it got turned off. It was locked in a networking closet with access restricted to a handful of people. I couldn't even open it without asking someone to let me in. Afterward we taped it somewhere further out of the way to ward off future issues.
 
Focus-testing a potential meta proposal: Suggested edits to highly scored posts should require more approval votes, because they're more likely to have been correct in the first place. Two reject votes would still deny it.
 
@DanielWiddis I used to work at a school where the custodians would always ignore that. We were all pretty annoyed by it, until one of the teachers suggested writing "No limpiar". From then on, like magic, it worked!
@RyanM Not a bad idea. That's more than I can say for most Meta proposals.
 
@CodyGray I'm sorry.
 
For what, exactly?
 
1:14 AM
@CodyGray for what I said.
 
For your opinions about linguistics?
I gotta admit, as much as I love that subject, I didn't even read or consider that discussion because I'm just too busy for that.
 
@CodyGray I imagine you are busy, so I don't want to cause any inconvenience.
 
@RyanM Downvote. You're adding more actions. Better to prevent an edit in the first place. Lots of suggested edits are <2000 trying to level up. Just put "This post has at least X up votes, suggested edits are disabled. Gain 2000 rep to edit it yourself."
 
I disagree with preventing an edit outright. There are some posts with plenty of votes that have glaring grammar or formatting problems. That's the whole reason we allow suggesting edits in the first place.
 
And now Ryan has two opinions. One carries considerably more weight. :)
I was mostly thinking that the proposal would increase the suggested edit queue, whilst restricting the level (maybe something lower than 2000 but above some minimum) would reduce it.
 
1:21 AM
Oooh, interesting counter-proposal. The idea makes sense, but I'm not sure the additional burden on reviewers is that significant...and I'm not sure I trust a lot of 2k users to get these things right either, so I dunno if I want to encourage them to do it in a way with no review.
 
Yeah, the burden on reviewers is a fair point. I'd have led with that. :-)
But I'm not sure that suggested edit reviews are really that much of a burden. They get roboapproved reviewed pretty quickly.
 
I suspect, without confirming, that the vast majority of suggested edits are on posts with a score of...say, 2 or below.
 
True. Reasonably short queue. Easiest to roboapprove review
But if they are not the vast majority, is it a problem worth dev time to fix?
Whey they could just install an autocorrect spellchecker instead?
 
Compared to everything else that's broken? Well, very debatable.
But editing errors into highly visible posts has a disproportionate impact
 
So, modify your proposal to be view-based rather than vote-based.
 
1:27 AM
e.g., this last edit is incorrect, though I need to experiment to confirm exactly why: stackoverflow.com/posts/4604922/revisions
 
Oh, is that answered by your evil sockpuppet?
 
@RyanM How about "edits to code in highly upvoted posts" ?
 
@DanielWiddis I don't know if that makes sense. The terrible answers at the bottom of that question don't need any protection
@DanielWiddis I could get behind that. I'm not sure whether the additional complexity would be useful, but it is what I'm trying to protect with the proposal.
 
@RyanM Fair. But combo of upvotes AND 185k views I agree with your proposal.
I also might propose (adding complexity so it's a bad idea) that such edits get post author approval rather than hitting the queue. Or at least give author 24 hours or something.
 
Restricting edits to code just doesn't work well from an implementation perspective. Plenty of edits are to code because someone formatted it incorrectly, or the inverse.
 
1:32 AM
Some edits even code-format lots of random words :D
 
Note that the author can override the approval of an edit at any time, even after it's already been approved. Mods also have this power. I just used it on the answer Ryan mentioned. The only thing that prevents this is someone submitting a new edit on top of it.
 
good point.
Anyway, I think the original proposal, with a criteria of both votes AND views is sound.
 
@CodyGray Heh. I had a rejected edit approved by the author a few days later. :)
 
@ChristopherMoore The answers on that proposed duplicate are pretty low-quality, but even ignoring that, it's a different question. This question is about running the code in a webview, the proposed dupe is directly calling JS code from Dart directly...I think. Neither question is particularly clear.
 
1:48 AM
@RyanM I’m not really sure what the win would be. Highly upvoted posts are more likely to be correct? Not necessarily. We see lots of votes on off-topic content too.
 
If a question is already closed and has a suggested edit that doesn't change that I think it should stay closed, I should reject, right?
this doesn't need to hit the reopen queue.
 
@DanielWiddis If the question gets deleted, the +2 gained reputation will be taken away from the editor, so I don’t see how accepting it would encourage editing to closed questions. Is it gonna put it into the reopen queue? Maybe not, then?
@RyanM Accepted and most upvoted answer, but it’s wrong. stackoverflow.com/a/3329178/7395227 Not saying it needs an edit; just that votes don’t necessarily say anything about correctness or quality. The number of already approved/rejected edits could be used instead, to determine if low-reputation users should be able to suggest edits.
 
@RyanM Here's one for your edit to highly voted. Answerer has 89.1K rep. Editor has 3. Edit is to code. I am hesitant to approve. stackoverflow.com/review/suggested-edits/26764365
 
@DanielWiddis Yeah, those should be rejected. He's trying to "fix" the code as he sees fit. That's not allowed
 
REason: clearly conflicts with author's intent ?
 
2:03 AM
@DanielWiddis That works. Rejection is rejection really
 
Thanks all for your patience as I ask n00b questions. :)
 
@DanielWiddis Nonsense. Asking questions to learn is a good thing. One fewer bad reviewer
2
 
Is this within the scope of "software tools commonly used by programmers", or is it off-topic with the reason of asking for off-site resources?
 
2:35 AM
@RyanM IMO it was a dupe. The post I flagged was just trying to use webview as a hack, but their ultimate goal would've been solved by the linked question. The linked question and it's answer was definitely low quality though.
 
I disagree with the reasons given here. This edit was intended to address the author of the post and makes no sense as an edit. It should have been written as a comment or an answer. makes more sense than This edit does not make the post even a little bit easier to read, easier to find, more accurate or more accessible. Changes are either completely superfluous or actively harm readability., right?
 
I would like to have your opinions on this tag wiki suggestion stackoverflow.com/review/suggested-edits/26760862? I am having too many questions. I am about to reject, but not sure for the reason. Could it be salvageable? Is the tag OK by itself?
 
@10Rep Funny, I would have chosen "conflicts with the author's intent"
@Vega Sounds like marketing fluff, but it's interesting that I can't find it verbatim
Actually, if you google it, it's just a combination of various press releases from the company
 
@10Rep I would chose 'attempt to answer'
@IanCampbell Yes, I looked up a bit, but found nothing of direct plagiarism
 
@Vega First sentence has nothing to do in a tag description. The rest of the first paragraph should be rephrased. Second and third paragraphs are just marketing/advertisement.
 
2:48 AM
@Vega I'm trying not to target the user, but they are an employee of the company
 
@10Rep I agree with @IanCampbell, clearly conflicts with authors intent.
 
@IanCampbell I looked in the profile, there were nothing, but the text said "we", so I wasn't sure there is spam
 
Seems unreasonable to let an employee of a company to edit in content potentially written by their marketing department (based on the writing style of previous press releases)
@Vega Honestly, I don't know if it's spam either, but I don't think it belongs in the tag wiki
Maybe reject it with a custom reason pointing to stackoverflow.com/help/product-support ?
 
@IanCampbell There's no edit summary. Should've written that they're connected to the company, in the summary. As they haven't done this, it should probably be marked as spam.
 
It does say "We’re the creators of the [Backbase]" as Vega noted.
 
2:59 AM
In the tag wiki proposal, yes, a sentence that has nothing to do there. It's also "we", not "I", and is a very generic sentence that doesn't really say that this user in particular, is from the company.
 
@Andreas It doesn't look like a typo to me...
 
@CodyGray Can I make a new request for LMU instead, then?
 
@IanCampbell The custom rejection reason textbox is not nearly long enough to include links... This is a constant annoyance of mine.
 
@CodyGray A: it's a syntax error caused by wrong use of statements. B: the user has forgotten to check the correct value.
 
Will [help/product-support] expand?
 
3:10 AM
@Andreas First, you have to tell me what LMU is. And, while I said typo, I really don't see any way in which that question is off-topic. It does not appear to have been resolved in a way unlikely to help future readers. There's an MCVE, and they had a problem with their code, which was fixed.
 
@CodyGray Lacks minimal understanding.
 
@IanCampbell I don't think so. I don't think anything is expanded in the rejection reasons. And...I'm not sure if that even expands in regular comments. For some reason, I have almost no luck with getting those [help/*] to auto-expand.
 
I know [help/on-topic] works in custom close vote reasons.
 
@IanCampbell Yes, but those just leave a comment.
Feel free to make a new request, @Andreas. Some explanation would be helpful. Perhaps also a comment on the original question to explain why you have voted to close.
 
@CodyGray :(
 
3:12 AM
You asked if you could make a new request!
 
@CodyGray Yeah, but LMU has been removed...
 
I agree with Cody, I'm not a python SME, but I thought that, while unlikely to help any other user due to a poor title, seems on topic
I even thought about coming up with a better title, but failed
 
I don't know Python at all, so I can't argue about any of the nuances, but that certainly doesn't appear to be one of the classic cases where it was resolved by a typo or some other error unlikely to help anyone else in the future. It might need some edits, but that's not a reason to close.
If it is just hopeless confusion, then that might be a reason to close as unclear, but that's going to be a bit of an uphill battle, since clearly someone did understand it.
 
My fiancée took a python bootcamp and I had to help her with her homework. That's about all I know.
 
@CodyGray It's a self-answer. You can see from the comments that nobody really understood it.
 
3:15 AM
@IanCampbell :-) That's cute.
 
Thankfully she knows R better or we wouldn't get along. Just kidding.... mostly
 
@IanCampbell mhm; maybe the two of you are right, but I still have a strong feeling it's appropriate to close it for that specific reason.
 
Maybe you can edit it to be a better question?
 
Maybe.
 
It's unusual to edit in a screenshot of the revision history, right? stackoverflow.com/a/63064671/13095326
Full disclosure, I provided the accepted answer and upvoted the post in question.
 
3:19 AM
@IanCampbell Ehm, yes...
Now I've seen that too.
 
I would edit it out, but I'm involved, so I don't want to touch it with a 10 foot pole.
 
@IanCampbell That's even cuter. Although I hear that lots of people in the data analysis subfield are moving away from R over to Python in droves.
 
I would edit it but I'm still trying to figure out OP's intent. :)
 
I've been called a dplyr-able.... it has it's ups and downs.
 
@IanCampbell Someone raised a flag on it.
I don't know what the heck it is supposed to prove.
 
3:26 AM
@CodyGray Probably that he answered first, then deleted, so he didn't look like he was answering second?
 
Who cares?
 
the guy with 574K rep cares. I guess. Dunno. Just can't think of any other conceivable reason.
 
I don't know if it's like this in other tags, but in R, there's sort of an unwritten rule that you don't copy the approach of other answers unless you provide a lot better explanation.
 
There seems to be a bit of a measuring contest going on in the R tag. I'm not too happy about it.
I'm not quite at the point of suspending two of our most valuable contributors, but a few more shenanigans will change my mind.
I don't have the time or the patience to sort out little ego conflicts.
 
I wish I had a better idea
 
M--
3:30 AM
@CodyGray They are both very helpful. And one of them is amazingly responsive and willing to pitch in. But yeah, so much drama we have in R tag
 
Waffles for everyone?
I agree, I've learned so much from both
 
It's kind of an unwritten rule that you don't copy other people's answers in every tag, and that you don't post new answers that retrod ground already covered in other answers. But, c'mon. If you do it within minutes of the other person, then it's reasonable to assume that you arrived at your own solution independently, you're just a slower typist.
 
@CodyGray, thank you for taking care of that edit suggestion :)
 
Much better you than us
 
@IanCampbell Why?
 
3:33 AM
No one questions the diamond glasses
 
I certainly hope they do!
 
M--
That's one slippery slope
 
@Andreas there was actually a dupe for that, but it's closed now.
 
Ok, fine, I just don't want to have some disgruntled person downvoting my posts
You scared me the other day
 
M--
No worries glasses, I will question you, and you will make a fool of me every time
 
3:35 AM
@DanielWiddis I saw that when I checked the question again. Somebody must've flagged it as a duplicate right after I posted it in here.
 
Not sure it matters much.
 
Neh.
 
Sorry, you mean on that answer? Yeah, I thought it was a good answer which is why I upvoted it. And I even saw it before when he had deleted it. I'm not sure why it needs justification.
 
@DanielWiddis Why is there a dupe for an off-topic question? :-(
 
M--
@IanCampbell Just saying you can edit their post and be sure that you won't get any downvotes :D I've done it bunch of times and although they were not happy about it from time to time, they didn't downvote me. Don't take it serious. just sharing some "trivia information"
 
3:39 AM
 
Ah, I get it now, thanks
 
M--
@Cody because of the name calling?
 
While I started it, speaking obliquely about two people, using names does take it too far, so I've moved that message into the oblivion.
Yeah, pretty much.
 
I was referring to the poster earlier who we were contemplating rejecting the tag wiki edit
 
@IanCampbell I just assumed you were talking about what might happen if you questioned me. :-)
 
3:42 AM
It'd probably be good for my academic career if you banned me
2
If I have a looming major grant deadline, maybe I'll question if a molecular biologist should be moderating C++ posts?
 
M--
@IanCampbell Shall we look under the rug?
 
Here comes a gift for Cody:
 
@M-- Sure, I like dust, let's look under the rug
 
M--
I was hoping to find dirt, I don't think dust would be enough to ban you :D
 
@IanCampbell It's better than a C++ programmer getting your molecular biology grants.
 
3:46 AM
I wish I had kept that link you shared. That has hands down been my favorite post on SO.
Although, the jokes post was pretty good too
Ah the good times on SOCVR
 
It was one of my favorites, too. It was clever, without having to resort to an over-the-top use of expletives.
 
Which post are you referring to?
 
Oh, someone posted a rant a while back about how I closed their question, even though I'm a "botanist", and I shouldn't be allowed to moderate here.
 
@CodyGray Did you suspend them and hard delete their account by any chance?
 
There's also a long deleted post with hundreds of programming jokes that are certainly not appropriate for polite any company
 
3:50 AM
@10Rep Another moderator took care of it. They suspended them, yes. We don't typically respond to abusive posts about ourselves. Conflict of interest and all that.
I only saw it in the first place because I saw that a suspension had been handed out.
 
Ok.
 
I think it came up in the setting of me feeling insecure about not really being a programmer
 
You have to turn that imposter syndrome into a win.
 
Well, people have been training me to be an imposter all my life!
 
@CodyGrey, Could this suggestion be rejected for the (almost) same reasons as the tag wiki edit suggestion? stackoverflow.com/review/suggested-edits/26760863
 
3:55 AM
I'd be happy to reject that one on plain usage guidance.
 
@IanCampbell As 'lacks usage guidance'?
 
Yes, exactly
 
Seems good to me, thanks :)
 
@Vega Yes, even more problematic. There's a canned reason for rejecting excerpts that don't provide usage guidance.
...and y'all already got it. Why am I even here? :-)
 
To review through this :)
 
4:10 AM
@CodyGray thank you, notwithstanding :D
crosses fingers the new fancy word was used correctly
 
@Vega Close enough. Technically, you'd need an object/referent to come after "notwithstanding", like "notwithstanding your earlier observation" or whatever. But you could argue that the reply to a specific message serves that purpose.
 
@CodyGray Does installing python virtual environments not fall into the "software tools commonly used by programmers" ?
 
@DanielWiddis It can, yeah. Sort of a case-by-case thing.
 
4:26 AM
I'm still trying to set up a java test environment in docker on my synology NAS and have no idea which SE site I need to ask for help on... :)
 
I have no idea
I don't do that kind of thing
 
Nor do most sane people, I think.
 
Why would you even set up a test environment on a NAS? It doesn't have the computational power for something like that, does it? I thought a NAS was just storage.
 
@CodyGray This falls into the "because I can". It's also an opportunity to learn docker. I want to test my project's code on Raspbian, but haven't yet found existing CI frameworks for that. I could, of course, buy a Pi. Or find a publicly available pi test server that I'm sure exists. And my kids aren't using the minecraft server I set up on it anymore so I have spare CPU cycles.
 
4:50 AM
Anyway, the main point I was making was that the same action could be on topic or off topic... setting up docker as a CI test server = on. Setting up docker to play minecraft = off.
Given that a google search for that topic has been deleted from SO, I'll guess probably off, anyway. *shrug8
 
@DanielWiddis Not sure which one you found, but they haven't all.
 
Looking at it, was probably closed as "opinion based" seeing recommendations.
This was the one I wish had an answer. :) webcache.googleusercontent.com/…
Anyway, just idle chat. Not meaning to distract you.
 
That was deleted by Roomba as an "abandoned question", not because of anything else.
Don't worry. I deleted two sockpuppets in between typing these messages.
 
Go you.
 
wim
@bad_coder The reason for the term is only because that's literally the title of the linked post, no more no less. You have my blessing to edit and change the link text to "repfarming" instead if you want. Note: I had not seen the meta post from Jaydles suggesting to retire the term.
 
5:02 AM
Is it OK to copy/paste sample code from the PHP manual? e.g. this answer takes its code directly from the manual
 
@Nick Does it cite the manual? Sources need to be sourced.
 
@Nick was just going to say that. Linking and quoting seems generally the right thing.
 
@CodyGray nope, only text is "You can use array_diff_assoc php function to find difference or value that is not present in array. Example: " & "Example output"
 
@Nick Then no, clearly that's plagiarism. See Meta for what to do.
 
@CodyGray thanks, done.
 
5:10 AM
What should be done with an answer that is an answer, but clearly not to the question? I thought this should be NAA as it's obviously not an answer to the question (from the meta post, it's an orange, not a rotten apple)
 
Did you run into a moderator who said, "It's an answer, just not to the question!"?
 
@DavidBuck I think it is NAA
 
Yeah. OK. So, you're not going to have a lot of luck flagging that as NAA, even for mods like me who don't believe any answer is acceptable. It's just not clear enough from a cursory examination that that has no relevance to the question.
A custom flag is better in that case. Or, uh... delete the whole question, maybe?
 
The other day you mentioned that, e.g. "Here's an answer in Javascript" to a C# question could be flagged as NAA (albeit you might still get declined). This did seem pretty obviously not even an attempt to answer that question.
 
It's Python code to a Python question... What do you want from us?
 
5:14 AM
Does that hold the record for the highest number of net negative score answers to one post?
 
Likely not even close
 
It's just down to the interpretation of "Any post that attempts to answer the question—however badly—is still an answer! Do not use the "not an answer" flag for wrong answers. Moderators do not judge the technical correctness of answers." - I took that as not an attempt to answer the question, probably pasted an answer to the wrong question.
 
It wasn't obvious, that's the key.
A custom flag might work in cases like that, but it's not obviously "not an answer", so a NAA flag is subject to being declined.
 
As, indeed, was the case. Fair enough. Thanks for the further clarification.
 
5:45 AM
@CodyGray Indeed you are right, the winner with 30 negatively scored answers is this although it was likely to produce opinion based answers so perhaps this one with 23 is the real winner.
 
@Nick I...just learned something from one of those answers....
My God, JavaScript is horrible.
 
that's...something, that's for sure
 
And then the very next answer, with the truth table?
 
@ChristopherMoore I am skeptical that is the case, given the use of HTML DOM APIs within the provided JavaScript snippet. That's not gonna work without an actual HTML document present (i.e., in a WebView). Unless you mean that what they actually need is a Facebook tracking integration and there's no need for it to use any JavaScript...in which case I would agree with you, but it wouldn't be a duplicate of that question but rather some Facebook question.
 
Remember how we were talking about how long it takes to handle plagiarism flags? I've been working on going through one user's answers since David brought up his declined NAA flag. That's been a good while ago, and I'm not even close to halfway done. Virtually all of the person's non-deleted answers are plagiarized from somewhere. (I'm not even checking the deleted ones.)
 
6:00 AM
Yowsers.
 
opens pending flags page, Ctrl+F "plagiarism" 8 results...plus another not containing the actual word. I'm so sorry.
 
:-(
 
@Nick Another fun thing to do is to find the question with the lowest total score of all negatively scored answers. Much to my surprise, the winner has almost all of the downvotes on a single, nearly-universally-hated, accepted answer.
 
Even the one or two from the first page that I thought weren't plagiarized and skipped over turned out they were... I just didn't look hard enough.
So, I gave up on that and just decided to delete the whole account. Turns out, the user has interacted with employers before.
It just keeps getting better and better. Maybe this is one of your colleagues? :-)
 
Second place is the strangest language feature question mentioned above, and third place is How can I change an element's class with JavaScript? which is much more like I expected, with the community's displeasure spread across several answers.
 
6:09 AM
@RyanM Hmm, why is that such a bad answer?
starts wondering if it's plagiarized...
 
I actually shouldn't say it's nearly universally hated: it actually has 73 upvotes.
...but it also has 222 downvotes.
I actually just assumed, with that score...
@CodyGray I don't think it is, honestly. Sometimes "pave over the thing and rebuild" is the solution.
I am not one of the voters, I just found it via query :-p
 
@CodyGray What does it mean has interacted with employers before?
 
@Vega Using Stack Overflow Jobs
 
I see :o
 
Honorable mention goes to How to validate an email address in JavaScript, with 18 negatively scored answers totalling 54 points of negativity.
I was actually about to ask why you hadn't just destroyed the account after an hour of finding consistent plagiarism, but then you did.
 
6:14 AM
Eventually, even my patience runs out.
Too much rep to destroy the account. Have to delete instead. Which is similar, but ugh. Just goes to show how little rep means. Nearly 2k, almost all from plagiarized posts.
 
What is the difference?
 
And I hold off on that sort of thing because I just feel like, in 8+ pages of answers, maybe some aren't plagiarized, which would kinda speak against deleting the whole account? Maybe?
Uh, destroy is usually used for spammers. It feeds into SpamRam, which was described a while back on the blog. It also deletes anything that is zero-scored, not just everything that is negatively-scored.
Deletion will only delete things that are negatively-scored, and will anonymize the rest.
So there's still manual cleanup involved even after an account is deleted...
 
oof.
I eagerly await a copy-paste of someone else's ban appeal being posted on Meta in the near future.
 
haha
Can't post on Meta if you're banned. :-)
 
What was general SE flag room? Found a post named 'When to visit an eye surgeon?' in security.stackexchange
^-^ It does, in fact, catch your eye
 
6:22 AM
@Cleptus Charcoal HQ would love to see that one
 
@Cleptus Is it about retinal scanning for security?
 
@CodyGray ack! me too!
 
Was it about security countermeasures being installed in one's eye?
 
No
 
but it has the [authentication] tag and everything!
 
6:25 AM
have started visiting a black spot in the corner of your eye then it’s time to visit the best eye surgeon in Karachi
 
@RyanM I really want to delete that answer...
 
Smoke Detector just detected it
 
My screen turns black time to time
 
I must confess I found that one funny
 
In this case, "detected" means I found it from opening security.SE and tipped Smokey off...
 
6:27 AM
Can regular users report? OI thought they only could flag
 
@Cleptus Charcoal and Smoke Detector are a community project. There's more information on Charcoal's website
 
ty
 
In this case, the reporting functionality is gated by a list of "privileged" users. If you're interested in participating after reading more, feel free to ask for more details in Charcoal HQ - they're a friendly crew.
Thanks for the report BTW :-)
 
My pleasure
 
I've always wondered... what happens if you press the "Don't Panic" button? Does it start panicking, or stop panicking?
 
6:34 AM
Viewed 10 times. 6 downvotes. I guess I'm one of the other 4 without rep to downvote.
 
I never knew what would happen
It is from Douglas Adams book
 
Accorting to MS: "In case of panic (or for any other reason), Push the Don’t Panic Button. Now you are supposed to get some sort of advice or wisdom. As for many other things in life, the answer is randomly selected, so don't be too hopeful... but it should at least be funny or interesting or both."
Oh, that's just an app
Failed my google-fu for the night.
 
@DanielWiddis Active spam flags on a post cause the Community user to cast a downvote, so technically you could. Also, at least one person cast a spam flag on it via Charcoal's scripts, which preview the content without needing to open the page, so it's possible one downvote came from someone who didn't "view" the question as defined by SE.
 
@DanielWiddis I may be too geek, sometimes when coworkers tell me 'I got a question' before they formulate it I do answer '42'. You must be hard into sci-fi to know WTF is it about
 
(it's often recommended not to downvote spam, as we want people to see it and cast more spam flags on it to delete it faster)
 
6:40 AM
Not necessarily. I usually use the integer 42 in my test cases. Often enough that I know it in hex.
 
I'm not into any sci-fi whatsoever, and I know what that is about. It's an extremely popular meme now, in all kinds of circles.
 
Although 43 is more shakespearian.
 
When most I wink, then do mine eyes best see?
 
If only one thus closed, thou are not blind / But do not blink, good man, for dark you'll find!
As I sip a barrel aged manhattan and resolve not to review any queues, I'm wondering if there are horror stories of moderators who did things whilst drunk ...
 
Depends... What do you consider horrifying?
 
6:52 AM
Irreversible damage, I suppose.
At scale.
 
Ah, no. That's never happened, at least not while anyone was drunk.
There have been a few mishaps, but pretty much everything mods do can be reversed. Even if not by other mods, at least by staff (CMs).
 
It turns out buggy scripts are much better at doing stupid things at scale than drunk humans.
Signed, someone who once wrote a git merged branch cleanup script that tried to delete the upstream master branch.
 
Well, everything was all merged in, right? It met all the criteria.
 
Exactly! That was, in fact, the bug.
 
Sounds more like an amended specification, rather than a bug.
There was a big screw-up years ago on Server Fault, where a mod did a bunch of weird stuff. It took a long time, but a dev was able to reverse it.
I forgot all the details now, and I was thinking I'd be able to find it on their Meta by looking for posts by Shog9, yet... Shog9 doesn't show up as a user there.
 
6:58 AM
@RyanM Oops. :) My biggest localized fail was trying to remove object files to recompile a c program. "rm *.o" works great unless you hold the shift key down too long after the *.
 
@DanielWiddis You had files with the upper-case O extension?
 
Fortunately in this case, the branch was protected and couldn't be deleted without privileges and pressing some extra buttons to remove the protection
 
no. Lowercase o. Uppercase period.
 
oh no
 
Oh, heh.
 
7:03 AM
But I did have a rather at scale blunder professionally in my time in the military. Somehow I was the only one on the aircraft carrier who knew HTML back in the late 90's and was tasked with adding alt tags to all images for accessibility mandates. Somhow I deleted all the imagery from the flights in the process. They took away my admin access after that. :)
I kept asking "you didn't have a backup?"
 
Now, be honest: did you do that intentionally to prove that you were not the right man for the job? :-)
 
Heh. That was a beneficial side effect. I nearly got in trouble for using "net msg" functionality in windows back then to send a message to every computer on the ship from Davey Jones, about the time we were crossing the equator.
Those were the days.
 
Accessibility as in for officers with disabilities, or as in in case it will be transmitted in field condition by loosing the right sequence of ravens and doves?
 
@JohnDvorak I would presume if you were a blind officer trying to read the website using text-to-speech software it would tell you "image of an airplane". Which obviously had zero impacted website visitors, but the government doesn't necessarily consider common sense when passing down "thou shalt" mandates.
 
Yeah, gotta make the documentation super clear for the blind pilots.
 
7:17 AM
And using avians for communication is more of a linux thing, not windows. Ships use flags and binary light transmitters and receivers. ;)
 
I do suppose "sun is shining directly overhead, no sources of shadow within 100km and nobody thought to give them a passive LCD" does count as a legitimate use case
@JeanneDark "the numbers are too large to calculate exponents"
 
Guess I shouldn't have wasted a close vote on that, heh.
 
7:38 AM
Greenwich Mean Time Clock?
Green Machines Taking Cookies?
 
Galactic Minions Target Cody?
 
Oh, that's a good one, @JeanneDark.
possibly spam
 
7:56 AM
Looked indeed suspicious and the OP seemingly wanted us to test that bot - I wouldn't have touched it.
 
Don't worry, I didn't
 
I...find myself disagreeing with a high-rep user's close vote...on their own question.
 
8:25 AM
Ooh, SO is probably going to hit 5 million close vote reviews today: stackoverflow.com/review/close/stats
 
8:46 AM
Can you actually vouch for that being on-topic on Stats.SE, @desertnaut?
 
@CodyGray you mean that it may possibly be off-topic / too-broad for there, too?
 
@desertnaut I mean, theoretically, yes. This is more your subject-matter expertise than mine, so I was wondering if you were making a genuine recommendation to migrate, or just a "meh, maybe there, definitely not here" kind of thing.
 
@CodyGray seems a valid question for Stats SE to me. I am very careful not to send garbage their way, and I am kinda of an SME here. My guess is nobody there will frown "oh, SO is again sending us their crap".
@CodyGray in general, when I think something is crap, I vote to close it as such, and not to migrate it
 
@RyanM I went with typo/no repro, I hope you don't mind
 
Not at all - I suspected as much, but I wasn't certain
@Andreas As a counterpoint here: venv is a programming tool, and questions about programming tools are generally on-topic on SO
 
8:57 AM
@CodyGray it is also a genuine question, and have seen many people getting confused about this point
 
@desertnaut yes, thanks. That's the confirmation I was looking for.
 

« first day (2437 days earlier)      last day (1378 days later) »