@Andreas No. That's a myth, I think. Some posts are closed before they are asked. Others live 4 full days in the close vote queue before it gets kicked out for lack of attention.
I tend to give them about a day or so. If there's no close votes on them, they're unlikely to get any.
@Dharman Por que no los dos? Also add the amount of meh questions too. Boring questions, questions that do not tickle the problem solving part of our brains, tend to not be very interesting reads.
@Braiam I honestly rarely do this, because I can just do [android]... but yes.
@Andreas Yes, the problem with [android][php] is that it's almost guaranteed to be no MCVE, because they haven't debugged far enough to know if the bug is in the Android app or the backend, since Android apps can't be written in PHP.
For example, I asked a question, and the system suggested me 3 tags... only one of them was django, the other were nowhere near related to the body of the question (python and dictionary).
I could see a legit question happening, but it's unlikely. For instance, I once had a problem where my Android app was making a request to my Ruby backend, and the backend was only getting part of the POST data. (answer: bug in the HTTP library's URL encoder. figured it out with a debugging proxy.)
I've seen bad questions closed in under a minute after posting sometimes. Which is particularly impressive given that questions don't enter the CV queue for at least 15 minutes.
3 people go "oh, new Android question. aaaaaand it's terrible" and vote to close.
bonus points for every google maps/mapbox/openstreetmap question tagged dictionary. I chuckle a bit when I see these, because I know exactly what happened.
> In computer science, an associative array, map, symbol table, or dictionary is an abstract data type composed of a collection of (key, value) pairs, such that each possible key appears at most once in the collection. — wikipedia
BTW, there are two solutions/implementations: hash table and search tree
@AndrasDeak yeah, but the language that claims to have the unique key property should also make sure that the primitive doesn't allow insertions of the same key.
I see no reason to argue that the concept includes O(1) set/get. Then you’d probably do the same for «List», but both linked lists and arrays are lists, so that’s not correct.
@Braiam @AndrasDeak That's inaccurate for the site-specific reasons, but correct for the reasons in the first panel of the CV dialog, which includes "Opinion based". The reasons which are on the first panel of the close-vote popup are common across all sites. The reasons which are on the panel opened when you click on "A community-specific reason" from that first panel are, as the text says, community-specific, which means they are, or at least may be, different on other sites.
The common ones under site-specific reasons are "Other" and "This question belongs on another site in the Stack Exchange network", but the selections on the panel opened for "…belongs on another site…" are defined for each site, if they are even available.
So there is a possibility that Seasoned advice will have "primarily onion based" at least as a site-specific reason. Or maybe that would be an actual valid close reason for Coffee
@Scratte Nope, all sites will always have that option. They may tweak a site specific reason for something in particular that may be read the same way, but they can't remove that from the list.
@Scratte I believe the "Opinion based" reason, which, unfortunately, IMO, is just "Opinion based", not "Primarily Opinion Based", is available on all sites, perhaps with the exception of Area51, but it's definitely on MSE.
@halfer When you're reading quickly, your mind will often fill in the words to be what is expected. Clearly, I should have slowed down and actually paid attention to the word which was actually written.
@AdrianMole Just in time to throw your remaining close vote in the room then? :) At least you shallot have to risk getting suspended even if your mind leeks ;)