@CodyGray since you mentioned them, have there been any discussions in the past for possibly extending the single-vote closing privilege of gold badges to typo/not reproducible posts? doesn't this sound reasonable?
While I personally wish I could insta-close Typo, No Repro, and Needs Debugging Details questions, these closures do not ensure that the OP receives actionable support. Dupe Hammering does ensure that the actionable support is delivered (if hammered properly). A question closed as a typo might not be accompanied by a comment that explains where the typo is and/or how to fix the error. Perhaps for Typo-hammering, there needs to be a required field which will express how to fix the typo.
This would mean devs would have to extend the UI.
A Needs-Debugging-Details-hammer would also need a field that expresses what details are required to reopen the question.
"Perhaps for Typo-hammering, there needs to be a required field which will express how to fix the typo." This raises the question of why this required field should not be the answer box.
@CodyGray The answer to that question in the current system is because it defeats a large portion of the point of closure: preventing answers and removing content that will not be useful to anyone except the poster. If the system special-cased questions closed as typos somehow, that would be more reasonable.
My concern is specifically about letting SMEs decide when to make the call to close as Typo. At one end there are typos where the error message says there's a missing ; here and that's the answer. These should maybe be closed as typos. At the other end there are variants of "why doesn't int i(); declare an int?" that get asked regularly which are not really typos (they get closed with the canonical targets usually, but that's different than it being a typo).
These questions lie on a spectrum, and the more one is an expert, the more obvious a typo is. Just yesterday I had a discussion with another C++ SME that was related to whether the correct placement of ... inside a std::forward was a typo or not. My argument was that it's a mistake that others could make where the compiler error message is entirely unhelpful. The other user felt it was an "obvious" typo, and it probably was to them.
Basically I'm saying that I would trust a gold tag badge holder less than a novice when it comes to judging the utility or obviousness of a Typo question.
I'm not sure I trust anyone deciding whether something is a typo, because the critical factor for me is, "will the answer(s) to this ever be useful to someone else in the future?", and that decision is almost never made correctly.
I'm not sure that there are no questions at that end of the spectrum. I have closed questions as Typos many times with the reasoning that they would not be helpful.
It's also hard to write canonicals for these. A common typo in Android is looking up one view ID when another is in the layout, or inflating the wrong layout.
Although, I do think those familiar with the subject are in a better position to judge whether something is a typo and/or not useful to others in the future than those who have no experience with the subject matter at all.
But your question included the magic phrase, "NullPointerException". How could it not be a duplicate of the canonical that covers all things related to "NullPointerException"?
To clarify, I don't mean that I would trust complete novices more (I should have been clearer about that), but rather users with intermediate experience. More concretely, I could see an argument for increasing powers to close as Typo once one has a bronze or silver badge, but then decreasing those powers when one gets a gold badge. I do think that considerable experience makes certain mistakes look obvious, when in fact they are not obvious to a majority of programmers.
@CodyGray Yeah, that's a good example of a clear typo that won't help anyone. But arguably, it could be closed as a duplicate of "Do I need to use the correct name when looking up a thing in Firebase?"
@CodyGray ha, I didn't see that chat message before making my own aligning comment. [shakes head approvingly]
I don't have a link for my story, but I know I have closed a question as a typo where the OP 1. asked how to do X, then 2. provided a snippet which clearly showed two earlier occurrences of how to do X (in the same code block) before the part that they were focussing on. I closed as a typo because there was nothing to teach them -- they already knew the technique, they just didn't actually do the thing. Feeding them their own technique just felt wrongtown.
Is this C++ question a dupe of a C++ question? Some folks had closed it as a dupe of a C question a long time ago (which I guess there was only a C solution for both back then)
@TylerH No, not necessarily. That is one strategy, e.g. EDG and CFront do that, and then they call a C compiler to compile that. More modern compilers just compile to some IR though, and then assembly.
@TylerH I'm not sure what you're seeing. I'm not noticing anything different. I only see a vertical line to the left of post bodies when the left-nav is enabled.
@Machavity: [ref C++ question] I would have agreed with the original dupe to the C question. The correct way really is that API call that's exactly the same in C and C++, and Windows programmers are expected to know the entire C API provided by Windows is available in C++.
To make matters worse though, both questions have only wrong answers.
@TylerH Are you trolling, or is that a serious question?
@Machavity The originally-chosen duplicate was incorrect, since that was actually asking about Linux (or at least looking for a cross-platform solution). However, it is still a duplicate of a question that is nominally about C, given the [winapi] tag on the question. When you're targeting the Windows API, the solution is the same for both C and C++ because the solution is to call the Windows API function. I've hammered it with the correct dupe.
@CodyGray: Because you need to append "\." to avoid returning true for a dead symbolic link
(If the requirement allowed me to return TRUE if you had minimal access to it I'd call CreateFile instead but that fails for the no permissions at all case)
I wrote a very simple C app one time, avoiding using any of the standard library, so I could get an extremely tiny binary. Was honestly quite difficult. Tons of stuff in the compiler calls the CRT behind your back.
At work I have this ~1000 line C library and 20 line asm library that linked together provide everything I missed from the C library that would have worked. (FILE * wasn't going to because of UTF16)
However, that was for my own personal use, rather than being for work. At work, I've always gotten away with being able to target modern versions, with almost no legacy support. It's a shame, because I enjoy the legacy support. :-)
Does not seem particularly useful to me, certainly not in light of the security drawbacks.
Biggest things that bother me in C are (1) the lack of a true const, and (2) the lack of some sort of automated cleanup routine, like C++'s RAII. My C code ends up being 70% error-handling and 30% actual code. Boring to write; impossible to read.
Been a long time since I coded a stack overflow vulnerability. Among other reasons is we don't have limited sized strings anymore so strings aren't on the stack.
Should we have a canonical question for parsing LaTeX in Python? (the problem is that it's a library request question. But there are many questions that asks "I'm using Python, how can I do <this task regarding LaTeX>", and I don't know what to do with these.
Too explicit? I'm not sure what you mean there. I've been eyeing Rust with interest, but I haven't had the time to actually learn or start working in a new language. (Too many projects, too few engineers, too little time.)
@CodyGray Something like "passing by value/const reference requires specifying it at the caller site" and "to access a reference you (sometimes) have to deref it"
On the other hand, I'm not a "professional developer" so...
I actually think it's unfortunate that, in C++, there's no way to distinguish between pass by-ref and pass by-val at the call site. Passing by pointer is nice only because it makes that obvious.
You, uh, you never have to explicitly dereference a reference.
which is also kind of silly, until you realize that it's just one of the obvious applications of being able to write symbols in your own language if you want to even if it's not English
Huh, looks like the Python parse LaTeX case is a weird situation. So there's https://stackoverflow.com/questions/30752351/how-to-parse-latex-file/65950159#65950159 (the old question) and https://stackoverflow.com/questions/39157084/extract-specific-section-from-latex-file-with-python?noredirect=1&lq=1 (the new question). Should we close the old one as duplicate of the new one? Op asks for the same thing and the answers are the same; however the old answer works for op's specific case but not other cases.
Posting two identical answers to the questions (except the abstract versus definition, which is' a trivial change) doesn't feel right.
okay, there's that option, obviously. (turns out in this case the other answer is not deleted, but I have no idea what's wrong with that one. Op of the new main question could explain)
Hi, there. The stackoverflow.com/q/42043396/2932052 closed free-service unquestion is answered and accepted but no value at all, only downvotes. Can it be entirely removed?
@user202729 Only cv-pls requests need to have recent activity, del-pls requests don't (they have other requirements and are fine if they fulfill those ).
I'm finding it hard to imagine there is a question about coding that form that is in some way specific to GDPR, as opposed to any other form. From code perspective, I mean. The legal considerations would be a separate thing.
I guess something like this is fine: stackoverflow.com/questions/64615031/… - it is a specific problem that is both programming related (as far as I understand that AMP thing is) and a GDPR consent form related. Am I correct in this assessment?
@AnnZen Considering the (good) answer, I would suggest that the question could be edited to remove any appearance of opinion. Maybe, "Which of these is PEP-8 compliant?"
@AnnZen I think the closure was accurate there. It really is opinion-based, if it asked what is the difference between the two in terms of performance? or something like that instead, I'd happily vote to reopen.
@CodyGray That's what I was thinking but wasn't sure. The flag made me initially think it wasn't and I figured having a hammer reclose would do the trick
There seems to be no canonical about inserting checkboxes into database using PHP. I have been looking for one for some time but I can't find any. Should I write one or try to clean up some random old question? Unless someone can suggest me a good target
Should this be closed? I think the OP should approach MS support not SO. But I'm not quite sure, because many android-studio questions are on topic here.
@Letsintegreat VS code is a tool commonly used by programmers. Questions about it are on-topic. If that question is edited to ask: Is there something I can prevent this behavior from happening? I see no reason to close it
maybe it's cycling through every user 1k at a time? or every review item in the queue history, and once the tally reaches a new K for each user, it sends out a new badge?
@code11 Hopefully not. Getting a second gold badge for the same thing is usually much less attractive of an effort than getting the first one, at least for folks who just like shiny badges
And there is better tooling to deal with bad reviews/reviewers now, too
@AdrianMole it's rather impressive to have not just 1k but 2k+ reviews across all the queues :-)
your patience in Triage and LQP in particular is commendable
I'm not 100% sure that the question is clear enough, but is an answer just telling one to use a certain algorithm without an implementation thereof sufficient?