So is this a me issue or something implementationwise I'm unaware of. Searching [*.js] while logged out gives me "node.js or vue.js or d3.js"/565,332 results while when logged in it gives me "node.js or vue.js or d3.js or ember.js or backbone.js or knockout.js or next.js or three.js or discord.js or sequelize.js or chart.js or nuxt.js or mocha.js or vuetify.js or handlebars.js or passport.js or sails.js or underscore.js or p5.js or knex.js"/1,558,933 results
Are wildcards less supported when logged out for some reason?
@halfer it seems to me like a dupe of the question that OP cited; per the ensuing discussion and offered answers, OP messed up in the same way, with the same solution.
also: in the future please feel free to ask in the python room if something seems to need python SME
@HenryEcker I can imagine there are differences, yes. I haven't noticed that one or recall having seen descriptions of this behavior on meta (so or über)
@SunderamDubey Questions about tools used for programming are on-topic. I'm not sure how the OP's issue can be conveyed other than by an image, so I think this question might be ok.
@SunderamDubey it is about vscode, which is a tool used by programmers and therefor is on-topic. If anything, the given close reason is incorrect and I'm binning the cv-pls for that reason. If you revisit and see other reasons why the question shouldn't get answers feel free to give it another go, with a different reason.
Actually it seems I already got an upvote on that answer after I posted the first del-pls and before I made it CW. That wasn't my intention, so whoever cast that upvote, please undo it. Otherwise I'll outright delete my answer. It's not even particularly useful.
Don't worry about it. It's quite clear that you didn't intend any foul play, and posted the original request accidentally. I'd rather the content not be deleted (unless you're absolutely sure that the answer has no value, of course).
ok, I just don't want it to look like I pretended to misunderstand the room rules. My post isn't totally worthless but also not spectacular. No big loss if it were hidden :)
@SunderamDubey careful reviewers will look for the review comment if they can't work out directly what has changed. If that comment then reads improved post that is not really helping. I have answered a few cases on Meta where the review comment wasn't specific enough, for example: meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/393571/…
are you confusing comments on posts with review comments? The latter are only displayed in the edit history and cannot be deleted
and yes, they are generally useful as summaries for someone who tries to understand why something was edited; in their absence, the system adds a generic summary like "deleted 28 characters"
@SunderamDubey @tripleee Just FYI: While edit summaries can't be deleted, moderators can edit them. If they couldn't be edited, even by moderators, then it would be somewhere people could put rude/abusive/spam content without it being able to be handled. If you see such content in an edit summary, please raise an "in need of moderator intervention" flag and explain the issue.
@Makyen Are you implicitly suggesting that, if we come across such content in a not-yet-approved edit, then we shouldn't flag it for moderator attention?
@cigien Awesome thanks for the link. I figured it was something like that... Though it's be nice if there was a banner or something that indicated that the results were incomplete and that you should log in to get the full results...
Though it's probably not an issue... it's unlikely that people without accounts are innocently issuing that search very frequently...
@AdrianMole love how +34/-3 is eligible for low-quality review but accepted answers aren't, despite people accepting link-only answers all. the. time.
if anything, I'd rather have to review the high-scored ones (maybe +2 or higher) than the accepted ones...especially because we have to review the high-scored ones anyway if LQA doesn't dispute the flags.
@HenryEcker IMO: yes. "In this skill path, you will learn the foundational knowledge needed to get started with React Native and how to expand upon those features as you progress through the courses." is at the very least obviously copied from somewhere. It's NAA at best, and clearly needs a flag of some sort.
@RyanM Okay. That's what I was leaning towards as well. The broken markdown link to a site was a big red-flag. Perhaps it was the combination with the question that made it more difficult specifically the "And if anyone prefers different tools for mobile apps development, please feel free to suggest :)" made it seem like that kind of recommendation might be a genuine answer to an off-topic question.
@RyanM Yeah. I wasn't sure if that was useful/on-topic or not even after removing the resource request.
Yeah. I dunno either. In some sense, it's not doing much harm, and it's a conceivable question someone could have, even if it's a little silly if you're at all familiar with app development: of course you can connect an arbitrary frontend to an arbitrary database/backend.
I could see it having a really good answer: "yes, but XYZ won't work as well because ABC, and you'll have DEF limitation, plus QRS extra work for the app's local DB..."
I improved the title to encourage that sort of thing more.