@Machavity I'd say not, and also asks multiple stuff - first half asks about a compile time error, second half about some runtime error, and yeah, both without giving even a single line of code
Would making a "null" edit to one's own closed post, simply to get it back into the reopen queue (after it's already been through that queue once and was left closed) be considered abuse?
... this is from a user with > 2k rep and the post has two current reopen votes (presumably, one is the OP's). I've seen it in review both yesterday and today.
@JeanneDark I don't know. I do know that you can only cast a reopen vote once (which they presumably did to get it into review the first time); but, the fact that they were allowed to edit and submit for review after (presumably) the first round, suggests that there is no obvious limit.
... in which case, it is a clear potential vector for abuse.
That potential for abuse was mentioned in the Meta.SE post that announced the changes to edits and the reopen queue (Anita, IIRC). She seemed to think that it was not going to be problematical. I'll see if I can dig out the post ...
Unless a mod does it, because some people raise flags instead of checking the box on their edit and I like to be helpful when declining it...
@AdrianMole sure
@AdrianMole I believe part of the reason that it's assumed not to be a huge problem (and it's generally indeed not) is that such abuse can be flagged and mods can handle it.
@AdrianMole Usually I prefer to VtC as dupe over typo, but when there's already 2 close votes as something else, leaving a lonely comment with "does this answer your question" when the close banner says something else really irks me
plus in this case I do think it's a kind of typographical error
@blackgreen very relatable. tbh there have been times I wished I could override the typo close in favour of a dupe close, exactly because "typo" is being used broadly to cover a common logical error, and we have a dupe explaining the logical error in detail
Out of curiosity I tracked down the last copy of the article in the web archive. It's from January 2014. It was deleted at some point later the same year.
Oh, I see. The tag wiki history shows that a user with the same name as that of the website made initially created the tag wiki.
Yet in 2016 somebody completely re-wrote the tag wiki...
I don't think it's at all related to the original blog post that was copy/pasted it was based on.
@Cristik why targeting? I see only two cv-pls for questions from the same OP that were asked 2 hours apart, it often happens that users ask several questions repeatedly which are all in need of moderation
TBH I don't think two requests about the same OP qualify as "multiple", and those Qs were asked a short time apart, so it doesn't look like user692942 is going through that OP's questions in order to moderate them.
anyway I'm not a RO, this is just my interpretation
@user692942 from that rule "Some examples of behaviors that are considered targeting a user ... Posting multiple successive moderation requests for questions/answers/edits by the same user."
Dunno. I clicked the Twitter symbol in the profile just to see if they had a link to that website there. Then I noticed that the name of the Twitter user is the same as the website anyway. I went to the tab to close it, as it wasn't needed and noticed the profile is suspended. No clue what happened. I just thought it's amusing since they apparently also post self-promotion here.
@Cristik The most important part from rule #20 is probably: "Keep in mind that we are concerned about both not actually targeting users, and not having the appearance of targeting users. Thus, what's considered acceptable is conservative."
I understand that. And that's probably the typical way of creating the appearance of user targeting and why I quoted that part. Whether or not it's enough in this case I gladly leave to others to decide :)
@mickmackusa I noticed you added the tag double-dot without excerpt to two questions. Given the unspecificity of this tag and recent burninations of punctuation-related tags, are you sure this is a necessary addition? I would like to remove these tags
@user692942 Yes, that happens sometimes. It's even happened to me in here without my knowing it, as I pay very little attention, basically none, to the user when moderating content. At the time, I was actually quite surprised to get a ping about it, because I really had no clue that it had happened. It's not a big deal if it's the result of going through a tag which you normally look at. Given how users sometimes post a batch of poor questions, it's fairly likely to happen, from time to time.
OTOH, user targeting does happen, even in here. It's something we don't want even the appearance of being facilitated through requests in SOCVR. So, it's looked for in requests (which is a large portion of why usernames are included in requests created by the Request Generator). When it's noticed, which is often by someone else noticing and posting a message about, it's something which ROs will look into.
If it's just a couple of requests which were made as you're going through recent posts in a tag, then "meh"; it happens. If asked about the requests, then just explain that's what you were doing.
If it gets past two, even over a more extended period of time, then it starts to look more and more like user targeting.
Assuming someone is just going through and moderating content on tags and not looking at a user's profile, searching for their posts, or otherwise doing something to intentionally focus on a user or that user's content (e.g. searching for terms they use, etc.), then my point of view on it is: just completely ignore the usercard on the post; moderate just the content. That will result in rare times when requests in here may start to look like there might be user targeting,
but that's something that should be easily handled by a message asking what's going on and getting an explanation. It may mean some requests are moved to /dev/null, if the user has been posting a substantial amount of really poor questions, but, IMO, that's better overall than forcing everyone to pay strict attention to users as they moderate content (who the user is really shouldn't be a part of moderating content).
@blackgreen I am not someone who is passionate about tag curation (or the general rules behind what is worth keeping/burninating). If it should be removed, I will not be insulted.
@RyanM Wasn't that something that was happening with the Stacks Editor??? Is SE running another trial? Did they turn forcing new users to use it back on?
@Makyen I thought that was "everything is inline code," but I wasn't paying too much attention to that particular kerfuffle, so don't take my word for it.
@Makyen Brief testing with a test account showed the normal editor being used for new questions. However, that doesn't rule out a transient or A/B test. I haven't seen any indication that they were actually turning this on now, other than that they said "we are targeting the end of June" in "Ask Wizard Test Results and Next Steps".
@TheMaster That is...an unfortunate edge case of the gold-badge feature. I suspect you may have been able to hack around it by temporarily putting it back, since you weren't the first to add it...reopened it before I thought of that, though :-)
@RyanM But I didn't expect it before I cast my reopen vote. So the vote was already recorded and there wasn't anything I could do afterwards. Thanks for reopening ;)
It's to prevent abuse of the tag to close questions you otherwise wouldn't be able to unilaterally close
if they included any time you added the tag (even if another user added it first), then it would provide a vector for abuse in the other direction: preventing a gold badge holder from rightly closing a tag about something just by manipulating tags.
Think to those close/reopen wars we used to have before mods instituted the one close/reopen rule for mjolniring.
Just an hour or so ago, I had some Thai street food. Without saying what it was explicitly, I can indicate that, according to a well-known (Biblical) proverb, it would not have been suitable source material for a "silken purse". :)
@IanCampbell Why wouldn't you be able to provide a URL/link? It's just a URL. That doesn't mean that anyone other than that user and moderators will be able to view the page. Are you aware there's a generic URL which works the user who clicks the link to take them to their own page: your deleted questions and your deleted answers?
@IanCampbell sigh A copy & paste failure. I've fixed the links in the message. Interestingly, that copy and paste failure is actually a bug, as the wrong link is repeatably being copied (i.e. the link I was hovering over isn't the one that's copied).
same user as the earlier Thunderbird one, apparently; I simply came across them among the recent email questions (the majority of which were junk, unfortunately)
Is there a rule that disallows deleting a closed question and reposting it verbatim? I had tried to coax info out of them yesterday and the question was closed as needing detail.
I think it is. They basically don't know what the authentication method for the site is ... I gave them two hints yesterday which they seem to have ignored. However atm Stack Overflow seems grumpy - can't refresh the page. Will try again once I'm at work.
@tink Basically, no, that's not permitted. They should edit their original question. Unfortunately, at least the last time I checked, the UI on closed questions encourages people to ask a new question, which is often misunderstood by the OP to mean that they should just ask the same thing again. While some people would certainly just re-ask, the problem is made substantially worse due to the UI (which should explain that they need to edit and what they need to change, but really doesn't).
As to what to do about it: If it's just once, leave a polite comment telling them that's not what they should be doing. If they do it more than once, raise an "in need of moderator intervention" flag and explain what the issue is.
We have a canned response for question repetition, but we do warn users for doing that with answers as well. I've been amazed at how many high rep users do the latter.
@TylerH That looks a clear, useful question to me. I'd be happy to edit out the OP's attempts and convert it to a "how-to" question with no attempt, and remove the "elegant" bit.
@cigien There's no way to edit this without inserting your own interpretation of what OP wants.
OP has code that works and they want something that is more elegant because only they know what they really mean by 'elegant'. If the question is to be edited to be objective, it needs to be done by OP. However, the chances of that even being possible in a way that does not invalidate at least one of the myriad answers that already exist are slim to none.
@TylerH I don't really care what criteria the OP has for elegant solutions. Since it's unclear what the OP means by elegant, i.e. what their intent is, I don't see how I can possibly change the intent. Also, I don't see any answer that's invalidated by converting it to a "how-to" question. None of them directly address the code in the question.
@cigien By changing the question from "how do I make this more elegant" to "how do I achieve this specific, objective criterion" you are by definition changing the question being asked (e.g. the intent) and inserting your own interpretation of what 'more elegant' means by choosing a criterion in the first place, rather than asking OP to choose one themselves
@tink Yes, this would be a good fit for Code Review IMO
@TylerH Yes, which is permitted. It's like converting a resource request to a "how-to" question. Also, the fact that it would also work on codereview is irrelevant to whether it should be closed on SO.
@IanCampbell Do you have a link to a target? If not, I'm going ahead and editing it. There's useful content there, and the question can be quite trivially salvaged.
If someone is asking how to do something and they give things they want to achieve and just word it poorly (e.g. in an opinionated way), you can fix that kind of question yourself, because you're not having to guess at what OP wanted.
I see cigien's side of things though. The duplicate I am thinking of is basically just this one answer there are a lot of other approaches provided here.
@TylerH No. I intend to replace the request for "better" code, with just a request for code. Honestly, people shouldn't share their attempts (working, or otherwise) when the problem statement is clear, and narrowly scoped. Of course, I understand users being wary of doing that, given how often questions without an attempt get closed as "needs focus".
The question won't make sense then. "Here's how I did it. How do I do it"? Because you definitely should not remove OP's own attempt from the question. If you consider just focusing on the fragment of a question at the very end, which asks for apply or a for loop, you could ask how to do it using those two methods, but that would invalidate 4 of the 8 answers (which don't use that).
in general it is not worth bending over backward to assist with people who cannot be bothered to ask a question that doesn't violate the site's asking guidelines so clearly...
especially not worth it when the OP gets 8 answers from eager beavers and 11 upvotes, to boot. They don't need our help; just let this one remain closed; I think that is the most useful outcome for all involved. OP and future readers get the signal that such a question as asked is off-topic, the answerers and asker still get their rep, and the asker gets 8 different ways to refer back to how to do it.
I agree with TylerH This won't be any more useful. The question needs to go to Code Review. Not a fit for so at all. He doesn't have a problem. He has working code.
Personally I think the most important thing to happen here is that 9 different users in the r community need to learn that "more elegant" questions should not be asked and answered... we lose that very important signal if we reopen the question and indirectly reward them for answering such questions in the first place instead of slapping their proverbial wrist.
I think you've misunderstood my goal here. I have absolutely no intent of helping the asker, nor do I care if they find the solution they want, or are otherwise helped, and I definitely don't care about any rep the asker, or answerers may get. My goal is simple; can I contribute positively to the Q&A repo? In this case, it seems to be a very clear cut "yes".
If you want to teach the OP to ask better questions, or teach answerers to be more careful in which questions they answer, go right ahead, but please try and avoid doing this at the cost of content on the site.
@TylerH Well, I have bad news for you. I don't think that's going to happen.
I can't find a good duplicate target that's more than "change all columns based on the value of the previous column". So I guess I wouldn't hammer the general question.
And in my search, I found some that would go better the other way. With the new question as the target.
Although the highest scoring answer here is very specific to the question author's data to be poorly generalizable.
Sure, but given that it's been on HNQ for a couple of days (giving time for duplicate targets to be found), and at least one SME in the room has actively searched for one without success, I'm guessing there isn't an appropriate target. If one is found eventually, I have no issues with it being closed as such, of course.
@SmokeDetector sigh It would be nice if there was a level at which each NAA and VLQ flag either counted as a "recommend deletion"/"delete" review result and/or just deleted the post. This one had 9 NAA and VLQ flags, which really should be enough to delete an answer without the need for more reviews in the review queue or a moderator having to step in.
True. It would need some level of oversight. OTOH, for deletion from the review queues for those types of flags, all the OP has to do is vote to undelete, and the post is undeleted and a mod auto-flag. So, that could be sufficient, as long as the user is also notified of the deletion, which isn't the case for some types of deletion.
As mentioned, the user would need to be notified, which is not currently the case, at least for non-review based deletions, as far as I'm aware. I don't know if deletion from review results in a notification.
Scenario: question about an "if" condition not working as expected. Resolution is exclusively about fixing the boolean logic. I actually have found a canonical for the particular logic in this, but it's in another programming language. Close as typo, or hammer anyway?
Yeah, that's a logic error, but not one particularly... programming-specific, in terms of programming logic. OP just did not sit down and think about this one out loud; I would not find that particularly useful
though depending on the rest of the question info/broader context I may or may not bother VTC
@IanCampbell I've adjusted the tag to be language-agnostic and added a blurb about OP working in jQuery to keep the validity of all the answers, but allow for it to be used as a dupe target for other language questions where appropriate.
@β.εηοιτ.βε yep...and even if you do have the points, you probably still need the meta post, because proposed tag synonyms are basically totally undiscoverable.
I would be shocked if more than a tiny handful of tag synonyms were approved by 5 users voting for them (or whatever the number is) rather than by moderators.