@Makyen He really meant to make a joke about the more common misspelling of "web-scraping" as "web-scrapping", as opposed to gre_gor's less common misspelling as "web-scarping". So... yes? But also no? :-)
@M-- Why should that be closed as non-reproducible? It's gotten an answer that people seem to find helpful, and I see no omission by the author of the question that it is non-reproducible (e.g., "I restarted my computer and that fixed it").
@CodyGray both of these questions are outdated and not reproducible anymore.stackoverflow.com/questions/31789314/… There was an instability issue with R Studio 6-7 years ago, but it's been fixed since forever.
Um, OK, but we don't close questions about specific software versions as non-reproducible just because a later version fixed that bug. That doesn't make the problem non-reproducible with the version that was asked about.
It would be a valid answer to the question (if not already posted) to point out that a newer version fixed the problem.
@snakecharmerb a pity. It could have been the start of a good question, if OP honestly thought a trailing comma should work there. (After all, it does in some contexts in some other programming languages - including Python!)
@KarlKnechtel It might be interesting to know why the SQL grammar is the way that it is (I confess I don't know), I'm not sure it would be a useful answer though. But I think if we are going to provide such an answer it's better on a Q that asks explicitly, rather than on a typo Q.
@snakecharmerb @KarlKnechtel I don't really see the issue. Why can't that question be answered with an explanation of why the trailing comma is not allowed? Why can't that become a reference for others who have made the same mistake?
@CodyGray I'd argue, that it isn't useful. In all the years of SO no-one has asked this question (though stackoverflow.com/q/20961185/5320906 and its related Q are kind of similar). Should we be producing canonicals for every syntax error instead of closing them as typos?
Although I'm tempted to ask "Why do all SQL parsers seem to produce such unhelpful error messages?"
I think the question you asked is a bit of a straw man. The obvious answer is "no". That doesn't mean that questions about syntactical errors that someone is likely to make (due, e.g., to a false equivalence assumption, as Karl pointed out) are off-topic or unwelcome.
that said, if OP acknowledges that something is a typo, I don't really feel like editing the question into something answerable; if there's a kernel of a good question there, I'd rather write it from scratch.
@CodyGray Fair point, I was exaggerating for effect. I don't think such questions would be unwelcome, I just question their usefulness, and indeed whether they can be answered without insight from the designers of the language / standard in question.
"...whether they can be answered without insight from the designers of the language / standard in question." Maybe not. Of course, what question can be answered except by those who know the answer?
Can this be fixed by some editing (i.e. moving the answer from the question into the OP's self-non-answer)? Should it be fixed? The other answer is clearly NAA, I guess.
Rolling back obvious gibberish to less-obvious gibberish isn't what I'd call an edit that "substantially improves the post, leaving it better than you found it". :-)
I was a bit hasty, there. I initially flagged it as R/A, then saw that it had been edited, so I retracted the flag and rolled back. I was definitely caught off-guard.
> Not using the UI Automation api is never not a mistake.
@AdrianMole To me it looks like an attempt. The question is "I would like to identify which sub function with which parameters failed. Could you advise a method ?" and they provide a method to "to log any errors that occur."
These don't seem to be the Python experts I ordered. :-) To be clear, my line of thinking was very similar to Jeanne's (who's surprised?), but I lack the subject-matter expertise to be sure. I'm not wondering if it's NAA. I'm more wondering if it is something that could be partially or fully machine-generated. My heuristics are giving mixed signals, so someone who can actually tell if the code is valid would be most helpful.
ok, thanks, didn't run so far into problematic posts from that user
hmm... seems I've visited, and upvoted, in the past, the first meta link (meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/299882/…)... time to take my Alzheimer pills... if only I'd remember where I put them...