@Daedalus handled, thanks. Feel free to leave a flag on the post if you encounter something like that again. Fortunately in this case it would've been found anyway, since they left enough abusive comments to trip the autoflag, but that's not always the case.
If you remember the user, preferably flag one of their posts, but otherwise you can flag the post they commented on.
Don't rely on custom comment flags, they get auto-handled by the system and we often never see them
Also, uh, no need to check the comment history with comments like that. Just skip straight to flagging. (unless you're checking if there's more that also need removal after the moderator handles the abuse)
@KevinB 3-4 years after, word to word copy (except for var makeRequest = function(message) { which is completely non-necessary because not even closed!)?
this said other answers also, years after repeat the same. Great it is closed
@KevinB IMO, no, but if you are referring to my del-pls request, I'm referring to the closure status of the original/target question. The one being requested for deletion is a duplicate.
if it's something they are doing wrong, like pushing a square block through a round hole, that's not a typo, it's "lacking minimal understanding", but we don't close questions for that reason anymore; we answer them (if they aren't dupes)
some people still close such questions for the typo reason by ascribing the second part of the reason's description to the issue: "this question is less likely to help future readers"
I'm undecided on whether this is a totally separate, inclusive description of the reason, or if it just further describes the 'typographical error' issue. IIRC, Cody was a fan of the latter
or maybe it was Darman
not sure, but it was some conversation in chat here last year-ish where a moderator mentioned that during such ac onversation
it was "solved in a way unlikely to be useful to other users"
which is why it effectively became the current typo reason
but simply "unlikely to be useful to future users" on it's own is rediculously vague and open to being used on effectively everything, given a close voter's subjective opinion of what future users would find useful
where as... typos are a subset of that that is fairly clearly not useful to future visitors
except in edge cases where it causes a specific error that doesn't often occur elsewhere, such as this case
because that grey area and alternate interpretation would be the perfect set of questions to 'close as duplicates' of documentation pages
a neat middle ground would've been questions closed for that reason can't get new answers, but could have 'discussion style' forum posts made (that can't be upvoted)
that way each individual question could still be closed pointing to the documentation if it's answered there, but custom explanations could be provided as needed by each OP if users want to help explain things
and then discussion would be closed after like 1 month or something
hell, that might not even be a bad implementation for all duplicate closures
More Apache AGE weirdness: stackoverflow.com/q/77376080. It looks like it's asking about debugging the source code behind the query. Am I reading that correctly? Is that allowed?
@RyanM User profile says they're an employee at Bitnine (the creators of AGE) and Github profile shows past contributions to the AGE repo, which is part of it.
If you inspect the html you'll see that it uses the bg-red-050 class... which, from initial investigation, does not exist. It seems it might be a typo of bg-red-150. — DaedalusOct 23 at 7:58
@GeneralGrievance ah, right, so it does...I only looked at the activity page, oops.
Is there a rally to prettify formatted code by adding language:bash to Linux questions? There's been a flurry of old posts resurfacing with the only noticeable change being colorisation.
alternately: the target could possibly be fixed in order to explain how the error message directly indicates the specific sort of typo in question; both the question and answer need work to serve as a good reference for this, IMO, but it seems that many have found it useful already.
@halfer last I checked, you are still expected to use a custom flag