@Joshua Some users genuinely don't know not to pick a fight with a mod, or what the diamond means. I've found that a gentle comment under the post, before a mod spots it, can be helpful.
Yeah both go under 'post flags' and aside from manually counting them up (which I don't have the patience to do) I will never know how many of them are close flags, VLQ flags, NAA flags, mod flags, etc.
But I also review suggested edits, remembering the pain of not being able to submit edits due to a full queue, so I can maybe spare others that pain, as the reviewing will free up some edit slots.
@Cow My answer to that is are you making a website? JavaScript is best. Are you making an AI? Python is probably best. Anything else? I don't know which is better, probably neither.
Python is obviously better because it has one of the cooler programming language names. Whereas JavaScript is perhaps the worst programming language name ever, after brainf*.
@user16217248 For me personally - I can't really make heads or tails of it. But I neither know R nor whatever any of the terms used there are. Presumably somebody who is familiar with the area can understand it much more easily.
Though it could be improved. Maybe by linking to the documentation or some information for that package. I don't know whether it's required, though.
Maybe it's now the first time they let their first semester students use a computer and tell them, whatever thing you don't understand in the world, go to Stackoverflow and ask them, they're all lovely professionals and will certainly help you :)
@jps Might even be required as some sort of "media literacy" course. And they are required to post on SO. Or maybe just "on a well-known online platform" but lots gravitate towards SO.
I know almost nobody who actually has an SO account other than me. All colleagues I've seen search for something aren't logged into SO. And nobody else has ever said "I asked about this on SO". Only one colleague I have mentioned once "Oh I know Eric Lippert. He answered one of my questions on Stack Overflow once. I was honoured". We were talking about Eric Lippert and one of his articles off-site.
Ah, right I also had another colleague who said they posted a single answer on SO and kept getting upvotes on it. So that's a total of two people I've worked who I know have posted on SO.
I also sometimes find answers needed for my work on SO and also some colleagues mentioned SO questions before. But the real reason for me to be here is that Microsoft removed Minesweeper from Windows.
@user16217248 you don't have to do that. we usually destroy spammers' accounts as a standard procedure. If you come across a spammer profile that was not destroyed, you can raise a custom flag to remind us
@blackgreen we usually destroy spammers' accounts as a standard procedure - do you? Just clicked on spam flags in my profile and already on the first page I found 35 not nuked accounts, the following pages don't look much better. Would be a lot of work flagging all of them...
@blackgreen your personal vendetta against air conditioner brands from Dubai? Not sure if I can find any not nuked profiles for that, but tons of other stuff. Feel free to look into my profile if you're bored from the usual flags and are in a kill 'em all kind of mood.
I'm definitely not going to bother. There's mods who monitor Smoke Detector reports and follow up on validated red flags to clean up the leftovers — or fix mis-flags. I'm not one of them.
@dan1st I'm not sure about that, but computer science is explained on Python.org several places and it's even part of their success stories, so I do think it's suppose to be here
@dan1st the top answer there looks good to me, which in turn links to the comment "It's a bit like having a tag called "programming". It's on-topic, but not very informative." to which I agree
The questions that have any relation to compsci are already pretty bad and well better served by more specific tags. The non-compsci questions with the tag are just atrocious.
@VLAZ We'll never find out. People post all kinds of nonsense as answers all the time. Sometimes it seems people feel the need to test posting on SO, and then just paste some unrelated stuff into the answer field.
weird. I could understand if it had been a copy-paste of the user's own question, just trying to find a place it will get an answer. But that was copied from someone else, many years ago.
@Adriaan I'm also not gaining rep very fast right now because I'm letting other people answer the questions. It will probably be a year before I'm at 100k.
@Cow That isn't clear to me. They don't say if this loan calculator is something they wrote, or an extension. It may not even be a programming question.
The amount of nonsense posted on SO recently is mind-boggling. People seem to post all kinds of output they get from chatGPT and the like here as a question, no matter if it's actually a question, an answer or whatever else of blabla they get...
I mean, I get what the description says. It's just not well defined. In VB (apparently) its an uninitialised. It then goes on to say that'd be null in C# but it's not. Not initialised is not the same as null - the null is a sub-type. In C# it'd be more akin to "default value" which, say, for int would be 0.
And then it says it's occasionally used in Scala. Which I do not believe it is because 1. I doubt it's "occasional" 2. it's not the same concept at all, it's a bottom type
So, the excerpt is for both "uninitialised" type and also bottom types in type systems. But it barely gives a glancing reference to the latter one. There is no usage guidance. It barely defines the tag as three different things.
@GeneralGrievance Are you sure it was the same user who asked? Also, they seem to use a package and the question is related to it, not just how do it in js, right?