@HovercraftFullOfEels Not sure. User has another AI-ish answer that I didn't feel confident enough to flag, but confident enough to leave a snarky comment lol
Could just be another one of those users that confuse SO with their personal blog
...good golly, how many comments claiming answer incorrectness are necessary to get a hugely upvoted answer pulled from the site? hmmm... stackoverflow.com/a/17833299/2943403postgres
@Machavity I think we can leave the OP alone with this. They got so many comments trying to help them, now it's up to them to add information to the question. There's a downvote (not from me) on the question, so the question will likely be deleted in a 29 days. And - breaking news - the OP just now edited their question to add more code.
@Machavity I need to go offline now, it seems I spent way too much time helping the helpless, probably more time than they spent trying to post a complete question. sighhhhhhhhhhh :(
The statement is part of the loop, instead of after it, similar to just misplacing it before the end curly brace (}) in other C-like languages. It's quite common in Python, because, whitespace can sometimes be confusing, I guess.
I think the association bonus should be retroactively changed to be a one-time 100 rep gain on a single other site, per 200 reputation earned, rather than earning 200 rep somewhere one time and getting a free 100 rep on every site you ever choose to visit in the future
You want 100 rep for free on 50 sites? You should have to earn 200 rep somewhere 50 times
get rid of it and instead award these privilages with roles that can be applied across all sites once you've gained that privilege. Abuse it and you lose it on a single site, abuse it repeatedly and you lose it across all sites.
but given that sites are all different, it's not like 200 rep in one place means you know how another site works... many sites allow opinion-based questions for example, some sites don't like flagging comments, some sites don't like commenting at all, etc.
I just feel like "hey this user earned 200 rep on site A back in 2013, but hasn't really contributed since, but they instantly get a 100-rep leg up on every site even 10 years later as they join" is kind of... unnecessary, at least.
Instead of a 'lets let every 1-rep user cast downvotes' study, I'd love to see a qualitative study on 'what percentage of bad user actions/contributions across the network are from users who benefited from the rep assoc. bonus, and how many of those bad actions would not have been possible due to it'
undelete votes don't count toward the publicly visible vote totals, no. Only up/down votes
The breakdown at the bottom doesn't explicitly mention it but if you hover over the statistic in the top-right of the user's activity page it'll tell you in a popup window that it's only up and down votes
unfortunately there are far too many practical difficulties stemming from tools handling tabs poorly (e.g., rendering as 8 spaces) to make it possible to recommend using tabs in the real world.
in theory, though, it's better: it's impossible to be off by one space on indentation, for instance. And people can easily set the rendered tab width in most editors to whatever they want. Perhaps they normally prefer 4 spaces but want to switch to 2 for reading some deeply nested code; that's trivial if you're using tabs.
@Cow Yeah, it's a programming tool. From the site (emphasis added): "Notepad++ is a free (as in “free speech” and also as in “free beer”) source code editor"
@Cow I think it doesn't have any real effect if you flag something that already has a close vote, because only real close votes count for closing a question. Your flagging has only the effect of bringing something into the CV-queue, if it doesn't have a real close vote yet.
Do you think this edit is valid? stackoverflow.com/posts/77152744/revisions see the revision#3. I argued that it conflicts with author's intent. While the other editor indicated that since the way OP created their input data does not necessarily contributes to their actual problem, it would just be a distraction.
@Cow so you mean the 4 votes for spam/RA, right?! Someone (a mod?) told me in a comment during the strike, but I can't find that comment anymore. But every red flag also causes an automatic downvote, and many of the Spam/RA posts are deleted at -4, so 4 flags are enough.
@Cow Then we need a proper definition for "undefined", because it has been used in this C++ question, where it looks odd. Clearly, undefined is ambiguous.
@RyanM No, a tag merge doesn't affect deleted questions (example: deleted questions with next tag). This fact can be used to split a tag into multiple other tags through merges by deleting the questions which aren't to be affected by the current merge.
Frustratingly, if you create a synonym you won't be able to use the site search function to find deleted questions with that tag. To find those, you have to first remove the synonym.
@mickmackusa the practical answer is no, no one who can is gonna be willing to do so as there's no CM with the technical knowhow and bandwidth to work with them to do it.
And in this case I would say it's not even warranted, since the solution already exists, the beset answer is to downvote this one. You could flag it for moderator deletion but unless a PHP mod responds to the flag there's little chance it'll get deleted (and even then there's no guarantee they won't toe the 'company line' about mods not being SMEs)