If I see a user post three answers suggesting the use of a specific product, and each one individually does in fact seem to answer the question but taken together they're clearly spammy, what should I do about that?
I don't think so. It's asking for opinions and it's practically outdated anyway as the Standard Library has included a string class for a long, long time
std::string has been available for what, 25 years?
Python people, does this look like an answer or a 'me too' post? (I already removed "thanks" from the beginning of the answer) stackoverflow.com/questions/77091101/…
@dbc you can mod flag and ask the mod to judge these posts against stackoverflow.com/help/promotion it allows for some disclosed promotion. Not sure where the tipping point is.
@dbc if each one individually does seem to answer the question, and affiliation is disclosed, I would argue it's not 'clearly spammy', actually
3 is probably about the number where I would draw the line, though. Anything after that would start to be a bit much, at least if it's all in short order (e.g. all the answers are within minutes or hours of each other)
then you can flag, but mods might prefer you leave a comment and notify the user to add it, and/or add it yourself if you know what needs to be disclosed
and 3 is definitely the number where I would draw the line if there's no disclosure.
I went ahead and added the comment, but the three answers are substantially copied and include the sentence "I can help you for the integration of this, need more details from your side in brief" which feels like a solicitation so I think I may go ahead and mod-flag it. Does that make sense?
@RyanM Sort of, but unless I go out and buy all the same network equipment and configure it all the same, it's not going to be reproducible to me
Otherwise even cloud-based service outages would be "reproducible" because, well just go build the same datacenter and cloud services that Amazon uses if you want to reproduce an outage that AWS has caused...
My quick read as a not-too-experienced python dev is that one of those imports a module, and the other a function, and thus whether it's urlparse.urlparse or just urlparse will depend whether you hit the ImportError or not. Is that right?