hello, i feel like i am being personally targeted (all my new questions in the past year got immediate down and close votes, without any comment or explanation). if this is not the correct place, could you be so kind and point be to the correct place to raise this? latest example: stackoverflow.com/questions/79002014/…
@RetoHöhener You could personally raise a flag to a moderator but it will most likely be declined. I checked the public record. You received a downvote on the 9th Aug, 23rd Jul, 28th Jun, I don't see it as a sufficient indicator that you're "targeted". I also don't think that there is any connection to it.
@RetoHöhener I also do not see any unjustified close reasons. Please note, that downvotes are no punishment. The voting system is based on its usefulness to every user. If users don't find your answer or question useful, they do not vote on you but on the content. If really a voting fraud happens, then there are enough systems in place that will revert that after a while.
@RetoHöhener I would agree with the close reason of missing details. To me the question sounds at first glance as a question more suitable to DevOps rather than developers. It misses to much context that I understand how the issue is caused or that I could track down the causes to find a solution to this.
@tacoshy no, i meant i don't even see the close reason, how can i see it? the install4j tag has been on SO for years and is one of the main ways it's creator provides support
(but i didn't actually want to talk about this specific question but really thought something was wrong. indeed i also do not see the close votes in my past questions anymore. could have sworn that almost every single one immediately received a close vote 🤷♂️)
@Cow This associated article, which links to that SO question, was published 40 min before the answer. Looks like to me that the owner was doing some promotion.
@Machavity agrreing with mickmack. I would say it would rather fit to "Code Review Stack Exchange" if the question specifically is about best practice and code optimization.
@AmitJoshi depends on the link. If it is on topic then yes or at least comment to the OP to add a sufficient explanation and context. If the link is not on-topic them msotlikely spam
@user12002570 Are you wanting to delete these dupes (which they are) because they are causing harm to the site (and/or the wider internet)? Or do you have a problem with the fact that they have (decent) answers? If the answers are the problem, then they should be dealt with accordingly, leaving the Qs as 'decent signposts'.
Yes, they are dupes but they have multiple linked questions for any user to keep researching on. That helps you get more information and get directed to possible solutions before opening another question. Many dupes are created not by missing research effort but because users do not know the exact terms they looking for. E.g. "Masonry Grid" is not a term many know and if they do not know that term, they will not find the main topic about it.
^ +1. But, if you think there are issues about "too many" dupes on a particular subject, then raise it on Meta. If there are decent answers (and such should not be deleted along with their parent questions), then maybe a consensus can be reached and the Q(s) can be merged with their targets - thus preserving the "great content" that the answer may represent.
I will (generally) support del-pls requests for nth dupe Qs if there is no decent answer there. But, if there is/are good content in the answers that will go pink along with the Q, then I think we need a better reason than just "nth dupe - no roomba". After all, there is a reason why the roomba doesn't eat Qs closed as dupes.
An old question I posted over 5 years ago (and quickly closed as a dupe of the canonical "Most Vexing Parse" post) was deleted a few days ago. I'm not raising that specific question in here (against the rules) but, the point is it was happily acting as a potential signpost for 5 years (and even a moderator with deep C++ knowledge visited and commented on the Q but didn't feel like deleting it) and now it's gone.
... Personally, I think the more such signposts to the MVP Q there are, the better. After all, if an asker doesn't know what the MVP is, then they can't really search for it, can they?
If that Q had been deleted shortly after it was closed (as may happen with the current bunch of delete-happy C++ curators), then I may just have been upset enough to not continue with my activity on the site. Just sayin'.
Gonna play devil's advocate for a min. Assuming I found the right one, it has 840 views in 5 years. As far as signposts go, it wasn't attracting a lot of views
@Machavity Meh. That's 840 folks who (eventually, probably) found an answer on the site because of my post. Go through all the other dupes of teh MVP post (there are lots) and add up all the views.
@AdrianMole FWIW, that's why we generally trust 20k users on delete votes. There's not a strong enough case for the deletion to be reversed. If you feel it does, I would ask on Meta.
@Machavity The point I was making was not about that particular post (you'll notice that I haven't cast an undelete vote on it - which would, at the very least, put it into the "moderator tools" pseudo-queue); my point is more a general one about delete requests for "nth dupe" with no other explanation.
(And it's 10k users, not 20k, to delete Qs, I think?)
Yeah, it's 10k. I'm in the "meh" zone myself. If you feel it deserves a discussion, I'd ask on Meta. Could be a conversation worth having. If you do, let me know and I can link it in comments on the post
Remember that we can always err on the side of not deleting things, if they're not creating harm. That pretty much neatly addresses the issue.
There's plenty of crap to delete if you're itching to delete things. You don't have to delete the edge cases. It doesn't matter that there's a lot of duplicates. As long as they're all marked as duplicates, then that's sufficient.
@KevinB Just tested this, and it appears they do. I found a question in the search list with 231087 views, copied the URL, and opened it in a private browsing tab, then opened it in my normal tab, and the viewcount now is 231089, two higher.
Which makes sense because it has to load the page in order to redirect in the first place, and SO would definitely want to keep track of how helpful a signpost is, at least I would think (too bad they still don't expose date information for views to users, though...)
it is a defnition question... which is typically better suited for a language stack, but it's not looking for the definition of a word, rather, the name of a given programmatic style that doesn't actually exist... if they were asking for a name to be created that would be opinion based, but they didn't, they asked what it was called and it just so happened to not have a name
And the every answer attempts to address that question. If we accept your explanation, then there should have been 1 answer, saying: "No, there is no name for that"