If someone posts a good answer, but he deletes it again. Should we undelete it? Because it adds a good and valuable answer to that Q&A and is answering the question. I mean we don't want to lose good content on SO, right?
This is a chat bot for the SO Close Vote Reviewers chat room, developed by the SOCVR developers. For more information see the github page. Reply with commands to see a list of commands.
@Rizier123 I think you'd want to comment first, indicating that they can also ask for the answer to be detached from their account via a moderator flag
@AmanuelBogale yes, you can pester the bots with little-use al-=permission code, but Closey is there, as had been explained to you, for monitoring reviews done in the Close Vote queue, which requires 3k reputation to enter. Hence, you won't be allowed access to Closey, as you're not at 3k rep yet.
@Rizier123 the meta-ed question in question was undeleted
@Kyll I already wrote a comment here: stackoverflow.com/questions/36240418/… saying that he wrote a good possible answer. Should we vote to undelete? Because the answer is a really good one and better than all others. And I don't want to copy, just that we don't lose it
@BhargavRao You've reviewed 60 posts today (of which 7 were audits), thanks! The time between your first and last review today was 10 minutes and 30 seconds, averaging to a review every 10 seconds.
@Adriaan You've reviewed 55 posts today (of which 2 were audits). The time between your first and last review today was 14 minutes and 25 seconds, averaging to a review every 16 seconds.
@AmanuelBogale you might want to dial down on the "lol" usage. There are moments there's fun here, but not as much as you are suggesting with your vocabulary (or you have a very interesting sense of humour)
imagine for example that you think "this is a silly formality that people need edits accepted. of course they're editing to improve!" and now you click "approve" on every edit, as fast as you can. obviously this is a bad idea :-)
they're basically easy-to-get badges, which require no actual effort in terms of posting a good answer/posting 400 good answers etc. Just click through stuff without others interfering. (Same as e.g. the fanatic badge, though that's less disruptive)
and generally i think the main good thing is they enforce some cohesion on how we review, more than catching the stray "robo-reviewer" which is just an extreme case of "not sharing the standard" -- i also like that i get positive reinforcement when i pass, which helps me know i'm "doing it right"
but i've definitely gotten hit with some borderline cases, and there are plenty of questions on meta that show that this is pretty common (and since most people don't take borderline fails to meta, i expect this is a very very low number as compared to the actual number of borderlines)
@Tunaki lol yes, not sure if I should write my comment also in german just to make it easier to understand and to communicate. So I can see what his real question is and edit the question into shape if possible.
Hey, I asked this question, and kind answerer tried to help which I voted up, but it's clear the question is not asked well. Can it get closed rather than deleted, so the answerer is not ripped off?
I had in mind to just close it, because the answerer addressed it the way it is written, and it would be significantly different to fix it up (making the answer look wierd)
In detail: it is a distraction that I put the "add line items" inputs inside the <Form> . The question would be a lot clearer if that section of code were taken out of there. If I ask it again, unfortunately it will be duplicate. It's not a different question, just needs to be asked better. I'm happy to edit the code in the question - I've just seen people unhappy about "moving targets" in the past.
Someone posted a good answer and deleted it. I already asked him in the comments why, no response yet. What should be done? - vote to undelete? We don't want to lose good content. -custom mod flag? To get it undeleted -...
@Braiam It is a good answer, and when I vote to undelete I'm unsure because OP delete the answer himself, but he's kinda destroying a good answer. And when I flag it, it may be declined because I'm wrong here. So really unsure here.
@Tunaki what I think is that someone could have understood it and answered it. But now it has an answer that shows how easily it can be misunderstood. I don't want to do the wrong thing by that answerer, who did offer good suggestions. So as such it wasn't originally a close worthy question probably, but in the circumstances closing might be the cleanest thing.
@Tunaki I can't send link here (it would be related only to OP) so never mind... just to show... (It was the guy how used SO as code service, when he had answer he wanted to delete, no more answers, already solved...)
Tunaki has has approved 712 edit suggestions and rejected 1029 edit suggestions, the other quy has approved 909 edit suggestions and rejected 57 edit suggestions, I guess there is some difference in judgement...
@Braiam Because I didn't came up with it and saw it in his answer. I posted my solution, which I came up with: stackoverflow.com/a/36240956/3933332 even though his one is better.
@rene About one year ago there were hundreds of votes for bringing back the "lacks minimal understanding" close reason and it didn't happen. So what we are really bound to is the will of the people who run the servers. Everything else is benevolence. If you want to change that, open up your own StackOverflow. The license permits it. — Trilarion1 hour ago
Why can't you actually place a bounty on a question itself? In an era where good questions are like diamonds and hard to find. So you could encourage asking good questions and give attention to good questions.
None of the current close reasons fit these particular questions
Sure they do.
Look... I get that folks liked that particular close reason. So did I. But it was widely misunderstood and misused, by the folks using it, by the folks asking questions, and especially by the folks reading quest...
@Rizier123 because questions are the sand which goes in our eyes and cuts our feet, but occasionally they diffuse into shellfish, iritating them until they produce a thick coat of carbonates around the foreign body
you bounty thick coats of carbonates, not little crystals of silicates
@AndrasDeak Perl, to me, was like a car crash when I was a child. Something took away my mum and dad, but I could understand it and I felt lost and abandoned.