@Moshe Maybe because mutability is the typical setting for a lot of procedural code. So making something immutable is the exception. Which is what people have questions for.
like i said in my answer, i suspect the popularity of the negative version is due to "derp, immutability is close enough to immutable". i would choose mutability myself
@Rob yeah; as a rule of thumb, try & use the API for stuff like this - it's a lot less overhead. If you're exceeding the API quota, it's not gonna be less of a problem hitting the site ;-)
Yeah, unfortunately I couldn't use the API for everything - though I did try to keep well under the API throttle in any case.. I'll have another look to see how far I can get with just the API (maybe some stuff isn't really needed)
@Rob I suspect grabbing close vote counts would've been the big one there. I briefly scanned your scraper logic; looks like it's driven by reviews, which... We increased recently.
Hm, must have missed that. I'll look into it the next few days. Would it be alright to ping you in a few days (if) I start it up with the new changes.. to see that it's doing a reasonable amount of requests?
@rene ok. So, here's my thoughts on this: that stuff was available in the old (ooooold) review interface, and it was very handy... Also really, really slow and mostly not used, which is why we simplified it in the review re-write back in 2012.
The goal of review is to get more eyeballs on stuff; not necessarily random eyeballs, but definitely different eyeballs.
let's say, diverse eyeballs
folks who wouldn't necessarily be looking at the questions otherwise
anyway, that goal doesn't preclude useful filters, but it does sorta imply that if you're getting too specific you maybe shouldn't be in /review
For example, if you got 10K there's a handy list of recent questions with close votes. You can, if you wished, refresh every few minutes and pick off the ones that appeal to you in some way.
I can live with the CVQ as it is but the recent increase of CV's and the challenge that came with it made that some of us wanted to use their votes as effectively as possible, hence the extra tools.
one of the big problems with close review has always (always - going back to 2011) been getting stuff out of the queue that didn't need to be closed. It's (relatively) easy to get stuff out by closing it, but the more effective that becomes, the more "meh" tasks are there clogging it up for folks who aren't filtering.
@AndrasDeak I don't know enough about LaTeX to see that, but the ones I see have a decent question statement + code example. Might be duplicates on tex.SE though
probably 2/3rds of the queue right now is questions with no upvoted answers, no accepted answers. Half of that scores < 0. IOW, if nothing changes they're gonna just get deleted anyway.
Now, @Rob's duplicate filter example is a pretty damn good one, because these are questions that, even if they're boring, even if they're already answered, if there's a solid duplicate then identifying that can increase the "weight" of that duplicate, can potentially reduce the number of future duplicates.
@Adriaan You've reviewed 60 posts today (of which 3 were audits), thanks! The time between your first and last review today was 31 minutes and 5 seconds, averaging to a review every 31 seconds.
I set my filter to not include duplicates in the queue. Since I only know MATLAB I'm not capable of determining whether some JS thing is equal to some other JS thing
@Adriaan 15 members (15% of this room's able reviewers) have processed 535 review items today, which accounts for 24.32% of all CV reviews today.
@rene You've reviewed 60 posts today (of which 21 were audits), thanks! The time between your first and last review today was 27 minutes and 2 seconds, averaging to a review every 27 seconds.
@WaiHaLee You've reviewed 60 posts today (of which 6 were audits), thanks! The time between your first and last review today was 5 hours, 57 minutes, and 43 seconds, averaging to a review every 5 minutes and 57 seconds.
@AndrasDeak Yeah I think so. Without these links, I think that only You can check your certificate with an online SSL checker is helpful - is that enough?
@AndrasDeak Hmm...we moderate posts, not users. So when I'm doing something with the post, I don't care about the users. So if you think you're correct on some sutff, just do it! =D
Well, I also want get 20k. But anyway, I can't get rep from flag/vote/edit. So I spend my whole day in the review queue, and what happened then? I can never get 20k, to help more :(