This is the meta site. It's for vamps to complain about their downvotes and tell us how nasty the rest of us are, not for software development questions. — Martin James5 mins ago
@Magisch It's not just the newb posters of bad questions I hate, it's the 20k repWhors who answer them. I just downvotes two RW: stackoverflow.com/questions/36624881/…
@Magisch We,, there are a couple factors. 1) The questions were indeed crap. 2) Revenge-downvoters who know that they have ot restrict themsevles to 2 downvotes/day to avoid the script.
@MartinJames Sorry to hear that. Here, the hold of winter is almost over. Almost all the snow has melted, and it's up to 10c today, with the promise of 20c on the weekend. AND I'm off tomorrow for a long weekend at Niagara Falls... so "good" barely begins to describe it.
@JAL That question has had quite the roller-coaster ride, and just got reopened. (Had 4 reopen votes when you posted your request.) Is there going to be a battle if we close it again?
@Mogsdad Yes, I flagged the accepted answer as NAA and a mod closed the question as "no repro." Apparently my answer isn't as well received as the "this is a bug" answer. oh well
Also I don't think this edit is appropriate (user is only speculating when the bugfix will be released). Roll back?
github.com/nkcsgexi — his Github profile lists an @apple.com email address, although their website says "Ph.D. Candidate, CS@NC State University", without any mention of Apple.
In the cube next to me sits a designer working on software for our next line of desktop phones. He's working from home today, but running a series of tests that involve ringing and other audio tests. All his phones are connected to a single POE (power over Ethernet) switch, so the evil side of me is suggesting a localized power outage to reduce the noise.
> Last night I accidentally ran, on all servers, a Bash script with a rm -rf {foo}/{bar} with those variables undefined due to a bug in the code above this line.
(Edits at the bottom.)
The Question
I was tagging a question with mutability and I noticed that there was a tag mutability and another one called immutability. The mutability tag has no wiki-description and was used 86 times, and the immutability does have a description and was used almost 1800...
IMHO I would keep them separate. English wise there is no need but I fell for programmers normally you only want to discuss the immutable or mutable behavior so having a tag for each lets you know what type of mutability you are talking about.