@NathanOliver you are wrong, if you read my post for comprehension, you will see I am targeting the users ANSWERS on their OWN MERIT. Just so happens they all sucked. Then again, you don't care because you didn't read for context/comprehension the first time.
@JarrodRoberson How would you define "targeting a user?"
user177800
@QPaysTaxes yeah, kind of assigning malice with the "go after them", because my post is 100% kill them and burn them with fire instead of, "lets help them understand how not to get it wrong after these 3 answers"
user177800
@NathanOliver "go after them" is assigning malice, not much to interpret there
@JarrodRoberson No I did read your post and I comprehended it just fine. Linked to a profile and want to look at all of their answers. That is targeting. I am done arguing about it. Please do not link to peoples profiles for the purpose of moderation. That is all that needs to be said. We can disagree and disengage on the rest of it. If you felt I was attributing malice with "go after them" I am sorry. I probably should have said "and go and moderate them"
@NathanOliver Well, as you mentioned, moderating the c++ and c questions seems a bit different compared to such tags like php or javascript. Are there more regular users here targeting c++?
I tried to moderate C++ for a while, but 2/3 of the questions are "What will happen if I do this UB thing?" or "Which of these options is faster?" and can be answered with "Why don't you compile it and see for yourself?"
@RyanBemrose Well, c'mon. Moderating that is easy, because asking for the behavior of undefined behavior is actually silly. I'm mostly giving them a Schrödinger's cat comment, and close that question as lacking for a reproducible sample or such.
So usually, the code would take less than a second to run, so time(NULL) always returned the same thing, but in the debugger, I would step through the code and rand would be seeded with different values because the time(NULL) calls would be more than a second apart
I believe most heisenbugs are coming from undefined behavior, and mostly the code shown isn't relevant for the problem. There are things like race conditions, that change from debug to release builds, and more such fragile stuff. The tag is merely useless IMO, since it just points out that the problem isn't actually reproducible (Verifiable as from [MCVE]).
I just found the heisenbug tag. It has 4 followers and 98 questions. Its tag wiki excerpt is:
A software bug that disappears or alters its behavior when one attempts to probe, study, or isolate it.
Not only is this a meta-tag, questions about heisenbugs are almost always off-topic because...
I believe so. They can delete and undelete. I believe in the case where it was not deleted by the OP it get applied as a vote instead of a instant action.
Although they can insta-undelete a answer deleted by LQP review.
@TylerH I live in The South actually. I remember snowmageddon 2014. My boss was like "Ice? Whatever". The next day he came in in the middle of it as was like "Uhm, yeah, saw three wrecks. Go home before it gets bad"
The biggest problem with winter roads is not whether or not I can drive on ice. I can handle it just fine. But I share a county with six million other people who all become retards.
I see it as "How to launch a debug session for my bower resolver" (whatever that means). I would guess it is straightforward using proper IDEs or such.
@QPaysTaxes there's always a next iteration of the phrase that is not blacklisted
filtering for the first 4 words without question mark would blacklist "What have you tried to determine the source of the error? Any chance your HDD is failing?"
or something, helpful comments
then again, they could check whether WHYT makes up a huge percentage of your comment
marked as duplicate by Tom, Community♦ 4 hours ago
This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.
Well, I've got a hairy case here: Are super-SCARY iterators legal?. I've been voting to close for being an unclear question, that doesn't contain all necessary information in itself. Upvotes were merely given by blindly upvoting high rep members rather than actually present good content.
@AndrasDeak Are yours too low? This site degrades already enough. Do we need to be more crap strayed in and it's going through just because a high-rep user asked it?
@Tunaki First of all it misses to explain what's a SCARY-iterator. I'm not familiar with that term, and I'm pretty sure most of my c++ fellas aren't as well. Not to mention extrapolating to a super SCARY-iterator from that point on is pretty useless.
I see, I peeked at the linked question (what are SCARY...) and it doesn't really define it. I thought it was a standard C++ term somewhat but clearly it's not.
This feels off-topic. "I'm having problems running/installing X software." Does the fact that X happens to be a programming tool make it on-topic for SO?
Link Once (if) you approve that you can see the attribute selector list where I had to move [attr|=value] to the end of the list so I could move it outside the auto-styled table
Weird, pasting a link to a documentation page will onebox it even if you add text after the link... and it will hide the text
to see the issue, hit edit on the attribute selectors section I expanded, and try to move the [attr|=value] up one line to be directly below the last item in the list
and add the | back to the column separators isntead of the nbsps