@kayess the problem is that his English is rather bad, so we don't always understand him, and vice-versa. He felt attacked last night, and didn't respond well to that, attempts from the ROs to deescalate the situation only inflamed him further, probably due to more problems with the English on his side.
I saw this request two years ago to burnitate the translate tag.
However, it seems we currently have many different questions on this tag again, all about totally different purposes and subjects.
Isn't there a way to avoid re-creation of the same tags again and again?
Yeah, I get the impression that people aren't flagging seriously in chat. About 50% of the times I click 'Invalid'. But this is the first time I see somebody reporting the Skeet.
@JanDvorak AFAIK C++ doesn't have transpose built in yet. Ranges is coming and that will help with a lot of this kind of stuff. It would be nice to be able to write something like that.
@FOX9000 k
@Gothdo Yes. You get one close vote and one reopen vote per question.
@BhargavRao imho that's working with double standards. rep shouldn't have to do a thing with that. If I post plain abusive garbage like that, I should be punished, and if it were a cat I'd email the mods pleading
@Adriaan meeh maybe a innocent mistake, mess up... it's not really that bad, mods will delete it within 1 minute or 2 naa flag to... seems harsh to punish'em with -100 rep
@JanDvorak well if they are really bad language or clear cut spam it's correct... but cat on keyboard Shog9 points is that it maybe is just a mistake...
if it's a new user, it doesn't matter (and spam is plausible). If it's someone who has reasonable posts elsewhere, then that spam flag will be declined because it'd mess them up for what was probably an innocent mistake.
I don't know if this is a good or bad thing, but the php to user list is almost like a sock puppet list. Every time you look at it you at least see one user with irregular voting.
And if you flag them they get suspended and they slowly drop out of the list making room for the next one :p
@Glorfindel so the Q should be closed, and I think that the answers should go. Otherwise we'd be allowing LO answers if the question asks for them. That'd be weird. Close and delete the entire Q I'd say
@EricAya I think the community is divided on this. Generally, I'm against putting new code in someone else's answer. But then people will flood the answers with bad translations of existing answers to newer versions of Swift.
@JAL Yeah it's a complex topic. I've given my opinion in my answer but I'm still opened to other views, notably to what extent editing to update syntax is acceptable. The edit referred by Brad in his question was going way too far and wasn't acceptable, but... what is acceptable will be hard to define precisely. But we need to define it nonetheless.
@Machavity yeah I have a few canonicals like that. But that's also what the comments are for. If an answer is outdated, users should comment on the answer saying it is obsolete
@JAL Sure but Braiam also recently made a huge edit similar to the one referred by Brad... So I'm not sure anyone, including me and Braiam, is really 100% sure what we are supposed to do. ;) Sometimes a specific answer calls for specific edits. Defining a general rule will be tough.
@EricAya yes, I disagree that these edits are "in the clear." It's hard to find a middle ground, since usually community decisions are either very far one way or another
@PetterFriberg Yeah I roll back any edit that replaces Swift 2 with Swift 3 because this is definitely not ok (but many users on Meta including some vocal ones disagree with this, so we really need a clear consensus at this point or there will be lots of edit wars).
@Cerbrus I will do so, if that improves the post. I invite you to do the same on my own post if you feel that you have the technical expertise and willingness.
It should either have been discussed with the author beforehand, or posted as a separate answer. This time it went well because the original editor agreed (afterward). But what if it had contained a subtle but dangerous flaw? Posting as a separate answer allows the community to judge it separately. — S.L. Barth3 hours ago
If anything, the comments here should make you reconsider your view @Braiam. Please stop bringing back that the author has approved, it happened after you edited.... I can't help but feel you act and speak as if you know everything better than everyone else. Could you please take a step back here? People disagree with you. Are you just playing jungle's law? inb4 you say that people are wrong and you know better. circular logic ftw. — Félix Gagnon-Grenier59 mins ago
@Cerbrus that's so unnecessary: author is always informed of any edit on their post, no separated discussion needed, also "Editing is a form of communication!"
so, I edit to communicate with the author how I believe their answer is better
@Glorfindel I feel that a new answer that basically regurgitate the code isn't what we were meant to do: canonical answers to canonical questions. If we have two answers that basically says the same thing... that's just more work down the road
"Their own fault" would be a better reasoning if they were actually held liable for compromising user security, but in most places they realistically are not. Users are the ones who suffer, not the developers.
And these days, realistically, a huge number of people don't learn from books or tutorials, they learn from looking at existing code and stuff on places like Stack.
(Disclaimer: my personal opinion which does not reflect community or company opinion.)
@JeremyBanks Well, I program embedded in C. But I have the standard at hand and am aware of the pitfalls. Something most colleagues I know are not to that degree. And that's critical infrastructure. They prefer to rely on code-checkers like lint, etc. Something I don't value much: humans are way to creative when it comes to making errors.
@Machavity Nice. Reminds me of a decade ago, when I had to justify enjoying talking to people online to others who acted like "online people" weren't real.