@Nkosi I would not flag that as NAA. Based on the answer right above it, it does appear to have code intended to actually answer the question. However, the user does tack on their own question, in addition to the answer. I left a comment.
A NAA flag is likely to be declined because that answer is not clearly not an answer to a person without technical knowledge, which is the criteria I see quite a bit when NAA flags are discussed on Meta.
@Baum Schafkopf can get weird if the other players decide to cooperate that you should be the victim in that game, or you simply expose yourself to that fight.
@QPaysTaxes The simple reason is that most system with code written in C done even have an OS, or just a small OS. Like most desktop-developers, you forget that bare-metal MCUs outnumber the heavy-weight platforms by some decades.
And no, **most platforms do not have POSIX threads.
@QPaysTaxes Decades is not restricted to time!
@QPaysTaxes So what would you say if you mean "10**n"?
But magnitude does not necessarlily imply a power of ten.
I did not talk about developers, but platforms. An OS is typically not run on a developer (until now)
@QPaysTaxes Well, A friend of mine, who is a native speaker, also uses "decade" for powers of 10. Maybe there are regional differences about the semantics. Just remember the differences between BE and AE.
@QPaysTaxes Read your comment carefully again. Said that: there are hundreds, if not thousand different CPU architectures. And even for the same family there is often not a single code-base possible. x86 and ARM are still a minority in terms of units sold as well as variety. Your assumption is highly disputable from my experience.
@QPaysTaxes A series is typically a set of different MCUs with a similar, but not necessarily identical subset of features. It does clearly not mean "the same device".
@QPaysTaxes That's not what your statment implied (and not relevant for it; C is most importatn for a variety of platforms and you cannot assume they will support threads. If you make threading support mandatory, you instantly would loose the majority of architectures.
So, no, the number of devs is completely irrelevant. The target market (i.e. use-cases) are relevant. C is meant for professional development, not for fun, so it has to match the reuqirements of the target market.
(btw: I'm not sure it was a good idea to add threading support to C11 at all. Not usre if there is any usabel implementation of them right now (MSVC does not even really support C11's mandatory parts completely).
@JanDvorak The standard targets professional software development. Not only academical purposes or hobbyists. The latter two typically don't case that much whether a language is officially standardised or not. Industry like Automotive, MediTec, Aerospace, etc. prefer a well-defined environment. The attitude might be disputable, but that's how it is.
@QPaysTaxes Strictly speaking, gcc is a freestanding implementation of the standard only. As such it provides the minimal mandatory headers for an freestanding implementation and the language itself, but not the part of the standard library.
@QPaysTaxes A medical insurance company is not MediTec. I talk about the embedded market. That's a completely different business.
Have a look at the reauirements to develop medical devices. There is hardly time to write code; most of it is documentation, looking up "quality" standards, documentation standards, etc. Not that I support all of this stuff; there is a lot of hiding behind paragraphs to avoid thinking for oneself or accepting responsibilities.
@QPaysTaxes I indeed meant "medical technology". But What you describe is "management technology". It is not really related to medi-care.
@Olaf Well, take a look of a clinical research stack of 1 inch of paper describing how stuff will be done, and the resulting paper is just 5-6 pages long...
I mean, really. Saw one of those things for an interview
@Braiam I don't just refer to the requirements document(s), but the legal requirements not explicitly listed (the documents typically refer to international standards, making them part of the requirements, but are typically not included in the final document stack printout).
@QPaysTaxes No idea how you come to this; it is something completely different. (not that I disagree about your statement - I just have no idea what they have to document)
It's useless in that case because it'll just be deleted anyway. And for the others, it puts the question out of easy review by people looking at question in the tag (so cannot vote to delete anymore, or close)
Hence if you edit, it should be a complete edit leaving the question on-topic afterwards
the op suggesting edit?, well you would need to check if he done others, I hope he checks why reject and then understand, presuming for now good faith...
hmm yeah but again, you need to put the effort we do in reviewing, search internet etc..., if you find other bad reviews by same then yeah. BR has always ask at least two bad reviews.
I hate these review's stackoverflow.com/review/suggested-edits/15419114, I really don't like when people switch the code, but then again I can't tell if its really good to change... (I would prefer they post another answers)... need to skip.
If a commonly-asked question has multiple potential duplicate targets, should it be hammered with an appropriate one and left at that, or should all relevant duplicates be added?
@Braiam Well, there may or may not be. Some questions just aren't interesting enough to have gotten famous (generally due to being boring RTFM-type stuff).
They won't ask it less. Each person who asks is new, and doesn't know that there's a duplicate, and had no chance of finding any of them because they didn't search. It does make it easier for you to find the right duplicate without having to dig a lot, though.
I love this new dupe functionality. I can even fix errors by adding a better target and then moving it to the top, instead of having to ask someone to rehammer.
you don't need to know there's a duplicate, only with having the top result being the question you were about to ask is a win for us: less questions asked that were already asked
There's a distinction between "no canonical" and "no duplicate." A question may not have a popular dupe target with hundreds of votes that everyone uses, but a simple Google search may produce several reasonable dupe targets with a handful of votes on each.
I've seen in many cases that the bulk of answerable questions comes from people that searched but couldn't have found the answer that solves their issue
That differs from what I see, which is a lot of questions that could've been resolved by entering the title into a Google search instead of the new question page's "Title" box.
And now I'm not limited to hammering those questions.
@BaummitAugen meeh I got lots, today I have been searching to get a new dog and actually decided to answer something again, instead of flagging and closing all day
@AndrewLi ooh no more relaxing... you get back to work and final can relax again ...
> I know there have been similar questions asked before on stackoverflow, however frameworks change so rapidly with new revisions, or becoming obselete.
@JanDvorak I've seen a quite a few unclear questions that have self-answers. If someone has to be psychic to be able to tell that the self-answer solves the problem, then the question is unclear (usually missing information).
@Braiam :-). Not that I'm aware of, but looking in the Browser Console (Ctrl-Shift-J, or Cmd-Shift-J on OSX) will show errors/warnings/etc. on most pages (sometimes hundreds), and a significant number from Firefox itself.
@Braiam What all are you trying to see? Keep in mind that it is usually better for browsers to be a more forgiving of the HTML they render than to require that the HTML be 100% perfect.