@Machavity Agreed, however I don't know carbon so I can't really close them when I see them. I will close them on request as you did for me here, no problem there. I feel it's only fair that I close questions that I fully understand and feel a duplicate will in fact solve the question.
@kayess "Because a command usually carries more information required for its handler than an event handler" So it carries more than just an event handler?
@J.Steen What do you mean? Asking for a tutorial or self-answered with a tutorial-like answer? For the former "asking for off-site resoureces" should work, for the latter the question is most likely too broad or unclear.
:38355373 Hmm, I joined the existing custom reason. That's indeed an extreme example for a NAQ. Normally there is a bad question with not enough information for others to answer plus the tutorial as answer. I CV those, too, because they violate the fairness/neutrality principle.
@J.Steen Just a dot plus space before the link prevents one-box rendering :-)
OK, cool. I fiddled with the IE11 Security Settings to make it more secure. That worked, none of the sites I tried did load. Then I clicked Restore default settings. Now IE crashes when it loads a site. I guess this is the new hype: secure by design.
@Machavity The OP states: "I am using github pages to host and am not sure if this has anything to do with it." so to me that tells me they want to use github's mail, but pretty sure they can't (not anymore that is). It apparently was possible back in about 2012
I added the other link. just to be 100% sure but yours is still on top
@Justin Generally when it is a bunch of posts it is all treated as one event. They get the stuff deleted and a message from a mod. If the continue then the penalties increase.
I wouldn't have thought that verbatim copy-pasting questions and answers as answers to other questions would be considered reasonable by anyone. But I guess it makes sense to give people the benefit of the doubt
@AndrewMyers Generally, yes, re-posting a question from a different account is mod-flag worthy. Closing the second one as a dup of the 1st (unless the 1st has an up-voted or accepted answer) can't be done by regular users. Note: re-posting a question from the same account should not be mod-flagged unless they do it multiple times, as same-user dups can be closed with their own questions as dup-targets. In this case, as rene said, it can also be closed normally for valid reasons.
@AndrewMyers While it's likely the questions were posted by the same user under different accounts, it's also possible that it's two different people with effectively identical code. It does happen, occasionally, where a group is working on a project and more than one question gets asked about identical code by more than one user. This can happen both due to school projects and outside of school. However, given the similarity in the question style (title), I consider it less likely in this case.
We have 9 active [cv-pls] requests (+20 more posted today & completed) with only the reason:"off-topic". In the past, using only "off-topic" has, generally, not been sufficient for a [cv-pls], because it doesn't give enough info due to SE using "off-topic" to categorize: General comp (Super User), Server Fault, Resource request, No MCVE, Typo/No Repro, Migration, and Other: custom. Have we changed the requirements such that just "off-topic" is a generally acceptable [cv-pls] reason?
@KhalilKhalaf FYI: For a hand created request, the "normal" would be: [tag:cv-pls] Duplicate https://stackoverflow.com/q/45357655/. There's a user script which will create requests for you from question pages.
Ideally, (as created by the user script) it would be [tag:cv-pls] [tag:android] Duplicate [React-native Struggling with multiple textinput, keyboard appearance and scrollView](https://stackoverflow.com/q/45357655/) - [ColdK](https://stackoverflow.com/users/8377769/coldk) 2017-07-27 17:44:39Z, but that much detail is not expected from a hand-created request.
The tag alloc exists with about 180 questions, but it has no tag wiki, and is applied lots of different languages without much evidence of coherence. Usually, it is some sort of memory allocation question, but that's about as much as can be said for it. There are some top users who've answered ...