Just to note a mod is required to remove synonyms once they're approved. Once the community has a firm plan in place as to what they want to do with Angular moving forward and also what to do with the legacy questions out there etc... — Jon Clements ♦Apr 11 at 18:32
Which means you need to have a "firm plan", then you can flag the plan with custom moderator flag.
@VadimKotov I have not followed the whole meta (nor do I have knowledge in that), but if you think it's a firm plan, you could flag it with a custom moderator flag, explaining the plan and what mods need to do to execute it.
a firm plan normally means a meta answer, which indicates what needs to be done and have community consensus (that you see from upvotes and downvotes on the answers).
@VadimKotov after flag, just wait, these kind of flags will take some time, first mods bounce them around between each other, so that maybe a mod with domain knowledge will see it.
We have no sweet stuff in. We got plenty meat, bread, cheese etc, but no chocolate, biscuits or.. coconut chips. I'm going shopping tomorrow, (car permitting), so I'll keep an eye out for them.
Nothing really beats normal fruit for juiciness, but really, buying whole coconuts and then processing them into chips takes forever, and I don't really feel like smashing coconuts normally.
Coconut chips are shredded pieces of coconut that are baked and salted and sugared.
It's not like coconut in a candy bar which is still moist. They're crunchy.
Concentrates their flavor significantly.
When you compare it to other dried fruits, like strawberries, coconut comes out sweeter. Strawberries tend to keep their acidity and have a tinge of sourness still attached.
@AlonEitan If it was actually link only I would accept it. This is not. It gives the name of a tool to use. That is all you need. It is not a good answer but it is answer which means it is not NAA. It is also not VLQ as we can understand it. It qualifies for down votes and delete votes but IMHO it is not flagable.
Meta is where rules are explained and clarified. Just because a mod says something doesn't mean it's law, if they're mistaken or don't see the big picture.
@NathanOliver You have a gold C++ badge so I assume that you see that answer different than me (I didn't write a single line of C++ code in the past 8 years), but what if it was an answer to, let's say, PHP (Or any other tag you're not familiar with), would you be able to judge that answer the same way?
Anyways - I barely ever flag anymore. If the flag succeeds, you get no feedback. If the flag fails, you get a nasty red rectangle that lingers for a week, and I'm easy to get stressed.
@BaummitAugen you get that at 10% declined v. accepted in the moving window of the past 7x24 hours, I believe. 25% and at least 10 total is an outright ban.
Stress should be a motivator you save for when you need something done. Being frustrated over an app crash all the time is unproductive unless you have a same-day deadline
When I took my GMAT in January
I didn't bring any study materials
I arrived an hour early with plans to just sit in a chair.
In the past I'd just stress study and sabotage myself.
If you view a singular failure or bad thing as an finality, of course you stress over it.
But like this mod opinion, things are rarely ever final, so if you don't get favorable now, you can try again later.
Does an answer count as being Not an Answer if the author admits it doesn't solve the problem in the question? I'm looking at this and I'm kind of baffled.
@Machavity Sure, just wasn't sure if "The problem described is not solvable by this solution" being in the answer changed whether it should be considered an attempt.
Am I the only one who thinks that Herb Sutter's metaclasses proposal is overhyped? I mean, it's great, and removing the need for Qt's moc is really nice, and it does reduce boilerplate and possible typos in a lot of cases. But with the way people are reacting, you'd think it would solve all your problems.
I find C++ to be a world of joy. Maybe it's my chronic fatigue or late blooming. Don't know. I almost lost all interest in other languages. Discovered the cpp only last year.
@BaummitAugen I'm much more excited about those two, and we will almost certainly have concepts and modules before metaclasses (I'd eat my shoe if metaclasses came before them)
@BaummitAugen Part of the problem in my experience is GCC. GCC feels the need to display every possible overload that it tried and why it couldn't choose it. Which sometimes seems to be recursive...
@BaummitAugen Ah, with the chron fat there are days you can't sum two numbers together little less worry about name hiding or omitting the trailing return type in C++ 14.
I have to use gcc 4.8 at work :(. Because that's the one that this Ubuntu version gets in its package manager. It's painful, especially the lack of colored error messages. So I actually got gcc 6, and I just have to ensure it compiles with 4.8
The pain of using languages that are being improved. You always want features from the newest version, but can never have them because they aren't being used
@Ron I usually don't answer if there's no MCVE. There are a few cases where I think it's okay. For instance, if the user says it "doesn't work", but doesn't provide an error message, it's easy enough to try it out and get the error message, but I'd also argue that the question isn't quite an MCVE. Also, sometimes a question is a near-MCVE and I consider it okay to answer
That depends on how fast I get my thesis done. By the end of this year if stuff goes great, next June if it goes poorly, probably somewhere in between.
... what... why do I keep getting haskell questions as cv review audits, but they take the first tag and change it to java (java is on my filter list, haskell isn't)