@TetsuyaYamamoto it does. was just wondering if we can make a career out of googling stuff for other people.. looking at all these types of questions :p
I've raised this issue on SO CVR before, since I think a lot of quick deletions are organised there. I've objected to it in chat, because it seems to be a good way to get a new user to feel really defeated: a closed question can be recovered, but a closed and deleted one feels rather mean, even t...
@halfer Yeah to me it was not so mean :), but Cerbrus has a point in that there are not really a lot of newly posted question that has del requests, then again it depends how you define alot.
If the rommba will clean it up then I leave it to the roomba. If the roomba won't clean it up then I manually delete. We are a site for high quality questions and answers. We don't need low quality nth dupes/typos (although dupes get a little more leeway).
@NathanOliver Ah, I didn't know that. I usually only add the language specific tag to a cv-pls request, if the language knowledge is important for the decision (e.g. typos or duplicates)
@NathanOliver CRTP is probably the way to go, but that question doesn't describe the use case so well, and is missing some efforts shown (for my taste). Doesn't look like a pearl, more like "Let's go shopping at SO".
@JonClements What do we do with blacklist requests once they've cooled off? Do we mod flag for CM escalation or just let them hang out until they get noticed again?
@JonClements Burnination is typically handled by mods and mortals (featured, etc). Blacklist is CM only from what I know. The FAQ doesn't exactly cover it
@rene <iostream> is a C++ library. So, yeah. Although if you removed that header (which they're not using), I believe it would also be valid C. But as-is, it would compile as C++.
@Machavity The annoying thing is the resulting 'OK, so you are dead, now for your next step' spam from funeral parlours, cremation chapels and cryostasis companies.
Also, it looks really bad on your Curriculum Mortis
`myaccount.google.com/inactiveTake control of what happens to your Google Account if you’re unexpectedly unable to use your Google Account, such as in the event of an accident or death.
well, that's convenient
you can set it to 3, 6, 12, or 18 months of inactivity