@Mogsdad While just in-lining the image would have been OK, you moved the image to i.stack.imgur.com. The source site is copyrighted, with all rights reserved. I don't see anything which makes it OK to re-publish under CC-BY SA 3.0 (even with the domain name included in the image, which helps, but usually wouldn't be sufficient for attribution).
@Mogsdad If the image was in-lined from a site other than i.stack.imgur.com, I'd consider the image as part of the link wrt. link-only (i.e. it's not actually in the answer). I'm not sure I'd consider the answer as not link-only w/o the image (which is subject to link-rot), as the answer says that it has to be done as in the image, without explaining that part. I'd consider it 1/2 an answer without the image.
I came across the little-used dogecoin, 8 followers, 20 questions, and only one question looks somewhat relevant. So with no further ado:
Does it describe the contents of the questions to which it is applied? and is it unambiguous?
The questions are more about APIs or apps that use Dogecoin, ...
@techraf It's highly likely the mod deleted that answer as a result of an NAA flag. As I understand it, the mod flag-handling interface just shows the flag and the post on which it's raised (i.e. the answer in this case). The mod could tell just from the text of the answer that it was NAA, so probably just deleted it w/o going to the question page and investigating. Assuming it was an NAA flag, they handled the flag efficiently, as they should.
So what is the reason that this question is not qualified to be on Stack Overflow? What if Google staff simply answers "Yes, Google Drive SDK v2 is going to be fully supported after the deprecated RealTime API is switched off". Note that these are two different APIs, hence my question which I can't ask elsewhere according to Google.. — Jaroslav Benc1 min ago
@JakeSymons I'm assuming that you're asking about close-flags, as those are the only ones which age away. I believe these are the same as close-votes: 14 days from the most recent vote, unless the question has > 100 views, then it's much faster at 4 days from the most recent vote.
@kayess I'm not sure what you're asking. The message immediately above yours shows 27 messages being moved to the SOCVR Request Graveyard, which is where we move completed and expired requests. The only people who can actually delete are moderators. Users can "delete" or edit their own posts for 2 minutes after posting.
@kayess np. (I had this mostly written, and there's some relevant info): The othertwo were moved to the Graveyard, as the requests have been completed. You can always look for your recent posts on your profile page.
@kayess You. You posted 16 on Wednesday, which is quite high. Generally, you should vote on an average of 4x as many cv-pls requests from other people as you post. This system breaks down if we don't have people also servicing requests (each takes 4 other votes). Assuming you're CVing your own cv-pls requests and use all your remaining CV on other cv-pls requests, that works out to posting an average of 10 cv-pls requests/day. However, there is no actual, set limit.
@Makyen I see. Could this be added to room FAQ? I find it useful. Also this idea could be a good candidate for a userscript, which could count your daily cv-plz request here in chat and/or in the close vote dialog. :)
@kayess Having the request generator userscript inform you when the number you're posting is high is planned (along with several other checks, most already written). The result of the May 2017 room meeting topic (#2) was to keep the current guidelines, but be more proactive about reminding users about the issue. There is a point where it changes from that to being a real issue for the individual and room. However, that point is not specified.
@JakeSymons There's no schedule. Here's the information I have. You can look at the Room Meeting page to get an idea of when they've happened. Generally, it's when enough people feel there is a need. It's also based on accumulated issues (i.e. more issues = more likely to have a meeting).
@JakeSymons Yes, they do.
@JakeSymons Note that for API's, that's "find me some API that can do X". However, someone asking "What method do I need to use in the Gronk API to do X?" isn't an off-site resource request, even if the answer is "You can't do that with Gronk."
@kayess @Makyen's comment is right - an answer should have been posted as an answer. However, calling that a question is a stretch - it's Unclear. The suggested edit on it doesn't help at all, either - what it needs is more information, and that can only come from the OP.
@Mogsdad @kayess The OP seems interested/willing to improve (has moved solution into an answer). If you're interested, I'm too tired to be able to put the effort that would be needed into directing them, so, feel free to do so. Keep in mind that they stated that English is not their first language.
@kayess I've edited the answer... I think it's what he meant, but left a comment for confirmation. I'll leave a tab open on that, and come back to it later. We'll see how it comes along... it's a welcome change to have an OP who gets on board with improving their post.
Saw that, good. The ONE thing that would help would be the actual text of any error - that would make the question searchable. (...and might point to a dupe!)
The be nice page has this: "Name-calling. Focus on the post, not the person. That includes terms that feel personal even when they're applied to posts (like "lazy", "ignorant", or "whiny")." Naming/calling someone or the opinion "dumb" does not seem to be nice
IMO, what crossed the line was calling out another user. We've reached a point where some profanity is tolerated - and "stupid" is nowhere near a concern.
@Adriaan not sure... I used to think that lexical knowledge is only good up to a point... then you better remember which lexicon you need to open for such knowledge : )
@Adriaan it's good to have it written down in an accessible location for 1) recollection when you forget or don't use terms for a while 2) conflict avoidance when new terms are added 3) new users come in and need to learn it
On my last consultancy beauty contest I was one of the finalists. My patience eventually ran out after 45min of endless s***storm from the client. Took some soul searching to keep it professional and not flip the table.
"Remember to smile" was all they told me before the interview.
@Mogsdad That does look like an answer, if only barely so. But if it's a correct answer, then it seems to me that the question doesn't belong on SO. This isn't electronics.SE, or even arduino.SE.
@IlmariKaronen Arguably true, but automation & robotics ends up spanning HW & SW, which challenges the boundaries here. Relevant Meta. Regardless... I'm only looking at the answer, which was deleted improperly.
Ok... seeing a LOT of answers in NATO that are variations of "you can do that with my extension (link), and it also lets you blah and blah blah". All unique, tailored to questions, but thin. They might stand without the link. But there's been a new one every couple of minutes, ~13 so far. At what point is it excessive self-promotion?
Vernon is a nice town, the downtown area has a couple of streets of Victorian homes... they almost all fit that description. Haven't been there since I was 16 or 17, though.
Anyway, if anyone here has some spare time and delete (or reopen) votes, I'd just like to remind people that SO still has a bunch of duplicates of deleted posts that could use some gentle care and attention.
(Where "a bunch" means 1780, as of the most recent SEDE update.)
The apple doesn't fall far from the tree... I'm supposed to be working, but the task is unpleasant, so here I am on SO. Procrastination might be hereditary!
But it's not enough to just feed oneself. Imagine the impact this "grab a pizza" idea could have! We just need every person in the world to rise up, and grab themselves a pizza, and we could end world hunger tomorrow! Or Monday, if people are busy over the weekend.
@Jean-FrançoisFabre I strongly disagree with delete-voting dup-closed questions which have not had an opportunity to demonstrate if they are good signposts, or not. The purpose of keeping dup-closed questions to have them be signposts to the duplicate. If the question is causing harm in some way (heavily polluting search results, egregiously wrong information, etc.?), then please explain that. But, unless it is causing harm, I don't feel we should be rapidly deleting such questions.
@JohnDvorak No. (or at least not sufficiently to outweigh the potential benefit of the additional signpost) Even if it was: I assume you mean on the answer. I'd note that a good quality answer suggesting that approach doesn't exist on the dup-target. Thus, it's unclear to me that the reputation is "undeserved". While the approach is mentioned in an answer on the dup, I consider the answer with that approach on the dup to be of poor quality.
@JohnDvorak No idea. That's the point of giving it time to demonstrate if it is, or not. That's one of the reasons that the 365-day Roomba has a rule that it doesn't delete questions with views > 1.5 * days since posted.
I can understand that it's frustrating that the question gets an answer. On other questions, particularly ones that have large numbers of duplicates and get multiple answers, that can be very frustrating. However, I don't consider this question a good example of that, due to not having a good answer with a similar solution on the dup.
@JohnDvorak That there isn't that solution on the dup, when the other solutions on the dup do solve the problem, means that there should be an answer added to the dup with that solution.
@JohnDvorak I can try, and often can get a feel for what it will be. However, what actually ends up happening, certainly trumps any such pre-evaluation, which is the point of leaving the question in existence for a significant time (i.e. in order to get actual information as to it being a good, or bad, signpost). I've generally found that I have to work at, and often don't succeed, in trying to determine the terms which will be used by a naive person trying to find something using a search engine.
@JohnDvorak Perhaps it is. Perhaps it isn't. My point is: unless it is causing harm, I don't see a reason not to leave it in order to A) demonstrate if it is a good/bad signpost (Removing good signposts is harmful. We don't know if it's good/bad, so removing it is potentially harmful); and B) what's the benefit of deleting the question? We save some bits in the database? What's the use of spending effort deleting it? [I really don't understand spending time/effort on it, unless it's causing harm.]
BTW that one needs closure because despites all comments & discussion with OP it's not clear what the problem is, and there are 2 answers (which probably don't work with the OP problem)
@Jean-FrançoisFabre While I can understand that desire, I'm not sure that deleting such a question is the appropriate way to do so. I'd also argue that this particular instance doesn't appear that egregious (in none of: the reputation level of the particular user, the number of easily find-able duplicates, the quality of the question, the quality of the answer, that the answer is a duplicate of one already existing on the duplicate (it's not such a duplicate), etc.).
@Makyen I'm less annoyed when a low/medium rep user is answering duplicates. Haven't we already done that unwillingly? yes. But some particular users with rep > 300k keep doing that. I want them to lose that rep and the time they spent writing a clone answer
@Jean-FrançoisFabre I'm not holding it against you. The term is one that easily comes to mind for describing the circumstances. If you/others continue to use it after being reminded, then we start to have a problem.
I wasn't aware of that, more focused on "rep" than ... on the other word. But it's obvious when you think of it. don't worry, I violated a lot of rules in this room, but only once :)
@Jean-FrançoisFabre While I can understand your desire, taking action on a post, for that reason, is not something that it's appropriate for SOCVR to do. SOCVR is about moderating content, not users. It should not be used to try to enact some penalty upon users (even more so when what the user's doing is within what's permitted on the site). So, while I agree that users answering duplicate questions is frustrating, don't use SOCVR to enact such penalties.
@Jean-FrançoisFabre Yeah, I'm mogsDAD, and DAD jokes are my specialty. I was disagreeing with everything & everyone so that I belonged.
If the behavior of other users is getting under your skin, read Why is Stack Overflow so negative of late?, and take solace from the fact that this isn't the first time that the "camps" have rubbed each other wrong. Then move on.
@Mogsdad I answered duplicates in the past (because I didn't know they were). Now I know (or even feel) that the question is a duplicate. I just cannot answer a duplicate when I know it's one.
@Jean-FrançoisFabre See, you and I are in the same camp, on that topic. But there are other camps, and they'll do what they do for the reasons they do it. They're likely beyond help. But...
I believe the newbies are our future Teach them well and let them lead the way Show them all the beauty they possess inside Give them a sense of pride to make it easier Let the newbies' answers remind us how we used to be
I don't mind helping the newbies ... by closing their questions as duplicates or commenting. Or even answering if there's a combination of subtle errors.
@honk Currently unclear. There are objections. The jury is still out. In other words: Currently, it is neither permitted, nor restricted, but that status may change.
@honk Unclear. You're not going to get an answer from me that anything along the lines describing the behavior is permitted. I can understand a desire for clarity and to know that you're not breaking "the rules". The issue needs thought and consideration. @JohnDvorak has stated some good points. For now, the issue is "under consideration".