Can someone remind me: what's the proper way to format error messages? Should I be using some combination of > and code formatting, or just code formatting? The reason I ask is because the message is often one line, but it's intended to be wrapped by the console. As an example, the error message formatting I used for this post
@Ron those selecting have no idea what they ask for and don't care. All that matters is hire me 10 developers and that they make 1000 jobseekers angry/sad n that process is not their problem.
@AnttiHaapala Thanks, so there are indeed two difference grace periods. In retrospect, that might explain why I could not delv one question or two after two days.
@Ron It's of little use and, anyway, too broad. The original 'Pascal' strings were POD, had a length byte at the start, data chars starting at offset [1] and a length limit of 255. The strings in Object Pascal, (Delphii), are dynamically-allocated, COW long strings with the length and refCount 'below' the pointer var that is used for access, data starting at offset [0].
Anyway, I gifted it a delv. Too broad, unclear, asks for, likely, POB comparisons and I can't be bothered with working on someone else's homework feature matrix:(
@SurajRao: Accepted answer refered the link, OP accepted that answer, so I guess it would match. I can't follow the changing tags anymore. Angular 5 is now Angular, Angular 1 is AngularJS, right? But makes it a difference in this case? I don't know.
@Justin It depends on what it is. IME, these are usually "Can I do X?" The OP almost always actually wants to know "How can I do X?" As far as close-voting, I usually find it reasonable to treat the question as if they really were asking "How can I do X?", which is often too broad, but is sometimes narrow enough to be a good question. I'll also usually leave a comment:
Questions asking "Is there a way to do X?" / "Can I do X?" / "Is it possible to do X?" are rarely appropriate for the Stack Exchange format. The answer is usually "yes", but sometimes "no". Either way, the question is usually not very effective. In addition, what is usually meant is "How can I do X?", which will often, but not always, be too broad for Stack Overflow. Please [edit] your question to clarify what it is you want. Right now, this is a "yes"/"no" question.
Please see: [Why is “Is it possible to…” a poorly worded question?](//softwareengineering.meta.stackexchange.com/q/7273)
@Justin The latter ones are the ones I really don't understand, particularly when they are showing complete code ("will this work?"). Why didn't they just try it? It took more effort to write the SO question than it would have taken to just try it and see what happens.
@Makyen At least in C++, it kind of makes sense, since compilers frequently allow code that's technically invalid. But then the question is basically, "Is this standards compliant?" and sometimes "Can you quote the part of the standard that shows that this is?"
@rene I am pushing 40 and you don't strike me as being much older. On second look it is a modal form issue gone wrong. The fluffy question is to blame.
@MartinJames that is true, but that is where the experts come in to help out, right? If they knew how it was called they wouldn't have asked the question.
@rene Meh.. MS why did they call the show mechanism 'modal'? What's wrong with, say, 'exclusive'? Sometimes, MS seem to open a printed dictionary at random and throw a dart at the page:(
@rene Similar to what @Ron and @Nkosi said, the question appeared slightly too broad to me when I looked over it. I now read it again more carefully (yeah, should have done this right away) and think it's okay-ish. I don't mind to admit that I might have make a mistake here, I therefore cast the last reopen vote.
@rene thanks for the heads up, will write up an answer soon (busy now). I stand by my request and that it should be closed, will explain why in the answer
@rene Thanks. I wanted to clarify, but preserve the descriptive terms the user had, instead of changing to using "modal". Hopefully, that will enable it to be found by (some) people who are not aware of the correct term for a modal window/dialog/form/popup. A lot of searching is just knowing the correct/common term for something.
@ErikvonAsmuth Too broad is a messy close reason, as far as I go it should only be used if question is crystal clear but it would take 2 pages to answer it (very very few question are like that). Unclear is always the safe choice and it also as a nice close text (that basically says also to narrow it down). I have a campaign never vote too broad are you real sure that OP really want that 2 page answers?? always unclear :D
@honk To be honest I also never vote too broad, since sometimes (if interesting non obvious issue) I like questions like "How can I do this?" with no code attempt. I think they are the most useful questions for SO (while they easily could be closed with standard reason too broad)
@PetterFriberg I'm fine with that. But I also don't mind to cast a "too broad" if I see another of those "I have no idea, please teach me" questions...
actually it often works better, since the answer could be very short and someone could question your vote, you go it's unclear how much I need to explain... the response is "then vote unclear"
Perfect :D, important is to close useless stuff for future users or questions that needs an edit to be answerable (mcve)... in doubt skip (to much stuff anyway we can't close it all)
There are so many really bad questions that actually 1/2 bad questions is not worth spending energy to close (only worth to close if you hope OP will edit)
@honk have a look that's what is slipping through the net in your tag
@honk There are another 47 question at cv4 ;), but you will get tired quick trying to keep everything nice and clean... better to just go after the really big problems.
trying to keep everything nice - I know that's impossible. Usually, I don't actively look for something to close, but I still stumble on so many close-worthy questions...
@PetterFriberg By the way, how did you create that report?
@PetterFriberg Amazing! I never took a look at SOBotics. I simply have too few time in my life ;) So, I can issue the same command to Queen? Or do I need some privileges in that room to do that?
@BrockAdams In the future, please provide a more detailed close-reason for your cv-pls requests. "off-topic" is insufficient, as it covers many different close reasons. On SO, "off-topic" includes all of: General computing (Super User, but really anything that "doesn't belong here"); belongs on Server Fault; is a Resource request; No MCVE (debugging question which doesn't fulfill requirements); Typo/Not Reproducible; Migration (to a few different, but not all, sites); and Other: custom reason.