Triage reviewed this as "Looks OK", which was my initial reaction, but if you actually scroll further, you'll see that this is too broad: stackoverflow.com/review/triage/18826624
@SmokeDetector Ah, right, I don't have privileges here, but do in Tavern and CHQ. Since others already reviewed it the same, I won't do anything, but if not, I'd go into CHQ.
@gparyani Just FYI: Giving NAA feedback to SD is helpful to SD and Charcoal, but does nothing with respect to getting the answer off of Stack Overflow. To do that, you either need to go to the answer and flag it as NAA, or wait for it to show up in the Low-Quality-Posts Queue and click "Recommend Deletion".
@gparyani Good to know. Now we just have to wait for it to show up in the LQP queue.
@gparyani There are many issues with how Triage handles questions. Questions are routinely mis-categorized in the Triage queue. The most common thing to happen is that people will mark the question as "Requires Editing" when it really should be "Unsalvageable". This tends to result in questions bouncing back and forth between Triage & Help and Improvement.
@Makyen Yes, I've seen the flowchart posted on MSE. Their thinking is, "it's not totally unsalvageable, the OP can edit the question to make it on-topic, etc.". Part of the issue is that the guidelines in the queue itself specifically mention the author in the bullet for Requires Editing.
@gparyani Please don't onebox a recent request, or re-request an active request. cv-pls requests have a lifespan of 3 days. Let the request exist for that time. If you want to talk about it, you can link back to it, but don't onebox it. Re-requesting it, or one-boxing it, like you did, is considered rude. It implies that you feel other people's requests are less important than yours, or that we are not servicing your request in a time-frame that is acceptable to you.
@Makyen Okay, got it. I was just referring to it in context, but next time, I'll link it. I used to link messages on a different chat room but was told to onebox instead; I didn't think the rules are different here. By the way, it wasn't a re-request.
@techraf Whilst I agree with the deletion (and voted accordingly), shouldn't we refrain from posting requests on very old, inactive posts? (Nearly 3 years for this one)
Does anyone here know enough about Swift to advise whether or not this question should be reopened? stackoverflow.com/questions/48782851/swift-4-0-call-api I don't have any experience with Swift, so I can't confidently ask for reopen-pls. If more information is required, please leave a comment because the OP is currently providing feedback and making edits.
@Adriaan The tag altogether was used as an excuse for a new question. With only a couple of questions it can be dealt with quickly. And these two were exceptionally bad.
@kayess they probably think you posted that Q on meta to get rep which they think they should get, since they asked first. (Even though you can't get rep on meta)
I came across the pronunciation.
Does it describe the contents of the questions to which it is applied? and is it unambiguous?
Well..yes. The description says:
Questions about how to pronounce technical terms.
But these are Offtopic explicitly according to Are questions regarding pronun...
Again, way to go around Swagger-Jacking questions that clearly belonged to someone else. I was about to go and ask this myself. Not trying to be a dick, but come on. — Krythic20 secs ago
Op just left the same comment on that meta post...
You clearly raced to post a question after seeing it being the requested response in the thread I previously wrote. You weren't even the only person who immediately left to do this. It's basically free points for whoever can type the fastest. It's a completely predatory mentality. This question is rightfully mine. — Krythic1 min ago
@Magisch it is hard to tell. I don't keep track of the handle rate of my flags. Last time I checked I had a comment flag pending from 4 weeks ago or so.
@Magisch I'm sure they went let him flag and now they see your reports and they say Okay, that is ... some workload and in 6 to 8 weeks they go Houston, we have a problem
Apollo 13: Launches successfully, explodes in orbit, lands back anyways. Falcon Heavy: Launches successfully, two bits chop off and return home, one more bit jumps into the ocean. What's left is careening into deep space, and the astronaut on board has nothing but a fancy space suit and a car that doesn't even drive.
@JakeSymons note that flagging a post which already has been flagged or voted on for closure doesn't do anything. The first flag or close vote pushes the question into the queue, so subsequent flags don't do anything, as it's already in the queue. You might want to save your flags for things which need flagging, such as new posts which don't have a flag/CV on them yet (not that you can see this, but eh), and red flags or comment flags.
@rene I wonder if there's been a change of procedure from escalating all of these to the mods doing more work to work out which ones need to be escalated and which ones can be sufficed with warnings
If there was the mods probably can't tell me about it
@Magisch they get seen and we do get around to them... but we have to spend time confirming your flag is reasonable (might take 10-15 mins) before passing it onto the CM team who then do their checking, and in some cases, will find more than anyone thought, they then take action.
...and we won't clear the backlog of more "important"/"necessary" flags if we spend all day handling 30 of yours instead.... so - sorry to say - yours just have to wait until we're back to a position we can spend time reviewing them properly without letting other stuff that needs looking at go unattended...
@JakeSymons I doubt that. More likely they are not familiar with the site rules. There are cases where the inclusion of multiple, seemingly unrelated tags is OK though.
@JakeSymons They are all different. C is too simple, C++ is too complex, C# is just right but needs a massive runtime and so takes ages to get going, kinda like Java :)
@Ron Yes. OSR is OSR. If they're using it to justify asking a new bad question I consider that enough to open a CV. It's uncommon so I don't think it runs afoul of the rules (you're not looking for old bad questions)
@Ron we have pro-forma comment about that: It seems that your code currently works, and you are looking to improve it. Generally these questions are too opinionated for this site, but you might find better luck at CodeReview.SE. Remember to read their requirements as they are a bit more strict than this site.
> Hello can anyone shorten this code: Hello can anyone shorten this code: Hello can anyone shorten this code: Hello can anyone shorten this code: Hello can anyone shorten this code: Hello can anyone shorten this code:
@TylerH While the close reason used by the person who initially voted-to-close isn't valid, the question doesn't contain a MCVE. [Note: The review is complete, with leave open as the result.]
They're really handy though... cooks stuff quickly that'd normally need an oven etc... Don't think they'd work for something that'd actually require submersion in oil, but they're just awesome...
@JonClements here in the Netherlands we're fond of deep-fried snacks as finger food in a bar (google stuff like kroket, frikandel, kaassoufflé, bitterbal), and those can be fried in the air fryer as well nowadays. Saves bars a lot of splattering oil
@JakeSymons we're not Python (good thing, as I don't speak a word of it). Utter poo needs to be closed as quickly as possible, so no, we don't have that rule.
The general rule of thumb is just to remember, if you see a post and you think "this needs closing", then you should CV it. If you think "this needs closing now", then you should CV it and post a CV-pls request here
@TylerH Well, I'm sure I'll be sanitized told if I'm sending wrong requests in, so I'll stick with the amount I'm doing. Just confused me how different rooms have different rules
@JakeSymons The real goal is having on-topic questions, not just closing every question possible. IMO, the preference is to leave a comment for the OP to see if they are responsive (within a few minutes) to modifying their question to be on-topic. Obviously, if it's completely off-topic, there's not much hope of that happening, and placing a CV / posting a cv-pls request immediately is reasonable.
so it's totally understandable to not want to close questions for a while. I know I have asked questions before and then stepped away after a few minutes only to return hours and hours later
Ironically, sometimes people decry the fact that askers don't sit around for minutes/hours after their question is asked in order to respond instantly to commenters, and then in those same people turn around and complain when someone comes to the site and asks a question that they need an answer to quickly.
To them, SO is not the place to come and ask your time-sensitive question, nor is it the place to come and ask a question that you need/want to know the answer to but have the patience to wait for a few days or weeks to get one.
I didn't realize that different rooms have different rules for the same thing before. But then I only hang out here and in Charcoal Hq so its not like I get out much
oh god, had the thought to nest switch cases and now google results are saying that's not only wrong, but that switch cases should be avoided and blah blah polymorphism etc. etc.
@TylerH As you said, we don't have an actual, explicit quota for the number of cv-pls which can be posted by a user/day. However, # cv-pls/day which a user posts is something that is monitored in an ad hoc manner. There is a point at which it's too much. If noticed, the user will be asked to slow down.
Our cv-pls system breaks down people don't service requests (each request takes 4 close-votes, in addition to one from the requester). Thus, generally, you should vote an average of 4x as many cv-pls requests from other people as you post. 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. Thus, above that average level users will, generally, be asked to slow down.
@Compass I have a table with reimbursement values for classes. The value is different for each letter grade and each diploma type. So there are 3 diploma types along the y axis and 4 letter grades along the x axis
@Compass I was originally thinking "It would be great if I could do like a multi-qualified case statement, e.g. 'case a and 1', 'case a and 2', 'case b and 1', etc.
with the map, you have one singular path, and the only thing you'd have to worry about is if the value is not in the table, which would throw a null pointer exception
Dictionaries are key/value maps when you don't care about sorting. If you foreach each pair you may get a different order than you first put them in. If you don't care then use a regular dictionary.
Its not as bad as Charcoal Hq, where the titles of the supplements and "male enhancers" as well as lots of other things comes up in the history, which I have to take out every now and again