Anyone know if the person asking a question gets a ping for a comment on a answer? As far as I know only the person who posted the answer gets the ping but I'm starting to doubt a bit.
@AndréKool No, the author of the question does not get a ping when a comment is made on an answer, unless the question author qualifies for being pinged through for some other reason (i.e. that's not associated with being the question author).
@NickA Agreed, they did a lot better than expected for such an inexperienced squad. Just a shame the two goals they did let in were from defensive switch-offs
But this is the most positive I've felt about the England squad for a very long time, if ever
@MichaelDodd My thoughts exactly, unfortunately the positivity surrounding the team itself doesn't extend everywhere (looking at the brawls in birmingham last night)
@MichaelDodd New favourite, an edit summary which address every eventuality "Improved formatting, don't use the Thanks,Please and Name in the post. Only write proper question. Otherwise you may get blocked."
@Rob Even if the sole purpose was to use the answer to promote their own services (YouTube channel this case), leading to potential monetary gain for the user? (ads, etc)
@MunimMunna I'm actually unsure on that one. Yes it's a very poorly researched question, and the reaction to the answers have gone to hell, but they're not technically asking for a resource, it's not too broad and it's clear what they want
@Ron It depends on the answer itself, if it attempts to answer 0.01% then also NAA not applicable, but if it's just asking for more information, flag it
@Nkosi It must not happen! We need a strong an united army to defend against the massed hordes of the evil blogge who, at the slightest sign of weakness, will sweep in, take our friends and families and transform them into mindless slaves for all eternity:(
@Ron Lots of crappy new code too. Just seen yet another compounded assignment statement gone wrong 'cos operator precedence and misplaced brackets. I do wish users would just shtap with teh ' cool, clever' code and write stuff they can debug:(
@ErikvonAsmuth thank you. I'm also in the dark regarding his context, but I remember that the first time we ever had an interaction was when I voted to close some TempleOS question.
@HovercraftFullOfEels Ahh, yes. I just CV, fired off the comment, and promptly stopped thinking about the question. The OP didn't ping me, so I didn't know they'd replied. There are just so many of those "Here's a link to my site. Something's wrong. Plz fix." questions. Unfortunately, they commonly get answered, which, of course, just encourages people to keep doing it, rather than creating a Q&A that's valuable to others (and possibly start learning how to fix their own problems).
I agree, the OP of that question is unlikely to change the question to be helpful to others, at least in their current state of mind. I like the comment you made. It does a good job of explaining the help future users focus. As to this particular quesiton, the OP's response makes it clear that they feel entitled to help, without regard to creating Q&A which are usable to other people in the future.
I don't see how an algorithm is an off-site resource. An algorithm comprises the steps necessary to complete a particular task, i.e. it's "how to do X". An off-site resource would be like a page describing an algorithm. All of the answers which just post links are providing off-site resources but the question doesn't ask for links, and those answers could have summarized their links here.
@EvanCarroll you have taken a very liberal approach on that edit :D ... I do see an image url in that post. Did you on purpose not link to that (inlining would be counter productive I think) or was it an oversight?