@InsaneCat 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.
@Makyen @Cerbrus The question is about turning something into a HashSet. The ´HashedSet´ part is just confusing - I had to google it to see what the difference is between HashSet and HashedSet...
I would say the question is exactly the same with or without the HashedSet part
Both guys rejected has no relation to the tags c# and linq... I don't get why they're even allowed to reject this type of suggested edits when they don't know the technology
@Jogge But the author's intent was clearly to have HashedSet as part of the question. They even added an answer about HashedSet as a supplement to the accepted answer. Your edit would have A) been against the author's intent, and B) invalidated an answer. Both things you are not supposed to do. In fact, the consensus is that any such edits should be reverted, if they get applied.
@Jogge We're allowed to do so because we're trusted to make such judgement calls, including having the judgement of when we should not be making such calls, for edits by people with < 2k reputation. While I might normally skip such a review, your changes were clearly against the author's intent, and thus should be rejected.
@Makyen The HashedSet is just confusing the reader. Yes maybe it's relevant for the author. But I don't think it's relevant for anyother than the author
@Jogge Perhaps, but the editing guidelines are that you should not be changing the post in conflict with the author's intent. You appear to agree that you were doing so, but are arguing that your judgement is that it should be done in this case, even though it's against the guidelines.
@Cerbrus btw you are correct; delete votes can't be undone. You have to wait until a post is deleted and then vote to undelete if you want to 'reverse' it
@Jogge The fact that I have more magic internet points than you doesn't inherently make me right. It does tend to indicate that I might have more experience with what is expected on Stack Overflow.
Note that if the author of that question had merely accepted the answer which was about HashSet (and not about HashedSet), then I might have agreed with an edit which removed HashedSet from the question. However, the OP adding an answer specifically about HashedSet makes their intent to include it quite clear.
@Jogge If you think that question is not relevant to the question that you were asking, then please, by all means, ask another question. Self-answering is also perfectly fine. Removing content someone else put into their question is rarely ever OK on Stack Overflow.
@Jogge well, then I guess it's a more general question which happens to contain two questions (both to HashSet and HashedSet), and there's no need to remove either, since both have been answered concisely.
@Makyen I could have changed his answer to HashSet aswell. Then everything would be fine and no one will ever be confused in the future about HashSet vs HashedSet
@Jogge Which would have clearly conflicted with the author's intent, which, as you've seen, is specifically something that is not supposed to be done. (and what @Adriaan said)
Just forget it. In the future many other readers will read this question and has to look op what the diference is between HashSet and HashedSet. It's just a waste of time every time.
@Jogge as I said: then leave a comment. That's what you have got reputation for. Or, leave an answer explaining your point of view what the difference is
@Makyen @Cerbrus back to that C# question: should the "Edit: this is what I ended up doing (...)" part be edited out? That's an answer as far as I can see
@Makyen OP also has a self-answer somewhere down the line which is NAA (asks another question), already flagged that. I won't edit the Q though, since I don't speak any C#
IMO this question is one of the examples where the new CoC would work well. Not exactly a great question, but their heart's in the right place and I reckon they'll be making a positive contribution in the future if the community acts respectfully in return.
Though admittedly it's a very rare example within the wider context of android
@Vega please only provide the link to the question which needs to be closed; the proposed duplicate will be in its comments anyway. This makes it easier to see which of the two is the one you're after now
@E_net4 I've played it through to just beyond Ravenholm a couple of times, but then other life stuff gets in the way and I don't get to return to it for a long time
@Machavity Ok, understand. Sorry for that. But how to handle that situation? Noticed this broad question and thought I've seen another too broad one from this user before..
> The current RO team is too small, let's make it larger! Want to help lead this room (and have a shiny kick button)? Write up a Github Gist and we'll add it to the nominations page. Nominations close Friday at 00:00 UTC and results will be announced soon after the room meeting.
> FAQ Member Expectations #12: Members are not expected to close vote any post you bring up. Furthermore, do not pressure anyone into doing so. cv-pls means "close vote please", not "close vote or I'll stab you." This applies to all types of requests.
@PearlySpencer while that is true it can also be seen as a second request against the same post and that is simply not something we allow under our current rules. The Room Owners are around to point out our rules when we think something might get out of bounds. Please accept that we link you to relevant rules in our FAQ. Trying to be witty might be interpreted wrongly and is best avoided.
@shreyasminocha Some questions will be auto deleted by the system. Otherwise users with 10K+ reputation can vote to delete questions and if it gets enough delete votes the question will get deleted.
@shreyasminocha For manual deletion see this. For automatic and manual deletion see this. As for why A lot doesn't get deleted it is a problem of numbers. There isn't enough people to moderate all the low quality content that gets posted every day
@shreyasminocha Just FYI: Pinging these users here was ineffective. They can't be pinged from this room, because they have not been active here (or at least not active recently enough). If a user can be pinged, then their username will show up in the autocomplete dialog as you are writing the @username.
"If you don't understand the muParser C/C++ library, or have not worked with it; This question is likely beyond your exact expertise...." smells of troll
"It's a free gift. If you want the C header as well, Private message me. I'll get it to you, somehow."
@shreyasminocha A bit aggressive, but I wouldn't consider it trolling, just lacking knowledge. I encounter such folks in my job quite often. Self-taught engineers who didn't really learn the language(s) with all their terms and how they work, but just by following a pattern they once learned. Completely lost when it comes to theory and standards or their toolchain changes.
@shreyasminocha Just to be clear: that does not mean self-taught people are always like that. I'm an autodidact, too, but I always wanted to look behind the curtain.
@toohonestforthissite Yeah. Anyone with that actual problem, rather than quiz/homework, would have just renamed one or both, rather than introduce even more confusion. Totally useless Q.
Anyone seen anything as to why SE has changed to using CSS classes as if they are the style attribute. For instance, the question attribution/action div gets class="grid mb0 fw-wrap ai-start jc-end gs8 gsy", with most of those just a single CSS property, many with !important. It seems to fly in the face of what the entire purpose of having CSS (i.e. decoupling the HTML from styles on every element). It's like they went back to the web of the '90s, only worse.
SE appears to have added animations for up-voting a comment. Are they sticking (i.e. not ending on the "normal" up-voted indicator) for anyone else (ignoring that the animation is annoying)?
@NathanOliver Yeah... that's definitely one of those where I'm thinking is there actually a QA team somewhere... that should never had been pushed to live...
mind you - I've pushed worse changes to live in my time so - meh - not one to talk
@Ron What makes it it even worse is the mot meta post on the right side have the old style links while all the comments and post have the new links. So now you don't even have a consistent style
@JonClements Same here, it just seems to be consistent from SO.
fairly sure us devs can get away with slightly more (despite our embarrassment of why the heck we mucked up) if the end user is a non-tech party that just wants to use it and doesn't give a beep how it works as long as it does :p
@Vega That's a major part of the problem. Sure, we're here, and I understand that you can't always test everything, but you should be testing the changes you make, at least basically. Obviously, how much testing has a lot of variables.
As @JonClements and @NathanOliver have said, we've all made mistakes from time-to-time. However, we normally learn from them and put processes in place which make it much less likely for them to get through to end users on a regular basis. For SE, it seems that having such problems is normal, which makes it appear that they don't have a QA process for changes, even at the level of engineers testing their own changes, let alone having at least some measure of double checking by others.