@SmokeDetector What's going on here? It looks like the poster took some content from the linked website, ran it through some sort of natural language transform (The bitwise operators allow you to manipulate different kinds of data in their binary form. => The bitwise operators permit you to govern totally different forms of knowledge in their binary kind.), then posted it. Should this be flagged as copied content? Or just downvoted and voted for deletion?
@dbc Looks like a custom mod-flag with basically that info would be good. You might want to mention that the user has had a prior post also linking to the same site (which may have had something similar wrt. the text, but metasmoke is down at the moment so I can't check).
Fixing the capitalization and other cosmetics won't fix the fact that the question is asking for a way to limit access to a file to a specific program, because limiting to a specific user isn't strict enough, but the answer suggests, U CAN DO IT BY USER NAME OF PROGRAM.
@dbc so the answer is wrong, but it's still not NAA. I once flagged a wrong answer as NAA and the flag was declined with this reason: "flags should not be used to indicate technical inaccuracies, or an altogether wrong answer".
Makes me wonder, what's the equivalent for written languages that don't have upper and lowercase characters? I'll have to ask my wife later what the Chinese equivalent is
@SmokeDetector k - very subtle spam link in full stop
@JohnDvorak I'm aware katakana is mainly used for "foreign" words (and occasionally for stage names, bassist/singer Miki Furukawa uses katakana to spell her name professionally), but is it also used for emphasis?
Just saying my hellos, was invited here on this post stackoverflow.com/questions/54399739/… , hopefully I'll do y'all proud and thank you for the invite @jww
@treyBake No worries, the key ones are basically don't flood the room with requests, use [tag:cv-pls] and a valid reason before requests, and don't post requests that you have a stake in (e.g. you've posted an answer).
@PetterFriberg I'm surprised, that's the second spam post they've had flagged today, and they've had a previous account nuked for spamming the same domain
@Bebs huh? I'm not even convinced he has the code in the first place :s Is he asking for example code, or does he already have a running piece of code which needs to be extended?
@TylerH One clear use is that you can use it instead of double-indenting if you have a list with code blocks inside it. That's a clear benefit. A second benefit is that you don't have to use the non-standard HTML comments to specify language, but you can specify languages more easily by appending the language to the first triple backtick
(defining languages using a code fence is standardized in CommonMark, these HTML comments aren't standardized anywhere)
@IslamElshobokshy Seems like one question to me. OP just repeats himself and uses bullet points so it looks like he's asking for several different things if you don't read carefully
@ErikvonAsmuth I am aware about the double-indenting, I just don't see it as a benefit as I don't mind double indenting and as a programmer actually find it more clear when viewing the post's markup
The second benefit (language declaration) also just seems like a flavor preference to me
I suppose. I think it's likely just so lauded because most people are used to GitHub
or whatever system uses it that is very popular
I agree there is a need to make code in posts more intuitive and add more guidance on how to get it to appear correctly, but I think the double indentation makes perfectly fine sense once you learn it
as long as they don't remove that method I am happy for the folks who love ``` as well, though
Keeping to some standard instead of doing your own non-standard thing is not a flavor thing imo, it's good practice. If everyone was doing weird non-standard stuff working with data provided by others would be a pain. Properly implementing standards is a goal on it's own imo
I think people are assuming it's a standard because it's how a lot of people do it, but that's harmful in the same way that starting out all your web programming tutorial articles with "It's simple! Just run bower npm grunt get install <thing>"
@ErikvonAsmuth I don't know what CommonMark is, or why that is called "CommonMark spec" but refers only to "Markdown". I am aware Stack Overflow uses some WYSIWYG editor 'addon' or whatever called Markdown to help format code and that it's similar to GitHub in some way. If SO is claiming to use CommonMark and this feature brings it more into alignment with that spec, then I agree that's a good thing.
Well, I've always assumed SO tried to move towards CommonMark. It's an initiative to create a strongly-standardized MarkDown but couldn't use the MarkDown name because of legal reasons, and Jeff Atwood is one of the creators of CommonMark. The main platforms that use MarkDown (SO, GitHub, reddit) all have a guy contributing towards that spec
Anyone know why sometimes when I am editing top 200 rows of a table in SSMS (v17.6), and I am typing something in one of the fields and hit spacebar, it "closes" the field like I hit tab or enter?
@NickA Def not typing Ctrl anything, maybe still holding Shift though because each new word is capitalized (it's a Title field I'm editing)
I never try to hold Shift when pressing spacebar, ever, but I type so quickly that I often press space before my finger has completely lifted off of the LShift key
@TylerH Yeah, apparently it was reported as a bug back in '09, never acted on though, so apparently Shift+Space kicks you out of edit mode, that seems like bad design
On a related note, I feel like Michael Scott vs Jim in the Office (US) on this task because I don't wanna work on the other task I have today. "Cons of Jim? Not a hard worker. I will spend all day working on a project and he will finish it in half an hour" aka me manually updating table fields hehe
@RiggsFolly It's unclear whether that's a typo as of yet. Typically such errors are not simply mistyping by the OP but rather just a misunderstanding of how the language is supposed to work/be written.
@grooveplex Not really much you can do. The OP disagreed with the passing of the suggestion and hard declined it. Since it is their post they are allowed to do that.
@grooveplex Most of your edit seems to be changing the wording and formatting. Also you remove the error message from the title, and the direct question at the end, and a tag that seems related
(sorry, I don't know how to get to the review item)
Can you ping would-be editors of a question after their edit has been rejected? Editor in this case has no posts on the network, so I can't leave them a comment anywhere