@double-beep That's not some sort of rep hack, it's just to bypass the 50 rep comment requirement. Better than just posting an NAA answer imo, but still bad.
The whole rep requirement for comments is a necessary evil, it's a pretty bad user experience but else mods have to do overwork on removing bad comments
@Machavity looks to be, yes. The thing was riddled with typos, so might well be. Oh well, let someone more versed in Python than me edit that back in if necessary
@StephenKennedy back in my day I used to earn stars left and right (cc @rene). Standards definitely have been lowered... more people are earning stars these days :-P
it'll get auto-deleted by the community with enough spam flags
(the room tag for that is [tag:flag-pls] but you can also report to Smokey if it has not been reported yet (in this case it was already detected a couple lines above)
flagging also has the benefit of us not spending our precious few close votes per day (though if a question is closed and deleted before the end of the UTC day I believe we get the close vote back)
It would probably be of less concern if we got, say 100 close votes per day...
@PetterFriberg perhaps... I'm sure they'll be happier now than recently under that new CEO, but happier than they were before the new policy? Who knows
Let's hope the board or whoever ousts that CEO after having to comply with a multi-million (or billion, depending on the size of the company) ADA lawsuit
@TylerH Yeah, terrible choices on the part of the company. About the only thing which might save the company is if it has very few employees, but the structure of the company that's implied by the question would indicate they are way above where that might help them.
@BhargavRao Yeah, it's really unfortunate for the people affected. I hope they end up in better positions elsewhere, with minimal disruption to their lives. From a business POV, it's just insane, for many reasons.
A business's culture, spirit, milieu and ambiance come from the top, and this one is headed in the wrong direction. I agree with the advice that the question asker should start looking himself.
Yep, the entire situation matters. While money is a significant part of it, it's certainly not the only thing. For many people, particularly for the type of personalities that tend to excel at programming/engineering, it's often not the primary motivator, beyond "enough" money to be comfortable in their current life (and sometimes less than that).
Does anyone else get periodic conversion for GitHub-style code formatting to four-space formatting along with slightly broken backtick removal with the magic editor?
that's the thing, I've seen this on a couple posts, and intentional reproduction in the sandbox failed. I'll bring up the last one I saw it on though, one sec
Do note that MagicEditor has not been updated since the GitHub style code fencing went live. Thus, conversions to four space code-indent was desirable as of the last time it was updated. (Still checking the example.)
@Zoe I was able to duplicate the problems you mentioned in the example you provided. Thanks. I can confirm that it didn't properly remove the backticks in your example, but did properly add 4 spaces to both code blocks. While conversion away from GitHub style used to be desired, it's no longer desirable (i.e. we should not enforce one style over the other). MagicEditor should be/will be updated to leave GitHub style code blocks alone, similarly to how it handles indented code-blocks.
@IslamElshobokshy This question is not "no MCVE". It's not a debugging question. It's a "how to" question. The "no MCVE" reason only applied to debugging questions. Only debugging questions require code. No other question type requires code (Homework questions require an attempt, which usually means code). Other types of questions are commonly "too broad" or "unclear". Adding code can often narrow or clarify the question significantly, but code isn't required and "no MCVE" doesn't apply.
For this specific question, while I'd like to see a bit of code in the question to frame it a bit better, it does not appear to be too broad or unclear. I'm also not thrilled with what's effectively multiple questions, but the questions are tightly coupled, so having them in one Question isn't too bad, IMO.