@Luuklag Ok. Lets wait , and hope MOD who handle that flag response question. Or some folks who familiar with that type of situation give some insight .
Need your opinions on this: Is voting down a competing answer that is rather sloppy considered unfair? I encouter this sometimes when I answer a question where an earlier answer was proposed but it's not really good :/
Well it's rather rarely that it happens. So I think it is not that big of an impact. And I don't downvote just because I want my answer at the top :) Sometimes the competing answer is just of really bad quality, but as already said. If mine is any good, it will go to the top eventually :p
@Lino As long as you can cast your votes as if you didn't have an answer on the question (i.e. you vote entirely based on the quality if the answer you're voting on), then voting, both up and down, is fine, IMO. In fact, I'd say it's a good thing to do, as votes are an important way for us to maintain quality on the site. However, it's sometimes hard to mentally disassociate oneself from the fact that you have an answer. Thus, care must be taken, particularly when downvoting.
@NathanOliver that's what I am thinking, the Q-style is rather okay but the content doesn't really looks answerable. They are asking about library-internal code. Which IMO is off-topic as that can always change and doesn't really add much value
@Lino netty is open source though so anyone who has worked with the source could answer it. Sure methods change but that doesn't make the question can't have an answer for how it works now, and even possibly later if there is a change.
I can load Charcoal and get an actual page, but it fails to establish a socket and get chat. Tavern (which I haven't been to recently) is just an unformatted mess
@Machavity They rolled that out a while back as a smoke test for us SO mods.
I wasn't a big fan of the original.
But I haven't looked at what tweaks they've made since the initial introduction.
I felt like it was trying to cram way too much information on one page. But some of that may be the idiosyncrasies of my flag-processing style. I prefer to click through and view the flagged post in its normal context. Not only is that view more familiar to me, so I can find things more easily and make fewer mistakes, but it also allows me to do things like read the question when handling NAA flags (which apparently not all moderators do).
Then there's that "who moved my cheese?" element of it, which Atwood always used to chastise me about
But when you handle that much cheese, you kinda like it to stay in the same place.