Hey guys, I came across this question, which is basically off-topic, but has answers that seem to have been useful to people. Is it correct to vote to close it, or should something else be done with it? I sometimes see questions like this that are protected? or something like that.
I ran across the mixed tag yesterday by this question. I thought "it sounds like it's pretty much mixed up" (pun intended) and looked through questions tagged mixed. It has 200 questions, but no tag wiki, and the question topics seem to vary wildly (based on the 1st page of search results):
Man...
@tink if it doesn't even attempt to answer the question, you can flag it as a non-answer. But only do that if you are really sure it's not an answer (and doesn't make even a minor attempt). You can get penalized for flagging answers as not an answer if they're deemed as legitimate attempts to answer the question.
@Chipster he's actually trying to be helpful, but he's ill informed :)
user10957435
@tink then flagging may not be the best here. Otherwise, that's all I know you can do. In this case, I decided to dv too, because you're right: it's not a great answer to the question. It is an attempt, though...
@tink If an answer is at a score of < 0, then users with >20k rep can vote to delete the answer. For particularly egregious answers, you can post a del-pls in here. However, doing so should be rare.
New contributor on Meta is asking: "How difficult is it to change an error message or other behavior of Stack Overflow to make it more appropriate?". If he only knew... meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/387036/…
New dubious tag: visit about this graphing application. Seems on-topic, but the name is bound to lead to confusion with website visits/other off-topic stuff. Does anyone know it/have suggestions for an alternate name?
Oh, excellent, just created a new question list to track possibly bad tags but guess this is solved then! Thanks for taking the initiative to comment btw
Well, the only "issue" I see is the bumping effect, and many people have been asking Stack Exchange for solutions (like an option to not bump, or to filter minor edits). As those feature requests are many years old, there is no alternative to improve the data. And if the staff (Shog9) wanted to stop it, they would put restrictions (autolock after X years, max X edits a day, etc.)
I've recently edited thousands of 10 years old tags wiki, and nobody complained :D
I need advice. is this "Not an answer": stackoverflow.com/a/56974113/10957435. I mean it sort of does attempt to answer, sort of doesn't. Is my comment and maybe a downvote the best I can do?
@Lankymart OS scripting automation is considered programming, not general computing.
And getting the script to work with program architecture where it used to work before some change is a valid programming question; the crux of the question is how to get the script to work again, not to find out what changed in the program's architecture.
Powershell, and terminal based shells in general, are, as @Machavity mentioned, a grey area. Often it's a judgement call. IMO, most things that are being used as single commands or a set of commands not logically related (e.g. order doesn't matter) (with some exceptions for programming-based single commands) are general computing (grey area, use judgement). Things that are implementing logic, or a sequence of interrelated commands, are programming.
This question, IMO, is definitely programming. It's asking how to perform a logic based operation (continue IIF the started Firefox instance is closed).
ah, the title has "& Coding Challenges" in it. I figured CG stood for Code Golf but I blacklist that website hardcore so I didn't know for sure due to the following CC
@Makyen It’s a script that would still work if fundamentals in what the executing process does hasn’t change. That means is probably not fit for purpose and the script needs to be re-developed, so it’s “too broad” then.
@Lankymart If they were asking how to do some whole script, then I might agree that it's too broad. However, the question only asks how to do one, very specific thing: "Waiting for an application [Firefox] to close before continuing script". It's a small part of potentially a larger script and should be re-usable across multiple situations. IMO, that describes something we actually want to have on SO.
Back in 2010, in SO's adolescence, when we didn't know better, I answered a question that would now be immediately closed Unclear/Too Broad. I just got an upvote to my answer, but the question is clearly off-topic, and my answer was based on guessing the OP's intent. (cont'd)
The question is +2/-1 and my answer is +5. What is the proper action here? Does the +5 mean it has enough value to remain? I'm not linking it yet to avoid any meta-effect, and I have no problem losing the rep since it's really an off-topic question.
user10957435
Well, my 1200 reputation self says probably close it to new answers (since yes, it is off topic), but there's no sense in deleting it or something like that. +5 means that someone has clearly found the content useful.
@JimGarrison I think we're smart enough to find it anyway :) Starting with rep, you wouldn't lose it if the question were closed and deleted: stackoverflow.blog/2012/03/06/…
But like NKosi, I wonder if you could edit the question to make it 'fit' the answer. That doesn't seem unreasonable to me given that the OP is unregistered and never came back.
@JimGarrison I would delete it. I have myself for cases like that in past. Well, not +5 but as high as +3 at least. And several +2 and +1. For a question that’s 8-9 years old, a +5 doesn’t seem too high to prevent considering it for deletion.
that said, I have a pretty good number of accepted answers I would self-delete now, if I could — due to them basically being typo answers and other cases I realize now I never should have written an answer for in the first place
@JimGarrison I've voted to close a couple of questions I answered shortly after starting out here on SO. When going back and looking at those questions, I've tried to evaluated them based on only if they are on-/off-topic, without regard to me being the person who answered. As @Nkosi and @StephenKennedy have mentioned, editing the question into something that's on-topic is, of course, the preferred solution.
IMO, the choice wrt. closing and deletion are separate, but related. Closure is for questions that are off-topic. Deletion is for questions and/or answers which are overall harmful. In this case, given that it was just upvoted, it's clear that even at this point it's been helpful to someone, so I wouldn't delete it. [Note: I have not actually gone and looked for the actual post, so seeing it might change my mind wrt. any of my positions.]
@StephenKennedy @Nkosi @JimGarrison oh, I also agree with that — if the OP is unregistered and never came back, and the question could be edited to make it on-topic, then yeah, that seems like a win for the site and for users