Is there a reason to be deleting these questions so quickly? A couple of those have been deleted within minutes or hours of when they were posted, or of when they were closed. That seems to, potentially, not give the OP enough time to even see that their question is closed prior to deletion. Why do these need to be fast-tracked for deletion?
@FrankerZ It matters in that it results in a very negative user experience. From the POV of other users on the site, it matters because it makes it more likely that the OP just re-asks the question or asks about it on Meta, because they have no information as to what happened. Remember, it's difficult for people to find their deleted posts and many people don't figure out how to see their recent deleted posts without being explicitly told how to do so.
@FrankerZ They can view it, if they can find the URL or a link to it. It's not listed in the normal list of their questions. They have to click through to another page in order to see it. The two links to the pages showing their list of recent deleted questions or answers isn't very obvious and many people miss it.
@FrankerZ I'd look at this question the other way around: Why does it matter that these be deleted quickly (i.e. right now)? Is there any harm in the question sticking around for a couple/few days once it was closed?
I don't want it to become a signpost, to be deleted by google. These are poor quality questions, some of which are clear duplicates, and wont be deleted by roomba. If I see content that should be removed from the site, why should I wait?
@FrankerZ I don't understand what you mean by "become a signpost, to be deleted by google". I'm not trying to pick a nit, just trying to understand why you feel there's more benefit to deleting now rather than waiting a relatively short time.
@Makyen @FrankerZ Most of my delete-pls come 2 days after the closure so others can vote. By then, the OP has either accepted an answer, replied that they "get it now" or haven't done anything to improve their question (in the non duplicate cases). For the 20k+ requests, I'll usually wait to have some signal that the OP has an answer, except in the abusively bad cases.
Why does it matter that these be deleted quickly I don't want to keep them bookmarked forever :\
The libary called cytoscape-web has been replaced by cytoscape.js. I have seen some questions tagged with both tags, some just with the outdated one, so this would get rid of some confusion (Still many questions are also tagged with the desktop version of cytoscape)
@Chipster This is something that many people have asked for and that Shog has basically said is a good idea and one that we should implement. Inexplicably, we don't have such an implementation yet (much like the 3 CV implementation based on the resounding success of the respective experiment just a few months ago). Suffice to say, the powers that be are aware of the desire and the details, and the only thing holding them up is... them.
Man, Bill Gates saying he'd have to do some calculations on 'how much he'd have left over' if forced to pay $100 billion in taxes has me rolling my eyes right out of my sockets.
I'd have to work more than 100,000 years at my current salary to earn as much as what he'd have 'left over' (and that's assuming I don't have any tax withholding...)
@SotiriosDelimanolis Do note that we do ask you to refrain from asking mods to do mod things unless it is part of a discussion you are having with the mod.
@SotiriosDelimanolis No worries. We just have it as a room policy so lurking mods don't get inundated with requests if they just want to hang out and chat.
@CodyGray Itchy and scratchy is a violent exciting show to watch in the Simpsons universe. That one episode was very dull in comparison to the others so that is why it was used as an example of something dull
@CodyGray The point being that Itchy and Scratchy is a very violent show, but that's part of the entertainment in watching it. Removing all the violence, as shown in the linked video, removes that entertainment factor and leaves little else to enjoy. The comparison was made to Meta, which is often contentious and gets out of hand frequently; without those issues, though, interacting with the site would become less enjoyable.
This comparison, of course, was made in a tongue-in-cheek manner, and can be boiled down to a jab at Meta itself.
@Das_Geek let me remind you that Zalgo is considered noisy formatting and our rule 7 in the FAQ asks users to refrain from using that kind of formatting.
There are...a lot of items on the FAQ. From what I remembered I had thought the "noise" rule had mainly applied to posting inline images rather than hyperlinks
I can't check the FAQ website while at work, unfortunately. The web filter blocks access to it as a "chat site". The irony is palpable.
It is a term invented here to refer to what our chat system does automatically. Kind of ironic we have to have rules forbidding the use of a feature of the system.
On every topic there are at least 6 to 8 meta posts and most of the folks here have those in their favorites, so when a topic comes up, instead of exchanging ideas, opinions, discuss issues, we were posting links to meta posts. All of us ....
@TylerH Unfortunately, I don't know that off the top of my head, but I can check for it.
@M-- It's permitted to post a del-pls for it, but I don't see why it needs to go now, rather than wait to be Roomba'd. In general, there's no need to spend delete votes on things which will Roomba soon. In addition, it's beneficial to allow the OP the opportunity to edit their question (even though most won't do so). Admittedly, in this case, they've already had 4 days, but I'm not seeing the harm in allowing it to remain until the Roomba deletes it.
@Makyen nah, I think it can wait to get roomba'd. Running the "Current solution posted by OP" would freeze your computer for like ~10-30 seconds, but it's not like an infinite loop or anything. Thanks again.
@Makyen no worries. If you happen upon it, I'd be happy to get some help, but I can just disable JS in the interim (though it'd be good to have a solution to lean on for any given website without having to rely on such a brute force tactic)
@TylerH I generally haven't found the need to block single JavaScript elements w/o blocking other scripts from the same domain. I'm surprised the site uses a <script> with an actual id attribute. That's very accommodating of them. The vast majority of <scrip> elements I've seen on sites have no identifying information, other than the src. Personally, I do add IDs, or a class, when adding such elements through userscripts, but that's mostly for debugging/convenience.
For normal browsing, I use NoScript, with JavaScript blocked by default on all sites. I then whitelist domains from which I'll accept JavaScript (easily done with a couple of clicks). Most of the time, the main functionality of a site is through scripts from different domains than the advertisements, tracking, etc. Only permitting selected sites significantly reduces the crud that's displayed on many sites.
For sites where I don't want any blocking, which is sometimes necessary, I'll just use a different profile that's set up to not have blocking enabled.