@sshashank124 To the best of my knowledge, the OP's rejection of the duplicate doesn't do anything wrt. the process of other users closing the question. As far as I know, the only thing the OP's rejection does is stop the OP being show a banner asking them if the duplicate answers their question. If they had accepted the duplicate, then the question would have been closed as a duplicate by the Community user. So, the answer is: it's marked/closed as a duplicate in the normal manner.
i'm trying to live a life with mobile only, completely withdrawing from desktops and notebooks but still coding s bit, sometimes... and i've made a mistake that's been bugging me the past half hour or so: stackoverflow.com/review/suggested-edits/25018322
is this the right place to ask for support on such an issue?
the thing there was i've completely missed the review, because the previous review was about an edit to my post and I rejected it but didn't notice the page was refreshed to the next, so I thought I was still in my post's reviewing.
I would've copied and pasted everything already, and shoot a comment to stackoverflow.com/users/7621800/atish-shakya or open a chat room for notifying him... but boy, this is no easy task on mobile!
@cregox I looked over the review and agree that the suggested edit was fine. I made a few improvements and it is now formally "approved." If you're concerned about your error, you could ping the editor in a comment and explain what happened. There'll likely be no hard feeling.
@cregox Ironically, you ended up getting three of us to review the edit. We all chose "Improve Edit". :-) Admittedly, I almost rejected it, as it was about the same amount of work to remove the poor formatting that the user added as it would have been to add in the changes they did which were OK.
@cregox BTW: There's no way to change your action on a review once you've made it. You can have other people review it, as happened here. If your intent is to reject the edit, then you can cause that to happen even after you've approved the edit by forcing your own edit. See: my answer to How do I edit a question with a pending edit that I already Approved? for more on how to do that.
As to using mobile: Are you using a browser or the mobile app? The mobile app has not been updated in a long time, and there's no work being done on it. If you're going to use SO/SE on mobile, you're probably better off using a browser. Personally, I'd choose Firefox, if for no other reason than it supports extensions on Android, and thus userscripts, which I find invaluable for using SO/SE.
@Makyen why were the bold reverted?? I mean seriously those are some important aspect to solving the problem (which apparently was already solved) even though tags were already placed. @cregox buddy don't worry and just refrain yourself from using it on mobile .. its hell there :D
@AtishShakya Bolding things like that is generally considered noisy formatting.
@AtishShakya To be honest, the main things I objected to were putting "Select2.js" in code format, as it's not code, and putting "data" in bold instead of code format, as it was specifically code. Putting "success" in code format was more of a stylistic choice. It could be that it was referring to "success functions", but I read it as actually referring to the success function, which is a specific property in jQuery $.ajax().
@AtishShakya I'll always revert excessive bold formatting. In a single question, one or two items are OK, and maybe one single para to draw attention to the main part of the question. However some authors/editors will embolden every noun, which makes the post harder to read. I consider a form of vandalism, and will sometimes contact the author to ask them from editing in this fashion.
@TylerH I think you might be thinking about the post closure notices. Those are now blue and at the top of the question instead of being yellow and at the bottom.
@NathanOliver I couldn't remember after two weeks if it had changed. I feel like it makes the UX change to blue everything 'incomplete' if the quote box is still yellow
@AdrianMole green is the combination of blue and yellow
@AdrianMole red, blue, yellow are "primary" colours. Why the computer scheme is Red Green Blue is (probably) a different story Disregard, Wikipedia also uses RGB as example
Actually, it depends a lot on what colour system you want: in terms of spectroscopic colours, for example, there's emission colour vs absorption colour.
... and the "pure" colour violet in the visible spectrum cannot be accurately represented in the RGB system.
@AdrianMole It may not help if you're color blind but see 3.bp.blogspot.com/-_-_4C--oHA8/VZVuVPX7q-I/AAAAAAAABdM/… for reference of what I'm talking about (each color is labeled with the color name, at least). On the color wheel it is easier to see how colors work in this way IMO
But what's shown there as "violet" is actually "purple". Simply can't reproduce the colour you see through a decent diffraction grating on a Xenon tube, around 440 nm (IIRC).
@JohnDvorak Yeah! I've spent quite a lot of time devising/modifying algorithms that nicely represent elemental spectra in RGB colours.
I just came across the log4 tag. Someone had used it rather than log4j. It has no usage guidance or description.
There are 68 questions. It doesn't seem to unambiguously refer to anything that actually exists. The vast majority look like typos that should have been tagged with log4j.
A couple a...
@Dharman The Austin Powers movie(s) makes a whole joke about this. I'm sure those will be on YouTube if you want to acquainted yourself with a bunch of euphemisms.
@NathanOliver Usernames are only manually blacklisted/watched. IMO, blacklisting what is not an uncommon name is over-aggressive. It's almost guaranteed to result in FP and draw undo attention to innocent users.
@Dharman Are they the author of the documentation? If not, then it's not their own work and should be appropriately quoted and attributed. If it's not quoted and attributed, then it doesn't meet the minimum referencing requirements.