@KenWhite That question is of far too low a quality to ever consider migrating elsewhere. Please consider the quality of a question when deciding whether to migrate or simply to close.
@CodyGray Ah, got it. The objection was to the phrasing on SOCVR, not the one on SO? I wasn't suggesting that anyone here migrate it; I was explaining the reason I thought it should be closed.
Yes, objection was the phrasing on SOCVR. Sorry I didn't make that clear. It looked like you were requesting migrating to CV, since that's one of the "unlocked" migration destinations that normal users can vote to migrate to.
@CodyGray Never noticed that Stats was one of the available migration sites. Sorry - my mistake. (I usually run across DBA, SF or SU posts for migration - never looked closely enough, I guess.) Thanks for the heads up.
@sshashank124 I'm going to agree with you that that one isn't a duplicate of the question chosen. However, I would also ask that you not make accusations like the one you did, that the question was closed "blindly". I'm sure the close voters had good intentions, and maybe even a good reason.
If you want the original voters, this room, or anyone else to re-evaluate a question closed as a duplicate, there's a better way to ask. Like: "I feel that this question is not a duplicate because x".
@CodyGray I understand. I tried to be professional in the question comments itself. I left that comment after the first 1 or 2 duplicate close requests and then it still got voted to be closed many minutes later without any discussion so it just felt a little frustrating ... sorry
You usually don't want to have discussion about that sort of thing in the comments. It gets noisy. Comments aren't an effective medium for discussion. Presumably, the people who cast the second and third close votes just disagreed with you. I understand that can be frustrating, of course. :-)
Is a 22 days old self-duplicate question too old for a cv-pls? They both (the question and the self-dup target) are duplicates of an older question for which I just posted an answer (saying just in case of a rule violation)
@RiggsFolly we were quick to delete it. Why was it deleted so quickly?
@JohnDvorak I would agree. The question was not particularly bad and I don't quite agree with closing it as typo. The OP is confused by the format. Their comments are not important, because that is the sign they are confused.
@JohnDvorak Hi, but the answer is quite simple to find in the manual. SO is not a replacement for a quick squint at the manual. We dont want to go the way of www.fools and just reproduce bits of the manual.
Huh, just got an answer accepted, I answered the question 6 years ago nearly.. WOW. Is there some sort of process going on to get people to accept answers?
@SecretAgentMan If they're of value (I think one of them was), maybe just a comment with a friendly reminder, for the link only ones, you could flag as NAA or spam
Should I add what I rolled back as a community wiki post? stackoverflow.com/posts/24333301/revisions I feel this would be helpful, because accepted answer contains mistakes.
@Dharman Yes, that's the normal way to handle it, unless you think the OP is very likely to respond to a comment asking them to post the content as an answer. In this case, that's unlikely given the age of the edit which added the answer in the question and the "last seen" date for the OP. When adding the CW answer, you can/should leave a comment for the question OP offering to delete the CW answer if/when they post an answer, but that they should ping you when they do post it.
@Dharman OK. If that's best for future visitors, go for it. I'd suggest leaving a comment on the question explaining the reason for your rollback of the question, particularly given that you are also going to add an answer. I usually leave something like:
I've rolled-back your edit adding an answer in your question. I'm glad you found a solution to your problem. However, an actual answer/solution should **not** be edited into your Question. In general, you should [edit] the Question to *clarify the Question*, but not to include an Answer within the Question. You should create your own Answer with the code you used to solve your problem, then accept it (the system may require a 48 hour delay prior to accepting your own answer).
When you've solved the problem yourself, [answering your own question is encouraged](/help/self-answer).
@Dharman It is copyrighted, as is almost everything written. I release it to be used anywhere on Stack Exchange as a comment, without the need for attribution.
@TylerH That could reasonably be considered a typo. The OP's code doesn't work because they used single quotes instead of back-ticks. The second highest scored answer shows the difference. Using a template literal is an unusual way to do it. It's also almost certainly a duplicate of something, depending on how you read the question (i.e. how-to or debugging).
@RiggsFolly I don't want to argue, but in this case closing it would not be very helpful. We could close it as a duplicate of a few posts, but the reason why I found this one in Google search is because it was useful as is. I decided to beautify it even more to be helpful for others, but by closing it I would be pointing people away from a thread I found useful.
so I voted to close as a typo after adding in that clarification to the question (e.g. "this isn't working for some reason"
to which now the appropriate answer could be "the reason is you have used apostrophes instead of carets" e.g. the typo reason (more specifically the "not likely to be useful to others" sub-justification) would apply IMHO
@TylerH I'd argue that the question, as phrased, was unclear. :-) Given the combination of the code in the question with the title and text, it was unclear if the question was debugging or "how-to". Both are almost certainly duplicates, but which duplicate to use depends on what was really being asked.
@Dharman Argue.. me neither. But you found that question "useful as is"? One answer with 3 well deserved downvotes and an Accepted Answer that is by your own admission complete nonsense? In what way is that in any way useful :)
@RiggsFolly Is that based on Taplar's comment? Funk Forty Niner just left another comment suggesting a typo. It appears perhaps that the code has multiple problems?
@CodyGray I agree, it would be correct to do so. In a few comments, I've chosen to capitalize "question" or "answer" to emphasize the difference between referring to a question post or answer post and just having a question or answer. However, I note that my subsequent edits to that comment have, unfortunately, not kept that usage consistent. I had hoped it would be a reasonable, fewer character, substitute for not using "your answer post", "your question post" to differentiate.
@Makyen Hmm. I wouldn't rely on that distinction being obvious due to a quirk of capitalization. I think it would be better to spell it out. There are a couple of redundant uses of "question" in there, too, which makes for some awkward constructions.
@CodyGray I didn't find anything suspicious (maybe a NAA). I noted, however, that they are comfortable in English, so that should not be the raison to copy-paste an already written question
@CodyGray And thank you for the comment on the question
@CodyGray I'll look at rewording it. The repetition of the words "question" and "answer" was an effort to more thoroughly emphasize the separation between questions and answers to users that were definitely not understanding that the Stack Exchange format has a strict separation of the two types of posts. It's quite possible that my effort to do so falls flat. It might be better to just explicitly state it. [I have other comments which do explicitly state it.]
I've rolled back your last edit. Please note that [Stack Overflow is different from traditional forums](https://stackoverflow.com/tour) in that it maintains a strict separation between questions and answers.
Doesn't look to me like those are tools he tried. Just approaches. Maybe the very last one (#5) is a tool.
It's definitely too broad, and possibly even not-programming-related, but I just don't see where it asks for a resource. So I'm wondering if I'm missing something.
@RiggsFolly TBH I didn't look at the answers in detail. What I meant that the question was useful with its answer edited in. Which is why I rolled it back and added a proper answer of my own. Both answers are garbage in opinion. I got about 6 or 7 results when I googled. Only one was using MySQLi instead of mysql_* and prepared statements.
@AdrianMole I just ran into this C++ issue today. Was trying to install a software client on a machine at work and it failed at the "install the 2015 package" step because that version of W10 had just had 2017 pushed to it a day or two ago.
In other words I wouldn't cry if the Question with its answers was closed and deleted, but that would only mean that the other worse results would prevail.
I also filed a report with the vendor of the software letting them know their software installer needs to be updated to either include the newer version of the distributable or to skip trying to install 2015 if it detects 2017 is already installed rather than failing
I posted code (C++) for an installer 'plug-in' that does actually check the currently installed redistributable for later/earlier than the one packaged up with the software. I can dig it out, if you like.
This is a huge improvement over the older system of MSVCRT libraries, and there was much rejoicing when it happened. I think I still hear the ringing echoes of the chorus.
@CodyGray Not sure that the VC++ redistributable is entirely synonymous with the Universal CRT, as it also includes support DLLs for MFC and other such stuffs.
There is, of course, the disadvantage that when a bug is identified in a runtime library component, the user is going to have to wait for a Windows patch, rather than such a patch being provided by the ISV. But it's probably more likely that Microsoft will patch Windows before you patch your own software.
@Dharman That's going to depend on if the fact that the user is trolling can be determined by looking at a single post in isolation. If not, then a custom mod-flag is better.
@Dharman Yep... didn't want the other flags to possibly be declined. And yeah, unless the content exactly matches the flag text, I'd recommend custom flagging with an explanation
@SecretAgentMan It had an "Unsalvageable" result from Triage, and was placed in the CV queue, which is the normal result when at least one of the three reviewers who selected "Unsalvageable" don't have >=3k rep. In this case, all three have < 3k rep.