I went back and forth about wanting to write an answer on the question. I decided not to since I got a most-likely-revenge downvote after I commented on an incorrect answer.
You are simply the person who first commented on a post reported in this room
we have a FAQ point (I'll find it in a bit) that requests (though it's not a be-all-end-all requirement) that users avoid piling on comments for stuff reported here
Though it is mostly to avoid situations where there's half a dozen of us all posting auto comments or manual comments describing various criticisms of said post
@Scratte right, they got ninja'd cc: @MartijnPieters
@Machavity Thanks. One thing, I am still learning about smoky, but when I feel comfortable, how I can be a trusted user (I know it says ping the SOCVR ROs, etc., but can I ping you here for that?)
@Scratte Typically we use the kind of ruleset that SO ought to be using; assume good intentions and use a light, corrective touch rather than a heavy, punitive one wherever possible :-)
@Machavity Thank you, but no rush, I may have spent couple hours in total reading Charcoal so far. I'd rater get more informed before acting p.s however I have self-control. I can put a hold on it myself :/ :D
@AdrianMole If they're dead-set on adding basic, tour/help center knowledge to various parts of the UI throughout the site, then yes, I'm suggesting user-sensitive modals throughout the site.
I'd rather they remove it from the modal though
If they're that concerned that people are closing questions without knowing why we close some questions, they should be required to view the help center page or fill in some value only stored there before being able to access the modal option
I'd support your second point, if you made a feature-request on Meta. Small, more succinct modals would make my life easier, for sure - I get fed up of having to move boxes up the screen in order to see the buttons at the bottom.
I'm using something called Seamonkey which is built on a Gecko ESR. So, um, last decade maybe? I'd switch to Firefox if they hadn't removed the ability to have different window icons per profile.
@TylerH They’re actually trying to make these privileges more discoverable (plenty of folks gain CV privs without realizing it), and do a better job of explaining them so that folks will feel more comfortable exercising them. So, it’s actually a very good thing… But as usual the execution is subpar in a few ways.
@TylerH Pretty much yeah. I tend to use different profiles for different purposes so keeping the windows sorted is convenient. Also, there is a question + an an answer by Makyen here: stackoverflow.com/questions/24004418/…As of Firefox 57, this is not possible from an extension.
My issue is practicality, I guess. You spend too much time shuffling multiple windows around, sizing them just where you want them so you can see everything. Whereas with tabs, I can just effortlessly make it full-screen.
I will fling a tab off to a second (or third or fourth) monitor, where it’s also easiest to just maximize it.
@dbc I think that’s how all mainstream churches define it, yes :-)
@Dharman I still use menu bars because they support keyboard navigation. Honestly I could do without toolbar buttons though, I almost never use them in any product that still has menus, right-click popups + keyboard shortcut support.
No. I’ve tried. I wanted to like it. It seemed like a good idea, considering how often I switch between sets of tasks.
For reasons I cannot fully articulate, though, multiple desktops just never worked for me. Neither on Windows or Mac, so I don’t think it is a UI issue.
@Das_Geek I don’t know how people exclusively use console sessions to get real work done. I want to have multiple editor windows, be able to see my compiler output, and possibly even the commit history.
If there’s no plagiarism concern (i.e., they gave you credit), then there’s no procedural problem. In the normal circumstance, where the offered solution is correct, it’s a valid answer. It’s often useful to show how the general solution can be applied in a specific case.
@CodyGray Multiple frames in a window. Can do that with either tmux or Vim. I generally prefer to have a per-project Vim instance, with multiple buffers open in splits. Then switch between projects and terminals via tmux
@CodyGray In general I would echo your statement of wanting to have multiple windows open. But when your company's IT people clamp down on internal connection speeds so that it feels like a 56k modem, you generally make do :)
I have a windows host machine, on which no work gets done. I either have to RDP or VNC into a tip-in server (don't ask me why), which then ssh-es into a Linux VM. That's where the work happens
@CodyGray It's for security purposes. Basically it helps shield the corporate network from an accidental "oopsie" from people working on lab machinery. The jump server acts as a very-tightly-locked-down and heavily-monitored machine whose sole purpose is to allow corporate machines to connect to the workstations
It was a system that was put into place by someone who is/was overly paranoid, and is generally regarded as a mistake by everyone else
It's one of the hoops you have to jump through (apparently) to have your lab certified to work on secret stuff
The lab machines have no access to the internet and are considered "safe", even though you can just download arbitrary things onto your machine and sftp it onto the VM...
This is not the case on the "real part" of the project I'm working on, but as I'm not properly cleared yet I'm working on "outside" machines. "Inside" machines have a real airgap, and you get stuff in by CD or hard copy
There’s also the very fundamental problem of a security infrastructure failing to consider some minimal practicality/usability. If it’s too difficult for devs to use to get work done, they’ll find workarounds, thus subverting any security that might have been gained.
Oh definitely. It was the worst when I was working on a project that involved a backend database, and I was given the bare minimum permissions on that database...that no one else touched, it would never be used on anything, and was just for my testing and dev purposes. I asked for all perms, and would instead be given very specific perms for that exact scenario. Well turns out my user was in the sudoers group so I, uh, "worked around" the issue
Getting stuff in by CD or hard copy (or flash drive) also makes very little sense to me as a security protocol. The only thing that’s stopping is the chick on NCIS from hacking into your system live over the Internet. While holding her laptop with her other hand. It’s not preventing infection with malware, disclosure of sensitive information, or anything else that actually matters.
@Das_Geek Yeah, that'd be hella frustrating. I'm assuming they were saying "you should only need these permissions for the production env, so you only get the same ones for test"?
It's not like there aren't reviews and approvals and virus scans of everything. Part of this hassle is to make sure we don't have to go through the even bigger hassle of getting software approved...takes months at least
@Machavity heh, reminds me of my days as a teenager "hey I need to be able to see this admin page on the phpBB forum" "OK kewl, I just set the permissions to 777 in FileZilla"
3rd-party code requires review, internal approval, virus scanning. 3rd-party software requires approval from the customer...which takes eons. So it's less of a hassle to spend hours looking through code and testing and hand-typing modifications than it would be to bring an installer in
@TylerH I also work on a lot of government, military, and aerospace contracts… The SE model of “Is it Friday? Did the build complete? Ship it!” doesn’t quite apply.
One of the projects I'm working on is an interal auditing tool that will (apparently) shave multiple hours off the code review process and turn three days of meetings into one
Not sure how excited I am to get cleared and move into that process....
well, I've hit stackoverflow.com thousands of times :-D
I guess I can't add SQL SelectParameters and a SQL SelectCommand statement for a SQL DataSource to a listbox using that SQL DataSource in the _OnDataBound call attached to said listbox...
@Scratte I have left comments saying to open an issue on github many times. When it's a bug or a feature request, that's not a bad idea. And, at least I try not to be rude :D Actually, I have an answer that recommends posting to github, but that's not the only thing in my answer AFAIR ;)
Probably those who made an account at whatever convention SO was at then never touched it again
Like that free mini-frisbee you got once at a job fair from a company you can't quite remember the name of, and the frisbee lettering is faded so you can't tell anymore
@Scratte no it's not. But I have posted comments like that. As @Das_Geek said, assume good intentions (it's harder to think otherwise here) and flag as NAA
I was reading Magic Editor script and it seems that it has the grave accent as code blocks in its placeholders. But still it messes with codes between multiple(3) grave accents (removing multiple ` , adding spaces before the code and only keeping one of the `). Is that a bug, or I am missing something?
@Dharman I voted as Unclear. Just didn't think closing two question as the dupe of the same post is constructive. Maybe OP will read the link and would clarify why the question is different from the dupe-target.
@M-- It's a rabbit hole of NAAs. Normally I would say keep it, but this type of question seems to be attracting poor quality answer it seems. Just take a look at the linked questions. I think we should close as too-broad.
There are two comments on the Question. The last two. I can't really make heads or tails of them. I don't see an Image and the phrasing of the last message is very confusing to me. Should I do anything about that?