Has anyone else noticed that the green "Reputation Bubble" (the pop-up) has gone? (As also today's gain in the reputation drop-down menu.) My top-bar score has been correctly updated, and the big green bubble on my home page shows the score since my last look at the rep. tab, however.
... seems to have happened around midnight, but I didn't get any rep. for much of yesterday, so it could be longer.
@Scratte Negative rep. change has never shown (at least, since I've been around). However, if you get a downvote, when you later get an upvote you'll see a "+8" green bubble (rather than "+10").
@AdrianMole I've noticed those :) But since I don't answer Questions anymore my rep is declining. The last bubble was from your approved edit a few days ago.
I could never do 40. I often read the post, then I skip it. Unless it's obvious to me that I have no clue.. but it get's me about three review per history page. The rest is Skip.
@AndrasDeak But nobody in their right mind would refresh my profile to see when I make a suggested edit :) The edit from a few days ago was approved by Adrian 5 min. after I submitted it. @AdrianMole Are you out of your mind? :D
I don't think the FP reviews need that much testing. If an answer is coherent and not one of the standard "Me too," "Thanks," spam or Link-Only, then most folks will (probably) give it "No action needed."
@AndrasDeak What are you trying to convince us of?
@AdrianMole Yes, they do.. while I'm checking up on it! And finding out that it doesn't work. Which leaves me with commenting on the post after it's been deemed "No actions needed".
@AdrianMole Those I find are also marked as "No actions needed" :(
@AdrianMole It is a reason to comment or downvote. And it's the responsibility of the reviewer to do that. Which is why I'm not too fond of finding out that someone didn't bother to check.
Commenting - I agree; down-voting while in a review, I don't agree (for FP). The general community can handle down-voting for bad answers (that are, nonetheless, answers).
@AdrianMole And if I return to the bad answer a few days later, the only downvote on it is mine. So the community do not see them. Besides, it's more the reviewers responsibility than someone just stopping by a post.
Also, I'm not sure the up- and down-votes made during a review actually show in your review history (even for moderators), so who's gonna know whether I/you/whoever did so?
I don't.. I check :) The other day I did have a somewhat sad experience. I came upon a post that caught my interest, so I read the entire thread. Then I read the review-answer, and I checked it, and it was wrong. Not badly, but wrong. So I made my comment.. and 30 min. later it was gone :(
OK, I see what you mean. In itself, that first line would still be more of a comment than an answer, unless it could be edited into shape with some formatting and/or more detail.
I found a couple of meta posts again attacking curators, by calling them "over zealous" (best case), or even "an inbred circle". Is this all fine, because it's meta, or should I flag such posts, either as rude or for mod attention because of the subtlety, just edit it out, or not do anything about it?
@Adriaan If it is really persistent from one user, flag as custom and explain. But otherwise I have found raising flags on Meta to be a waste of time
Room Q - is this on-topic? It looks rather brief and poorly researched, but it seems to have attracted a good answer: stackoverflow.com/questions/60963066/…
@halfer Currently I'd say it Needs More Focus, but if you edited the post to just say "Does Angular come with a templating engine by default? If so, how do I use it for a simple substitution?" I think it's on-topic
full disclosure: I've never used a templating engine or Angular
I have 4 posts from the same user that's looking like spam. Do I 1. post them here and get the community to flag them or 2. just raise a moderator flag?
@halfer It's not a "comment is enough"-situation in my opinion. Which I will do with a case of just 2 posts. They're answering the same types of Questions (different technology) but putting the same link to some API as a solution to all of them.
@RyanM OK. I was thinking it might be. I'll just flag them then.
@RyanM Though I have seem these types of flags here in SOCVR with just linking to one of the answers.
@Scratte Ah, if the posts are identical then you can flag them all as "identical solutions to multiple questions". That is disallowed too, and a mod is liable to prune some of them (ideally all minus one).
Okay so I dug it up out of curiosity (I won't act on it to avoid the appearance of user targeting). I think it's an honest attempt at answering a bunch of questions that are duplicates of each other.
and not realizing that they should be flagging the questions as duplicates and answering once
@Scratte In that case, a spam flag may not fit, but I would certainly try to discourage boilerplate material - that is an enemy of quality
I once found a high-rep user who pasted a multi-line begging message into the footer of every question they posted - think there was around 250 of the blighters!
@Scratte No, it was a rule-off, then How would one go about and debug this further? \n\n I'm opening to any suggestions at this moment. \n\n Any hints / suggestions / helps on this be will be much appreciated! I've another 100+ of those to remove :-(
@halfer that's what I thought. So I guess that leaves the "edit" option, but that'll most likely result in a rollback war, flaring and me painting a target on my back.
@Scratte Heh! Serial editing needs to be done carefully - there are mixed opinions about it on Meta. But I think I would venture to say that mods have been cautiously OK with it, as long as the edits are good. And of course one needs to back off a specific user if it causes problems with moderation generally.
But yes, it can work - some writers are particularly stubborn with adding rubbish, insisting on a liberty to their own "personal style".
@Adriaan I don't mind being associated with DVs, for the most part. The worst that someone can do is moan about it, and if someone contacts me seeking feedback, I will sometimes give it.
@halfer I don't mind downvotes much. I do mind those who moan about "us curators" abusing the system downvoting for incorrect, personal reasons, i.e. abusing the systems themselves.
I have found that most low-rep users don't care about it too much, or they do a couple of rollbacks and give up. However a very small number of people kick up an extraordinary fuss.
There is a 30k user who was making an absolute racket about being allowed to add religious proselytisation into his posts, and he was nothing if not committed. I agreed with mods to stop editing his material in the end, as I edited too many in one go.
@SamuelLiew It looks good to me. It's asking about a single problem and it is looking for factual answers explaining the usage of this given syntax. Maybe it could use some editing, but in general it looks OK to me.
@SamuelLiew I don't see it as too broad, because the begin-end may be required for the statement to work. Also, there could be a perfectly good technical reason to split the statement up.
@Dharman I meant to say that without the edit to those posts, they may warrant a downvote. Removing the reason for the downvote, would in my opinion be a good thing, even when done by the same user to posts by another user. If I write "Vote for <candidate>" during an election on all my posts, I'd imagine I'd get a lot of emotional voting.
@Scratte Maybe, but we should try to avoid emotional voting. If there's inappropriate content in the post, then it is our responsibility to remove it by editing. Vote only based on the usefulness/correctness of the post.
I do not understand the purpose of VLQ on questions. Every time I raise one it gets declined. I raised one today on this: stackoverflow.com/questions/61026628/…
This is pure gibberish in my opinion, and casting downvotes, close votes and delete votes is a complete waste of time. Why can't mods simply handle a VLQ flag on this and delete it?
@Dharman IIRC VLQ flags on questions have to be handled by mods directly. However, mods are exeption handlers, for things the community can't take care of. In this case, three simple "Needs clarity" votes will take care of it. What the purpose of VLQ flags on questions is I wouldn't know though
I have a different question though: What do to with pictures of code in answers? Are they ok or do they NAA? Like this one It has several problems, but one is code in an image..
@Scratte In this case you can simply transcribe. However, in most cases you should flag as NAA. An image is not an answer unless you have to show visual aid to support your answer.
If you cast a VLQ/NAA flag on that answer you showed us it will be marked as helpful, because it is essentially thanks-answer, not because it contains the image.
@DavidBuck In such cases I include a comment with this link...More times than not the poster will transcribe his code - if he doesn't he really didn't want an answer...
@dbc We sort of had this discussion earlier today :) I'd say, it's not the image that's the problem, because it's just a copy of the code in the question. At best it's a comment saying "There's no error in your code. I ran it".
@dbc I flagged this earlier today as NAA. I'd leave another comment on "your" answer saying that the post is really a comment about the code in question working.
@dbc Now it's a slightly different situation. While I still think it's a comment, the moderator handling the flag may not agree. The answer is however preventing the Question asker to improve on their post, because it they do, they'll invalidate this answer.
Does it describe the contents of the questions to which it is applied? and is it unambiguous?
Nope. Meta, meta, meta.
Is the concept described even on-topic for the site?
Stack Overflow is about programming, so I guess? But really, competitive programming should go on Code Golf, if anywher...
@rene Hm, I think that I must have WIFE V4.0. Its source code is hidden and unmodifiable. Shoot, even its API is completely undocumented and encrypted. Forget decompilation
@Makyen Since the tag has so few questions, we can put it on Meta and then burn it ourselves after it's been up for a few days (assuming no serious objections), right?
@rene That's a very good name for what it is :) But I've so far found it to be "SQL ANSI-92" or "SQL-92" versus "SQL ANSI-89" or "SQL-89", but I'm sure I've seen other names used for those. Maybe just new and old :D
@Machavity Thanks :) I didn't really express what I was searching for very clearly, sorry.
@Dharman I don't feel strongly enough about it to persuade anyone to change their mind, but there isn't anything risky - as far as I can tell - with an 11-year old asking a programming question in public. But imposing US law on the rest of the world is a cultural imperialism I'm wary of.