@S.S.Anne When you do ask why, maybe rather than saying something like “Downvoters, can you explain why you downvoted this?” or whatever, it’s better to just ask something like *“What can I do to improve question?” or “Do this question have problems that I should fix?” That way you’re (re)focusing on the question rather than on the downvotes or downvoters.
…And that way you’re asking not just the downvoters, but instead inviting further help with the question from everybody; asked that way, anybody who might be inclined to help you improve the question will free free to chime in.
@rene this version of a Carole King classic has been one of my favourites recently though - especially like the rest of the folks that come in and apparently do a few bits unscripted...
@Scratte well, it doesn't seem overly useful to me. The other answers explain better how to deal with it. Having an answer to link to a specific version is kind of ... useless ... but I'm not an Android Dev so maybe they find it an awesome answer.
It wouldn't be the first time Android "amazes" me ....
@Dharman Only a mod or the Community user can do so. The 15k protection privilege requires that the post is >1 day old. If enough of the "me too" answers are deleted, then the Community user will protect it.
@E_net4isunsafe Indeed, most likely these are the "friends / colleagues" situations that constitute a loose or informal voting ring. "Hey coworker, I have this problem" "Post about it on Stack Overflow and I'll vote it up so it gets attention"
@Scratte I'm inclined to say yes, but a very poor one. It boils down to "Use this function/method/thingy" which is an answer. A good answer, however, would explain how to use it in the answer itself, not behind a link.
@DavidBuck Long story short. I'm not using any general metrics on the site. I was going for the "gold flagger" of Samuel's userscript. It has a very low tolerance for declined/total ratio. Next is the "elite flagger" with a little green medal. My stats are currently looking like this
@Scratte You have to be very clear, very early on in your flagging career to hit that. I had a few hits and misses before learning that you have to grit your teeth and ignore/downvote some terrible answers as flagging will get declined. If the target is < 1 declined per 1000 helpful, I need to successfully flag another 18000 posts.
I'm more concerned about my 'aged away' flags - currently 16% - as that represents time I've thrown away.
@DavidBuck I feel I did my bit when I flagged a post for closure. I don't go about in the review queue anymore, so I just flag the Question when I find them when I'm hunting NAAs. But I was lucky I suppose. Every single of my declined flags made me wonder enough to go hunting on meta and ask about it here. I was a 5 before I realized that my reason for living was the elite flagger status that no one other than a few moderators can see :D
But if you decide to go for it.. aged away counts on the total :)
@Scratte We can't close bountied questions. If you feel a bountied question should be closed, then you should raise a custom mod-flag and explain that the bounty should be removed and the question closed.
Well.. it's sort of debatable if it's an MCVE. No full one could be made. But by the looks of it, I doubt anyone will answer it. Apart from the one that's already there.
How many time can you roll back a vandalised question? See stackoverflow.com/questions/61528279/500-requesterror . It has been vandalised 3 times and finally closed. Both @Makyen and @Machavity have acted upon it.
@TylerH Yeah, I resorted to JavaScript. There really wasn't a way around it for what I wanted. Although, for the current case, you could key off of the value of the <input>.
@Makyen I meant it doesn't have one. It looks like it does, but there's noway to not make changes to almost everything in order for me to run it on my own system.
@Scratte If it is a debugging question and doesn't have a MCVE, then it should be closed until such time as there's enough to be able to duplicate the problem, or at least get it past the point where people have to guess at what the problem is.
Believe it or not, yes, we do have a piano tag, which has the following very off-topic description:
The piano (an abbreviation of pianoforte) is a musical instrument played using a keyboard.
This clearly has nothing whatsoever to do with programming.
While a lot of the questions that use t...
@Scratte It's ok. You don't need to tell me. I appreciate if you want to help me flag. I will scroll through them after work maybe. The worst are auto-flagged anyway.
I've always only looked at the ones with a score lower than 6. The ones that weren't autoflagged. I noticed that lots of those are answers that the queues will not see.
@zero298 Definitely not moderator -- unless there's a mass post by the same user, there's no need for moderator intervention here. Mod flags are intended for things that can't be handled by community moderation.
@zero298 spam or rude/abusive. Those are what we call the "nuke" flags as they delete the post and hit the OP with a rep penalty and an IP ban if they do it enough. This lets us basically stop someone without having to get the moderators involved.
But, if you flagged something like that for moderator attention, we'd just turn around and raise a red flag on it, so you might as well just go ahead and do that yourself.
How does a question even get that many duplicates attached? Is it just a combination of flaggers and close voters? (re: stackoverflow.com/q/61591355/2943403)
@RyanM When I identify that a question is "Mega-duplicate" I drive home the message by finding lots of duplicates where the solution could have been found if the OP would have bothered to research. (All of the duplicates are from me; I kept appending pages to the list; there is a max of 5.)
@RyanM No, some gold-badge users put up to 5 duplicates to show that this question already has enough duplicates. Sometimes they just put 5 unrelated posts, but that shouldn't be done in general.
There is no harm is showing the OP multiple existing pages where solutions can be found. Sometimes the collection of duplicates are a bunch of 95% correct answers, so by aggregate the solution for the snowflake case can be derived.
If a full answer to a post needs linking to multiple other posts then it means that the question is not a duplicate or the duplicate targets are not good enough.
@Scratte there is a minimum rep for the privilege, but I think it should be lowered because sometimes someone closes with a weak duplicate and another stronger duplicate should be provided instead of reopening then reclosing.
@Dharman I show my generosity and willingness to research by hunting for multiple duplicates. This often leads me to closing whole collections of duplicates and/or finding old pearls that need new answers. I rarely answer new php questions because 90% of them are duplicates.
@mickmackusa I would say most need to be closed and deleted, but closing most as duplicates is not so good either. I don't think it causes harm other than it is more difficult to delete it later on.
I think a lot of new questions deserve to be closed as off-topic or unclear.
Duplicates are sometimes good, because they give a new take on the same problem. Even answering duplicates in rare situations (<0.1%) comes with the benefit of a fresh solution
I have delete votes on a lot of duplicates and I indent to delete even more, but I focus primarily on the ones which cause harm, suggest worse solutions or are bad quality in general.
There are thousands of such duplicates. I really don't mind if someone answers the same question again, but providing a good, top-notch answer.
@Scratte Adding more than one duplicate target is not very useful most of the time, so normal users do not need it, but it would be nice if we could vote to change the target.
hahah. This one is funny. stackoverflow.com/q/61602887/1839439 Not only it is a self-duplicate of a one posted an hour ago it also has a nice message at the end.
If I want to answer a new question which is a duplicate of an old answer BUT the old page's answers do not offer the advice that I would recommend. I take what I believe is the best course of action... Close the new page with the old page, then post my advice (which I feel has unique value) on the old page. I am a predominantly necro-poster now because I don't need points for privileges anymore. From yesterday: stackoverflow.com/a/61586613/2943403
@RyanM I didn't downvote before ending the review, so now a flag has been raised for mods. If I were to downvote it back to 0 it would probably be removed.
@RyanM The score is >0, so it requires moderator review. See: the answer to: "How does the LQRQ work?" for a bit more information, although it's a bit dated.
Fair enough. It was intended as a critique of the system - I'm not claiming this user has done anything wrong or asking for any action to be taken against them (on the contrary: the user's posts are actually all fine in my book). Nonetheless, I've removed the message out of a desire not to give that appearance.
Critiquing the system is fine, as long as we're not singling out users, or their posts as an example of a user. In this case, the issue was mostly that there were posts given as representative of the user, rather than representative of content.
To repost my complaint without any ties to specific identifiable users: there exists a user with >30k reputation, 8 posts total, and only one post with 10 or more points. The question is good and has surely helped a great many people, and should be rewarded accordingly, but rewarding a user with full trusted-user privileges for asking a single question just makes no sense.