@Scratte There is no limit to the number of answers to any question. It's also not unusual to have several answers to a single question upvoted. The only limit to that is that only a single answer can be accepted.
I should say that if I answer a question, and can see more than one approach to solving it, I do so in the same answer even if I have to edit it in afterward. There's no rule against providing multiple answers to the same question though, each with a different solution
@Scratte we occasionally get two instances running in parallel, this time apparently because metasmoke went down briefly. The solution is for someone with adequate privileges to tell one of the instances !!/standby, usually over in Charcoal HQ
I rejected an edit today where someone had swapped out an image URL while inlining it. I had assumed that by replacing the image with their own copy, they could later update it with e.g. spam, undetected. Afterwards, however, this kept nagging at me, which led me to Martin Smith’s guidance.
I’m now convinced my review was a mistake; it seems I.stack.imgur.com images can’t be updated by the user after-the-fact. Can anyone rollback my rejection? I don’t want the well-meaning contributor who proposed the edit to be penalized or feel discouraged because of my unfounded and inappropriate suspicion. (Obviously, I won’t make this mistake again, at least regarding i.stack.imgur.com URLs.)
@JeremyCaney I do not think it's possible to undo a review action. I've had one suggested edit rejected myself and was told that the result is binding. I had to redo the edit with another round of edit review.
In this case it's not possible for the editor to redo it, since the inlining of the image has been done.
@Scratte: Well, shoot, I was worried that might be the case. (And, yes, I ended up inlining the image myself, along with some other edits, as part of an "Reject and Edit".) I just regret that my action could discourage the contributor from proposing edits in the future, and especially as this was only their second suggestion.
@JeremyCaney To be honest. I doubt they would have redone their edit even if you hadn't edited it yourself. Depending on the user, the experience of a rejection is quite varied.
Does this answer to the above cv-pls count as NAA or Spam? It's an advertorial, but it would stand alone without the link, and it does declare the poster's affiliation, but it's obviously not the sort of answer you'd want to attract on an off-topic question.
OK, who would upvote this and why? OP literally just posted more code that should go into the question as an edit. So, it's most definitely "not an answer". Even as an answer, it's not very good, since it's just code.
It's not the first time I've seen something that's clearly not a good post upvoted. Rather quickly after being posted. I suspect a voting ring or a voting bot but I have no way of finding out.
I don't think there are THAT many people who misclick on upvote or otherwise upvote content that shouldn't be upvoted.
@VLAZ I think it's the same as downvotes really. I've seen downvotes on posts that take a lot longer than 1 minute to read, but still getting downvotes as soon as the post goes in
OK, downvotes I get. Sort of. It's easy to DV. Heck, I sometimes I DV after just a glance. I then have 5 minutes to read and amend it if I made the wrong call. Also, some people just DV out of spite I assume. But upvotes within few minutes at most on content that doesn't deserve it smells fishy.
I'm generally cautious to attribute spite to people on Stack Overflow, and I generally try to discourage new users from seeing spite that isn't there. People have mistakenly seen a downvote/edit/closevote and immediately determined that it is motivated by anger/malice etc, but without a mean-minded comment, I think this conjecture is harmful.
In other words, people mostly edit and vote out of care. It's feedback.
Because a lot of times I can guess correctly that the answer is bad or not even addressing the question. Sometimes I am wrong, as I misread something but it it seems obvious the post is wrong, I don't really need an in-depth analysis.
If I'm not confident, then I'll first read then vote.
I mean technically but it's so mild and so hard to prove that it's not worth any additional effort
@JeremyCaney indeed users cannot modify posts uploaded to i.stack.imgur; however, in this case rejection by you was fine; OP should have just put an exclamation mark in front of the existing image code rather than reupload the thing to the same exact domain.
@VLAZ No, a voting ring is trying to engage in reputation fraud. So if I upvote, say, Tyler once a day for a month, that's a voting ring. He's not earning that reputation natually
That's why we explicitly disallow asking for reputation voting in any form
In this case the cognitive dissonance of SO voting comes into play: votes are simultaneously for upvoting useful or correct content, and for whatever reason you deem worthy of your vote.
The only reason we allow the latter is because there's no way to enforce the former without mind control/truth serum
So in this case it's probably this scenario: guy 1 "hey I have a problem I can't solve" guy 2 "post it to stack overflow and I'll upvote it"
slightly less common but still frequent is an unrelated group of people: guy 1 posts highly problematic question to SO. guys 2 thru 5 "I'm also having this problem and I only care about it getting attention and solved, so I'll upvote" et voila
I'd expect the "ring" to be more than two.. so I upvote someone else's post once a day. That someone is in my group (ring). So everyone in the group largely forms an unnatural closed circle of voting on their own stuff.
Slightly related: I'm sometimes worried when I upvote content from the same person just because it's among the top voted content anyway. Say, if I am looking at a lot of questions where JonSkeet posted, then I may naturally upvote his answers. Because they are good. I suspect there is some tolerance for vote fraud when upvoting very popular content but it still makes me feel strange.
Funny, but I think this was discussed before some time back here. I believe there is extra tolerance, yes. I think it was @Makyen that explained that one shouldn't keep track of the number of times one has voted on other users content.
@Scratte If you're voting on content (which is what you should be doing), then there there should be no need to be watching what user wrote what you're voting on.
@MattB. close and reopen votes (unlike up and down) are public, ie any user can see these. That makes fraud possible to find out for any regular user, no moderator nor dev access privileges are needed to get to necessary data. This makes it so much harder to abuse close/reopen voting, any effort one would put into it would hardly be worth it
@MattB. SOCVR isn't a "ring" either. No member is required to vote on things, and we won't kick you out if you don't vote sufficiently on suggested questions
@Machavity also, I think the crucial difference is that the votes from here are (I hope) correct. People aren't voting for non-applicable close reasons.
yw. Note that off-topic and unclear questions are not tp, they are fp. You should vote to close them instead. SmokeDetector is only for things that should be red-flagged (need immediate deletion).
(you also need to be on a privileged list for this room for smokey to listen to you here -- as you can see from the messages above, Rob is not privileged in this room, hence Smokey's message to him when he tried to reply to a report with a classification command)
My first try at that cv-pls got the message "The chat room URL you supplied is invalid". Clicked on cv-pls, get three options "Send request", "SO Close vote reviewers", and "Check for updates". Clicked the middle one. Get a panel with a one entry bullet list for "SO Close vote reviewers", enter a message and click set. Leading to the message "The chat room URL you supplied is invalid". Using Firefox and Tampermonkey.
folks do you by chance know what's up with LQ queue? It is second day in the row that it gives me double limit of reviews, do we experience some kind of a flood of non-answers? I haven't seen double limit for many many months
@gnat I know nothing about it. :D I can only send max 100 posts a day into that queue and recently I have been doing it more consistently. I haven't seen any influx of NAA, on the contrary, I would say this week is pretty quiet. Usually, MP and BR were clearing that queue few times a day. I haven't had many flags handled by MP recently and other mods started to chip in, which makes me think that MP has taken some time off. That alone would explain why the LQP is overloaded.
@Machavity I know how it works, just wondered why it happened that there are unusually many posts in the queue. As I wrote it's been steady on a smaller limit for months and any time I looked at it in the past, queue size was well under 100. And suddenly it gets over 150 for 2 days in the row, making me wonder if I missed something that happened lately
From help center: "Questions asking for homework help must include a summary of the work you've done so far to solve the problem, and a description of the difficulty you are having solving it." ..missing that, would it be "Needs details"?
@Scratte If you were to answer this question would you be able to provide a clear concise answer?
If not, then pick a reason why. If you don't know what problem OP is having then it is needs focus. If they describe the problem, but incoherently or too vaguely then it is Needs details. If they describe the problem, but it needs code or error message then it should be closed as No MCVE.
@Scratte Then it means you can answer it. Why do you want to close it? From my point of view I do not know what difficulty OP is having. Even if I could write this procedure I do not know what part I need to focus on and explain in detail.
At the moment (as far as I know), the extra delete vote per 1,000 rep. is the only thing you can still 'earn' after reaching 25k. A similar sort of thing for close votes would be nice.
... well, I suppose you can still earn specific Gold Hammers.
@Dharman What do you think can be done about this answer that you commented on? Does it warrant a mod-flag for copy-pasting another answer (even though its accredited)?
@TylerH It's not a Question. It's a discussion of how to represent joins as diagrams. How a particular diagram that was used in an answer could be modified to better represent the various joins.
It's basically a discussion about join representations and their limits.
@Scratte If you can't abstract the discussion so it can be held in the SQL room then you probably can't abstract it adequately to be held in any other room, either...
It's a chatroom; it's for chatting. If there are rules, they'll be linked in the room description. Otherwise, if you run afoul of expectations, someone will tell you.
Yeah, before the edit, I would've given NAA. But after, it was an answer, but just not an acceptable one. I guess your original flag got through to the mods' queue.
I reviewed this mysql android-studio question about an hour ago, when it was in Spanish. It's not in spanish anymore, but I have no idea if it still needs details. Any thoughts?
@Dharman No.. it's not autotranslated. The rest of the site is Spanish. But this particular Question started out as Spanish.. but how it's picking up the updated English content. But it's still not attributed.
So lazy, I searched for the question ID in the source code and it's there but it doesn't link to SO. It just links to that dev4app site and the ID is embedded in those links
You did remind me - the other day I found another site that was copying content without appropriate attribution. I didn't have the time to report it then and it kind of slipped my mind afterwards. I'll do it now.
You do that, while I handle the reports :D Also, you have to report each link separately. The form asks for link to copied content and then the original, the search term and explanation, as well.
I suppose it makes sense, I was actually wondering whether to not just dump them into two separate ones anyway but the contact form gave me no choice. I think this is better. It's easier to follow up on those one at a time.
@Scratte IN YOUR FACE! I just got two emails that say "This is an automated message to confirm that we have received your request at our Stack Overflow community support portal.". OK, it also includes "Thank you for your patience, and we'll respond as soon as we can." but I count the start as being different :P
@MattB. I agree (even if it means going against the votes of three 'Big Boys')! I voted to reopen, so it's now at 2:2 between delete and reopen! Sweepstake, anyone?
@MattB. and @AdrianMole I would take such disputes to Meta unless you can get the clarity in this room from the people who closed. You can ping them if they are online.
I don't see any problems with that question, but then again I do not see my name as one of the voters. I am not sure what was the reason to close this question.
I still see that question to be a typo but there are nice answers there, so I won't cast a del-vote. If the rules allowed it, I would've said "ping me if that was deleted; I am willing to cast an undel-vote".
@M-- I don't think it's a true typo. Even if it was a typo, why should it stay closed? Why is this typo question not helpful in your opinion? We do not close all typo questions.
@Makyen Yeah, but it was in the LQP queue. Presumably, before I added my spam flag, and then somebody thought it was OK? But it's no big deal - "disputed" != "declined".
@AdrianMole I assume that the mod who deleted the answer was the one who marked your flag as disputed. Only mods can handle spam flags. LQP has no impact here.
@AdrianMole It's possible there's an edge case in there where the post exiting the review queue disputes all non-custom mod-flags, or even all of them, but it's not supposed to happen that way, as far as I know. Only you (or a mod) can determine if your flag being disputed happened at the same time as the post exiting the queue, and wasn't at the same time the moderator delete the post.
@Makyen Alrighty. I was just curious about the rules. So... let's say this one gets deleted. Can someone ask for undel-vote here, or that would fall under: "we do not engage in disputes like this. Post on Meta..."
@M-- There's a point at which we should direct it over to meta. If there really is a disagreement in the room as to what the status of the question should be, which isn't easily resolved through a bit of discussion, then, yes, it should be taken to Meta and all requests moved to /dev/null.
It's not a useful question, and it asks about undefined behavior, along with other things, like the implementation-defined ordering of local variables. The OP also describes their code incorrectly -- there's not five variables, but one allocated five times.
Your spam flag on that answer was "disputed" by a moderator. VLQ and NAA flags from other users were automatically marked helpful when the mod deleted the answer.
@AdrianMole Never seen a spam flag disputed? Yeah, mods will do that sometimes if they understand why you flagged the post and agree it needs to be deleted, but don't think that the spam penalty is appropriate.
In the case of that answer, it looks like the YouTube link was probably a legitimate attempt to answer, so not really spam, just not appropriate for our format.
@CodyGray As you once told me: "Keep up" (Revenge :D). Two discussions are happening here at the same time. One about whether to close, delete, or reopen a question. The other about the disputed flag (which you addressed). Look at my link again, if you may. Your opinion is definitely appreciated.
@M-- Agreed, I am not keeping up. I just checked in on the room briefly (didn't read the whole transcript), but noticed that someone had said something about "mod".
I was just looking at that other question. Honestly not sure I see the problem. I don't understand the closure, and I definitely don't understand the desire to delete.
@M-- @MattB. @S.S.Anne I've read back over the transcript (I'd previously been concentrating on the other discussion). We are quite close to the point where the requests should be moved and further requests for action move to Meta. However, it looks like the discussion is still productive.
Maybe find a duplicate target explaining why pointers cannot be printed with %u. Or include this in an answer. Then, explain that optimizing compilers can do a real number on the code, justified by the "as-if" rule in the standard. It's a fairly simple question, and a fairly simple answer. Don't really understand all of the discussion.