Upvotes on an answer doesn't make the an exact duplicate question any less of an exact duplicate question. Alive to Die has a long history of answering questions that he knows are basic duplicates.
@mickmackusa That has 62k views, which implies that search result are finding it, rather than the duplicates which you used to close it 2 days ago. It does not appear that the duplicates have been edited recently so that they will be found with the same searches that people are finding this with.
@mickmackusa Maybe the ones you feel are more comprehensive should be edited to make them more likely to match searches which will find the post you want to delete.
@mickmackusa That's a good question. I'm not a SME, so it's not easy for me to pick out what users might be searching for. It's quite possible that users are searching for various function names, but it could also be other things. In at least one instance, I've resorted to just putting a list of potential matches in a question. The question where I did that had an answer that covered the general case of an error, which might be seen as a result of calling multiple different methods.
@mickmackusa It needs 8 votes to be deleted because it is highly upvoted. I do not see what is wrong with this question. I don't know why it got closed now or why it should be deleted. Looks like useful content to me.
I am struggleing to see how anyone who understands php cannot see how this is an exact duplicate question that should have been closed and removed years ago -- before it had the chance to receive so many upvotes.
I would even dare to say that deleting such questions is vandalism. We should only delete content if it brings a positive outcome. I do not see what we gain by deleting this question. There's not a single downvote on any answer and the question has only 2 downvotes. It has a lot of views, too. Keeping this question around will not deteriorate the site.
There is absolutely nothing lost by removing this page.
nothing.
What is the cost of keeping redundant pages? Thorough researchers (such as myself) waste time. They will need to read two full pages instead of just one to determine that they have all of the wisdom on offer.
@mickmackusa Maybe if you were to delete it back then it would be better. Now it has proven that it attracts traffic and people find the answers useful. We could say that if we delete 90% of questions on Stack Overflow nothing will be lost. We should rather focus on deleting harmful content of very low quality. There's plenty of really really bad PHP posts. Before we get to deciding on the faith of popular question we should delete all the really bad ones.
I am a self-taught / StackOverflow-taught develop. I've learned most of what I know about development from this community. I "waste" a lot of time researching when I find repeated pages/questions/answers. We can help researchers to waste less time by removing redundant content.
If the answers provide good solutions then why do you consider that to be time wasted? You found a solution. Maybe not the one you were looking for, but it is still a solution.
I don't know that I want a moderator to port the answers from a question that is 5 years later to the earlier page -- this will only create page bloat on the earlier page because the suggestions are the same.
I feel your pain. I learned how to code from Stack Overflow, too. The only reason why I started to participate is that I wanted to remove the harmful stuff that was showing up instead of the good content. There is so much bad advice on Stack Overflow. Often wrong solutions get upvotes and I do not want other people to learn the bad practices as I have learned.
I fight bad coding practices in PHP rigorously. I feel that when we focus on good content and we ignore the obviously bad posts, then we really waste our efforts.
I am sure you know that I am not ignoring bad posts. I am scrutinizing all content on this site. Every micro-improvement to Stack Overflow is a win as far as I am concerned. If we all help a little bit, things will get better.
I envy your gold badge because you have the power to remove very low quality posts singlehandedly. I can't even ask for closing here because we are not allowed to ask for closing old questions. I have a list of hundreds questions that should really be closed, but even if I voted I would still need to find two more people to get them closed. There's over a thousand duplicates for stackoverflow.com/questions/2973202/…
>1000 for an API which was removed from PHP few years ago. Who needs that?
I won't mention the duplicates for Undefined variable.
It greatly irritates me that you don't have your gold badge yet @Dharman You are an exact case where Stack Overflow is withholding privileges from someone who could be a more profound contributor. I had to wait a long time for my gold badge because I don't play the FGITW game.
@EJoshuaS-ReinstateMonica Roll it back. Editing to invalidate answers isn't permitted. They need to ask a new question. OTOH, there are times when people answer where the question can have multiple possible interpretations. Adjudicating that situation becomes significantly more complex.
I'd note, however, that "multiple possible interpretations" doesn't mean the OP just realizing that "the questions doesn't say what I meant/really needed to know". If the clear interpretation of the original question is different than the question the OP intended to ask, then the OP needs to ask a new question, not change the current one.
@Scratte Fortunately, not nearly that bad. It takes far less effort to move completed requests from here to the Graveyard than it does to compost and post an answer (even one that's just a quick FGITW answer).
@Makyen I envy those that can do the FGITW Answers. They must have good memories. I always have to compile and check and reread and fix grammatical errors.. my brain needs an upgrade :D
@Scratte I'd expect that the significant majority of FGITW answers are posted without having been checked to see if they are functional or correct, but with just an assumption that what was written is good. What you describe is a different level of care than I believe most FGITW answer get.
@Makyen don't underestimate hoe much distance my hand has to move and the energy my finger requires to make those clicks. Let alone the brain-power to judge if that looks about right to be moved. It is an almost unbearable responsibility ...
@Makyen There is the care factor sure, but I think there's certainly other factors. It's the unfairness of life in general :) Some people just have really good memories. They'll have read some man page 3 years ago and they still remember the options. They're uniquely qualified to write good FGITW Answers that never needs even an edit.
@Shree only on actual closed and not deleted questions. See the posthistory table, rows with posthistorytypeid = 10, the Text field will have the JSON with the close voters.
@rene Yeah, I probably should put the "move" button down to the bottom right, so you don't have to move the mouse alllll the way to the top-left of the popup. :) Admittedly, it does take some effort to double-check that all the messages are ones that should be moved, but it's gotten fairly rare where it's picking up something that shouldn't be moved. [There is an outstanding change I should push regarding not considering comment-locked questions as something users can't deal with.]
Thanks. I'm glad we're there too. While there are always additional things I'd like it to do, that script is at the stage where it's good enough for it's primary role the vast majority of the time.
@Scratte There are other factors. Yes, a part of it is going to be how good a person's memory is, but a large part is just going to be experience (i.e. number of years programming in that language, and/or experience giving quick answers in the SO format, etc.).
@Makyen Yes, I agree, but only to an extent. I've done more than enough pl/sql programming to have it all in memory and yet, it's not :) Details needs to be sorted by trying it out. I think this is also one of the reasons some people fail certifications.
@Scratte Another time, please include the link. If you don't include it, we're forced to ask for it, rather than just doing the edit.
@Scratte Note that this is something you could do yourself. You just need to be explicit in your edit comment that you are copying content from the OP's non-answer (link) into the question.
@Makyen Yes, I know. I was afraid someone would just flag the answer as NAA. While it very well serves it's purpose once the content is edited from the question into the answer: stackoverflow.com/questions/61838611/…
@Makyen It's the other way around. Meaning I'd have to do two edits and very likely be rejected on both.
@Scratte Not the way that I normally hear the flag described, but that doesn't mean much, as it would be easy to imprecisely describe what the requirements are for the flag to be raised.
Can someone please confirm this answer is the standard procedure for reviewers on the LQP queue? (If there's a more canonical or accurate post please share.)
@pkamb That you have the same question is not really a good reason to reopen the question. Does it need more answers before the question itself is improved?
I don't know if answers should be added before/after the question is improved. But yes it needs more answers. The remainder(dividingBy: function was added to Swift several years after that question was closed.
@pkamb Prior to your edits, and the others resulting from the discussion here, when was the last activity on that post? Seems too old to be bringing here, without some recent activity.
@bad_coder That answer is mostly good. However, the section about code-only answers is trying to be too nuanced. Code-only answers that might be an answer to the question should not be deleted through the LQP queue. If it's obvious the code-only answer can't be an attempt to answer the question, then it shouldn't be deleted through the LQP review process.
OTOH, it's fine to leave a comment on such answers politely asking for the user to add some explanation and noting that answers with an explanation tend to be better received (i.e. get more upvotes).
The basic criteria for the LQP queue is that answers which don't attempt to answer the question, or which give no actual answer (e.g. link-only answers), should be deleted through the LQP queue.
@MikeM. (cc @pkamb) Our requirement for recent activity applies only to cv-pls requests. The reason for that restriction is to control the volume of cv-pls requests which we get here in SOCVR, so that we are not overwhelmed by cv-pls requests. It doesn't apply to other types of requests, because we don't appear to routinely reach the limit of other requests which the room can handle.
@Makyen The last sentence here should have read "If it's obvious the code-only answer can't be an attempt to answer the question, then it should be deleted through the LQP review process." (cc: @bad_coder)
@Makyen thanks. I saved your "summary" to file for easy revision. I had that impression from "Late Answers" queue. But LQP adds more responsibility since you're objectively voting towards deletion, or not. (In conclusion, I'll try to understand if the "code only answers" actually try to answer the problem or if the content is completely besides the point.
@MikeM. np. It's easy/common for that confusion to arise, particularly given that cv-pls requests are, by a considerable margin, the majority of the requests we see.
@bad_coder np. Yeah, it can be confusing. It doesn't help that there are a considerable number of answers that get deleted through the LQP queue that "shouldn't" be deleted that way. Mostly, what I've described is how moderators will evaluate the review/post if it goes to them. A large number of people treat reviews in the LQP queue as a way to delete marginal content, not just very low quality and NAA posts.
It's not intended to be that way. The LQP queue is intended to be deleting answers that fit the strict definition of Very Low Quality or Not An Answer. But, that's not how a large percentage of people treat the LQP reviews. The trouble is that moderators sometimes go through such reviews and issue review bans. It hasn't appeared that it's been a focus of moderators for a while, but it has happened in the past.
Personally, I find that a significant quantity of LQP reviews should get "Looks OK". For a good number of those, I'd even be fine with using a delete-vote on them from outside the LQP queue, if they qualify by having a score of <= -1.
I'm not understanding the hesitation on that reopen vote. Thoughts? Perfectly valid question now, if it wasn't before. And the views/votes prove it has been useful, even closed.
@Scratte I'd say low quality, but not very low quality and both are just a bit above NAA (not by a lot). Admittedly, I'm not a SME, so I'm assuming some context.
Was there some update today? Seems from a few hours ago pages are more static. An answer used to just go very transparent if I had the page opened in a tab. Now it seems like nothing happened. If I try to interact with the answer after it's been removed, I just get a notice that it's really gone.
Missed a sentence there: ..if I had the page opened in a tab, when the answer is removed.
@Scratte SE's WebSocket has been experiencing issues. It's something I've been looking into for SmokeDetector, because it's been causing SD to not be scanning for up to several hours. The error is that the WebSocket, which is how pages get all the dynamic change notifications, will connect, but never deliver anything other than SE's "heartbeat" messages, which are used to determine if the link is active. In my testing, I experienced that connections could fail up to a 15.5% of the time.
Another weird thing is that the question on meta isn't deleted, but has been locked so it can't be deleted, while the answer posted on meta is unlocked
The new answer could've stopped re-deletion, but I don't remember how that works
Then maybe it should've been closed as too broad? But it also doesn't fit because the question is clear and has a simple answer. What would be if I posted the docker file in an answer?
I've seen some people say that Docker questions should be asked on Server Fault, but there is a big overlap with programming, so I tend to be OK with them on SO (probably also since I've asked a few of them!)
Docker is a framework that creates and runs virtualized containers. A dockerfile defines what a specific container is. Asking about problems with dockerfile is probably on-topic, but requesting entire dockerfiles is software recs in this context, but can also be a too broad "gimme teh codez"
(that last part assumes it's on-topic as a piece of software commonly used by programmers, which it is. I vaguely remember docker being in a bit of a grey area in general though)
When I look at my backlog of mysqli questions I have to clean up I feel powerless. Even with the amazing help from this room I think I am years away from cleaning it up.
Okay, so there are these questions here that qualify for the RemoveAbandonedClosed Roomba, but aren't being deleted because they were migrated from another site (tl;dr it's due to a code optimization based on a not-true assumption).
These questions fall into two categories: questions closed prior to the concept of migration rejection being implemented, and questions closed in June 2019 or later and after the migration stub on the original site had been deleted.
@Dharman You get that when you're over 20 but the queue goes out of the red zone before you hit 40. Seems the "Thank you..." message can only have 20 or 40 as the number.
@Scratte I think the mods have been attacking the queues, in recent days. Yesterday (I think) I noticed one (Sam) have done 82 suggested edit reviews.