@AdrianMole is this answerable now? Is the answer not "your compiler is old"? And OP is claiming in comments that it still doesn't compile. Is it not no repro?
@AndrasDeak I voted to reopen because the OP had addressed the points raised in the comments, and which were the given close reason. But I agree that it could now be closed again, but for a different reason - as stated by the OP in the comments.
Is this NAA? I mean it is an answer, but the question was about memory management, but the answer seems to be about memory management in humans, not computers...
@JohnDvorak I've generally been of the opinion that more restrictive is better. Having it be more restrictive makes it less likely that the substitutions will be activated when not intended. IMO, it's better to have their use potentially introduce some additional spaces in the resulting message, than to have them used in more places where it's unexpected.
I'm willing to consider changes to the implementation, but there's a mix of things to balance. I'm not sure if there's a good solution.
I've seen smokey post this Link at end of answer a couple of times regarding links to regex101.com. Not sure how smokey works, but is there a list of sites to ignore regarding external links?
@DavidBuck Yes, there are a couple/few such lists in SD/MS. regex101.com is on one of them. So far, implementing exclusion of the sites on those lists has only been done on a couple/few detection reasons. Doing a more general, and thorough, implementation is definitely on the list of things to do. It's not too difficult, but it's overall impact wrt. the possibility of not detecting some actual TP posts needs to be evaluated.
Presumably it should be replaced with two different tags, one for each use-case?
something like [eris-discord] and [eris-blockchain]?
or...[eris-contracts]?
and do I have to actually write a meta post or can I just split the tag in half myself? it's 13 questions and extremely obvious which are which - 5 are the discord library, 7 are the blockchain platform, and 1 is a typo of "esri"
okay, now it's 12 questions. I fixed the typo one.
@Dharman hmmmm that's not the worst one I've seen... a lot of them are about character counting, and someone could be an expert in that, what with all the multi-byte and/or multi-codepoint characters...
@RyanM When I said it's an implementation detail I literally mean it: it depends on how the language/framework/etc. counts them. So, no one can expert on it, because it's experience in one language would not be applicable for other languages.
Also, some languages (like sql) count it differently depending on configuration :D
Doesn't the fact that the oldest occurrence of a tag is 10 years ago and in that time it's accrued 6 posts a year on average, has zero watchers and no-one thought it worth writing a tag wiki suggest that it's not particularly useful?
I should also say that it's not a great tag, so I don't feel super strongly. My basic opinion is that it's not bad enough to be worth bothering to remove.
@E_net4isdownhausted That's why I held back from flagging. Just wondered if there was any moral support to be found here to risk a flag, but probably not worth it. I had an NAA declined on a link only answer the other day so don't want to risk my 'declined average'
The last two NAAs I had declined read "A security update may have caused this. See this (YouTube video)" and "Maybe I guess you need thing on('foreignStateChange')" I'm bound to get a few garbage answers declined out of my next 9000 flags, even though I am much more careful to let awful answers, that are still answers, go unflagged.
@DavidBuck I think NAA should be reserved for things that are question updates etc. "A security update may have caused this" is technically an answer. If you are reporting Link Only Answer then use the LQ flag if you can (requires the answer to have been DVed) or a custom flag.
@halfer I'm sure it was a discussion here that persuaded me to switch to flagging Link Only answers as NAA. I must have flagged hundreds successfully that way since then. I get your point about "A security update may have caused this" but on it's own it's a bit of a chocolate teapot as far as answers are concerned.
I'm not really sure that "A security update may have caused this" is an answer at all. The link holds the information to what or how it can be fixed. I mean, I could potentially open up any question and just write "There's an issue with an assignment of a variable somewhere. See (youtube link)"
As for making requests for a burnination here in SOCVR, we require that there's an MSO post that follows the burnination process. Basically, we don't want there to be a perception that SOCVR is a place where tags are destroyed without visibility on MSO. So, while you can ask for input/guidance and/or for agreement from a trusted community member, please don't organize an effort to do the editing.
@Scratte I really don't think that "the gold" should be something one strives for, at least not given it's current definition. From what I've seen, the cumulative error rate moderators have in handling flags is more than what's permitted for that criteria. So, while it is obtainable, doing so requires both luck and that you withhold flagging in situations where something really should be flagged, but where a moderator mishandling the flag might be somewhat more likely.
@Makyen Thank you :) You are the voice of reason. Some of us just don't listen. I have as you predict on many occasions not flagged because of the risk of a declined flag. This doesn't even just apply to answers. I may be too OCD to be of value, because any setback will make me change my future behavior and how I use the site. The fear of the declined flag certainly does require one to not only evaluate the post, but also the risk of a flag getting declined due to a misunderstanding/mishap.
@DavidBuck Yeah, I agree - I don't think it is a great answer and would be happy for such answers to be removed. They would probably make helpful comments under the question. You can alternatively flag them to ask a mod to convert them to a comment.
@halfer My first declined flag was a mod flag where I was told to use standard flags. I've restricted mod flags solely to obviously non-standard things like blatant plagiarism and rollback wars since then. I would worry that "This would better as a comment" would just be declined.
Also, remember that SO mods decided to be hand off with NAA's; answers that you can delete with a NAA flag on other sites, the same answers wouldn't be deleted on SO.
I have every single post that I've flagged opened in a tab. For NAA's the max pending is 10. Else it's unmanageable, since I go through all of them every 10-15 min to see if a user has edited the post into OK. When they all go pink one after the other in less than a minute, that's a moderator working through the queue. If comments appear "... From review" that's the LQP working slowly and post do not all go pink all at the same time.
@Scratte We need to spend more time answering and not reviewing... I've watched one pythonista new user catch my total rep up in 3 weeks on SO with prolific answering
@DavidBuck I've seen another one also get 1K a week :) My favorite reputation riser got 20K in 4 months. Unfortunately it seems they are no longer active. But yes, curating very time consuming and risky.
However.. I was going for the "Unsung hero" badge, but alas.. some of my Answers that gave me the Tenacious one, have since received votes.
@DavidBuck I've considered that, but I feel it's gaming the system. I thought the zero-scored accepted more than 25% was of the accepted ones. Not the total answer count.
@RobertColumbia Java Programming Exercise “From Parameter to One” has an MCVE -- while (i <= num) should be while (i > 0). Maybe the question should be closed as Typo or Not Reproducible, but the MCVE looks legit IMHO.
@Scratte yeah, surprisingly few are actually Java...I have 212 answers for 189 score in [android], but only 89 answers for 59 score in Java (and 47 for 54 score in Kotlin)
I'm often a little surprised which answers get me the most score. this one was a surprise, for instance.
Sometimes the trick to getting upvotes seems to be polishing the question so that it looks nicer and people are more inclined to read it and think it's interesting.
I also usually upvote questions that I answer, partly to draw attention to them, and partly because if the question was good enough to merit an answer, it's probably also good enough to merit an upvote.
Thanks! Yeah, complicated mod flags seem a little backlogged at the moment. I have one from May 14 :D (it's a request to merge two questions - I can't blame them for not wanting to dive down that rabbit hole)
Personally, I only dupe-vote them if I see a stack trace pointing to their code
There are also a bunch of stray clear dupes of other Android questions that would be great to clean up, but it's difficult to do without a dupehammer because you'll never get the votes
I see them come through the CV queue every now and then