For example, if some obvious beginner has if (a < 0 && a > 9) (&& instead of ||) is that a typo? No, it's a misunderstanding. But should it be addressed as an answer or as a comment?
I would give a brief explanation in a comment, with a link to elementary documentation for the operators of the language in question. Stack Overflow isn't really here to replace basic documentation.
I understand what you're saying, and one would expect users to work it out, but they didn't. They posted. So why not have a duplicate target? It's no different from the multitudes of Questions closed as a duplicate to the famous arrayOutOfBoundsError
Sometimes I really do wonder what goes through peoples' heads. Question has been closed as a duplicate. OP then edits their question, simply adding, "Appreciate any help!" Now, is that likely to get my re-open vote? Really?
personal favorite edit: "kindly help me i would be thankfull" changed to "Please answer its not closed question" (later followed up by another non-substantive edit rephrasing everything and adding "please its important if can tell me how i can create this layout would be helpfull")
I took pity and left them my "Your question is quite broad, and ... you should break the problem down into smaller problems ..." canned comment
"I have to input minimum amount of numbers. The minimum is the maximum but I am able to input more numbers than the maximum." am I having a stroke...no, just an audit
@RyanM Tag-only edits don't automatically push the question into the reopen queue. Only edits to the body auto-push into the reopen queue, and only if done by someone who did not VtC or flag the post, or who is the OP.
That's why, if there's a pending cosmetic edit after you've VtC, it's a good idea to reject the edit and edit yourself to do the easy cosmetic cleanup. It saves the question from someone else coming along and doing a cleanup edit that pushes it into the reopen queue. I wouldn't spend a lot of time on it, but if it only takes a few seconds...
@RyanM OK, I respect your opinion. I disagree, because it's no different than asking for "official documentation* from some random github project. The answer would be a link to an off-site resource, and the MS change from MSDN to docs.microsoft.com shows how those links can break.
@KenWhite I think this case is slightly different, because they're asking for an API: that is, a method that can be called on (presumably) a web-service of some sort. That would be different than if they asked for a link to documentation on how to make that sort of call, in which case I would be completely on board with you. This question, to me, seems like asking if reddit has an API that provides a list of the moderators for a given subreddit.
@RyanM you are right. Those subtleties make a difference. An API question can be a language specific "how to" if it's about stdlib or a commonplace library.
@Braiam ok, I'll watch a youtube video and read on wikipedia about the elections. Thanks for sharing, having a pretext to selectively read the news broadens my horizons.
@Nick It may be. I have not, and have no plan to, click on the links. I'm good with close, delete, and watch the domains for any repeat posts. In other words, assuming good faith for this first post, even though it does contain a product keyword we've seen before.
@MikeM. You are permitted to make a del-pls request if the post is within 1 downvote of being able to be delete-voted. This is based on the expectation that if it's worth a delete-vote, then it almost certainly is worth a downvote, and the Meta which explained that position. Specifically, that means closed questions that have been closed for < 2 days and are at score <= -2, questions which have been closed for > 2 days (no score requirement), and answers which are at score <= 0.
@Makyen Cool. Just wanted to make sure I hadn't missed a policy change. I recently installed your URRS(?) script, and the tags went all funky when I posted that. I wasn't sure if it was trying to tell me that I really screwed up.
@MikeM. The last I checked, the URRS marks the requests which can not actually be delete-voted as invalid. It needs to be updated after the policy change which permitted posting requests where only one downvote was required.
@MikeM. Yeah, I've changed it in my copy of the URRS to be the one downvote required levels, which means it should get into the next released revision.
in completely unrelated news, I've just discovered that SQL doesn't have a function that takes two values and returns the greater (or lesser) of the two, and I am stunned.
and also SEDE doesn't let you create functions so you can't just make one
@RyanM indeed that is truly horrible. It just smacks so badly of someone completely embarrassed by the lack of such a basic function and needing to come up with a "cool" way to emulate it.
@RyanM I've starred your last comment. It gave me a good laugh...
@akrun First, chat is not the proper place to ask for a mod to investigate votes. I'm OK with having a general discussion about it, but if you want an actual investigation, you should raise a mod flag. But, I looked into it anyway because I'm just that kind of a nice guy (and have nothing better to do on a Friday night). I found two things worth noting. [continued]
First, you did receive some targeted downvotes from a user within the last 24 hours, but those were automatically invalidated by the reversal script. So...you're right about being a potential victim of targeted downvotes, but you're worrying too early. This is why we ask you to wait 48 hours before raising an alarm (flag), because usually the automatic script does its job, as it appears to have in this case.
Second, I do see some other patterns of downvotes against your account (5, 6, 10, etc. downvotes all from the same user), but all of these (literally all; I checked every single one) come from high-rep users active in the same tags as you who have given you far, far more upvotes than downvotes. Therefore, I don't consider these to be at all "targeted" or in any way inappropriate. They're not personal or targeted if there are an equal number up and down, and these aren't even equal.
This is just a typical case of folks knowledgeable about similar technologies having minor differences of opinion, which is normal and healthy. Take the votes under advisement as an indication that other experts may disagree with your recommendations/choices/opinions, but also take them with the usual and customary grain of salt.
Also...although it was removed from this room because it's inappropriate to call out specific users here, you've mentioned your suspicions about The User Who Shall Not Be Named revenge-downvoting you before in mod flags. We've looked into it. I just looked into it again. They're not. They've certainly downvoted some of your posts, but they've upvoted others of your posts. Please stop fighting with this person. You don't have a bone to pick with them.
@Dharman PREACH! I really wanted to pin this, but I restrained myself and only starred it. Can we get this printed up on t-shirts and bulletin boards? Maybe a site-wide banner?
@RyanM Grrr. I really hate every time someone links to that. It trivializes the entire idea of voting on SO. Yes, sometimes downvotes are inadvertent or misclicks. Sometimes upvotes are, too. But in general they are not, and we don't want people to simply ignore the signal that votes provide because "maybe Tim lost his keys".
The key part of Tim's answer is this: "It's one down vote, don't worry about it - as long as you're sure that your answer is good, then put it out of mind." And that's good advice, but it's not the message most people take away from that answer, especially when it's quoted out-of-context.
Speaking of, lemme go bold that part of Tim's answer. BRB
Also why am I not surprised that you are the sort of person who posts long, thoughtful novels about cutting boards... and now you've got my looking at knife accessories. I'm gonna have to send you the bill for the resulting purchases...
In particular, you've reminded me that my knives are criminally dull, and that I lack a knife sharpener...there's now one arriving here Monday.
@RyanM Got someone complaining there that the answer is not long or detailed enough. Anyway, it should not be surprising that the microbiology major has some thoughts about foodborne illnesses or cleanliness. Plus, I like novels.
@Scratte I did not, because I'm not confident that I could properly use a stone well enough to create a consistent edge. That stuff takes practice.
@Scratte Also those things aren't sharpeners! They're for honing, and you should have both :-) which is why I'm gonna buy one of them, too, because the one I have is terrible...
@Scratte That knife has been used on a considerable amount of sandpaper
@CodyGray Some of my knives are...not quality. I could buy more expensive knives to replace them, but I figure I'll see what return I can get on sharpening them.
My chef's knife is the only good knife I own. Not coincidentally, it's much sharper than all of the others.
@CodyGray Twice?! Is that actually recommended? I'm actually pretty consistent about flossing once a day...less so about brushing my teeth when I am a zombie in the morning.
Me: "How hard could it be to write a query to approximate a user's current reputation?" Me an hour later: "Aaaarrghh I forgot about bounties [screaming internally]"
@Scratte oh goodness, if I wanted to hit the low end I'd just propose that privileges should be based on the number of thanks you've received, because that's the real metric of usefulness...
You haven't really established your Meta reputation yet. Now is the key time to decide what you want to stand for. You could always be a champion of emojis the people.
Anyway, if you're bored and want to know what I think your reputation should be, data.stackexchange.com/stackoverflow/query/1256298/… Note the caveats at the top: there's a bunch of stuff it doesn't take into account (yet)
Basically, it replaces the daily reputation cap with diminishing returns on additional upvotes on a given post. First 10 votes are worth 10 apiece, next 10 are 5 apiece, next 20 are 2 apiece, and the rest are 1 apiece. It's implemented as a cap on the score computed the traditional way by 10*upvotes - 2*downvotes. It should probably have a per-post cap of 500-1000 or so, but that only matters in extreme cases.
Oh, I see. Yeah, that makes sense, then. Jon Skeet hits the rep cap almost every day, so he'd benefit the most. I haven't hit the rep cap all that many times in the many years I've been here.
@RyanM so basically if you got 20 upvotes on a single post every day, this would restrict your reputation gain to 190+(n-40) in total as opposed to 200 per day?
@CodyGray it's less penalized and more rewarded less - the idea being that you have already received most of the reward for having written a useful answer, so you should be rewarded more for contributing additional content
Hmm. Thinking about it, you're basically keeping the same idea as motivated the rep cap (encouraging people to take a break from answering today and come back later to contribute more), but spreading it out over all time (encouraging people to come back and continue to post new content).
the daily rep cap also catches posts that get a lot of upvotes in a day due to a lot of people hitting an issue simultaneously (e.g., due to an outage or a bad push), which this also handles, because it doesn't care what day you got the votes
I just wonder if it shouldn't start increasing the value of votes after several years have passed and they still keep rolling in. It's quite rare that an answer remains useful after many years, so either it's just that canonical of an answer or you are keeping it up-to-date. Both of those are good, and should be rewarded.
@CodyGray it might be that the solution to this is to handle questions and answers differently. this question, for instance, does not deserve anywhere near 56k rep :-)
@CodyGray I'm not sure about that. Usually with everything else in life, you need to keep working to keeping having returns. Not saying that it always works out, but I do not think that the movie ET makes the same when someone watches it now than they did when it first came out. Even if the experience is the same.
@RyanM Devil's advocate: why not? People continue to find that question and its answers useful over all these years. Why should it not be rewarded in kind?
@Scratte Um, I think they actually do. Movies and songs still make royalties, even years after their release. Shouldn't they? It's quite an accomplishment to have made something that remains popular, rather than just having a brief flash of popularity.
@CodyGray They do still make royalties, sure. But I was under the impression that the rates were lower, and after a certain period even the copyright wears out.
@CodyGray it is: my system, at least with no cap, would award 5995 reputation for that question. But it wouldn't, and shouldn't, immediately grant the person every single privilege in the system.
@RyanM I am not the right person to sympathize with this argument. I'm a bit more like Joel than Jeff, in that I don't believe that there is any such thing as a question that is "too simple" or "too basic" for Stack Overflow. That's clearly a question that developers will have when reading API documentation, so why should it not be rewarded and popular here?
(Also, if you want to fix this problem, talk to the Android devs and tell them to stop introducing nonsense into the API....)
I actually agree, mostly. I just want to reduce the reward that comes from a single popular question. That user would get 3809 reputation for that question: they're rewarded quite handsomely.
@CodyGray I have no problem with that question being rewarded, but I agree with Ryan you shouldn't be able to get full site access from one lucky question. Perhaps something like the tag badge constraints (need to answer x questions (or ask y questions) as well as get a certain number of upvotes) is appropriate for some of the higher levels of privileges?
@Nick I actually would (to a far lesser degree) like to see that changed too, because 1 popular answer and 199 crappy ones gets you the gold badge. But at least they have to be answers, not just questions.
@RyanM I think something's a little off with the query. I've tried to see if the end results match my account, and I think there's a discrepancy somewhere.
@Scratte I'm sorry, but this is not enough information to solve the problem. Please provide us with a minimal, reproducible example, including your inputs and your expected results. :-)
When it comes to tag badges on Meta, the only reason I haven't earned the vast majority of them is because I haven't posted enough answers to questions with that tag. I think that's kind of funny, actually. I could gain probably 100 tag badges just by posting nonsense answers.
@Scratte the computed rep is 1602, your actual rep is 1745. As noted at the top, it doesn't include the association bonus, so that's 1702, plus you have some number of suggested edits. Oh, it also doesn't include rep loss from you downvoting answers.
that I think I actually can't fix, because that information is non-public.
Hard to tell if this is intentionally spammy or not. Given that it's just an example URL, would it be reasonable to edit this to be example.com? And then close the question because it's off-topic anyway...
user12867493
@DavidBuck Agreed, Smokey did report it and I marked it as a false positive due to the fact that there was no spam history for that domain
@DalijaPrasnikar This question is currently open, so delete-voting is not possible. Feel free to re-request when it is possible to delete-vote this question.
They are the most common ones, but I am trying to catch others too. It's a very imperfect bot and I aim to find the obvious ones. You might still find non-english posts while normal browsing and they might not be reported in my room.
@Dharman Did you ever consider the idea of looking for stuff that is not English, rather than looking for stuff that is non-English? That would be more generic, n'est-ce pas?
@Dharman Check for a minimal number of (or percentage of) common English words. Prepositions an conjunctions would be a good start: It's difficult to write anything in English without one or two of those.
Then you also have: "Tengo problama. erro: "Undefined index on the line...."
There are so many posts in two or more languages
I actually had an idea in December to write a bot for questions, but I gave up due to the fact that it is extremely difficult to write good heuristics to identify what is a good question, what is a bad question and what only needs an edit.
@Dharman That is not English, the opposite, it is lazy or intentionally "I use a different language than my boring parents", a lingo widely used in the teenaged peoples of the world.
@Braiam a lingo widely used in the teenaged peoples of the world and by the inmature people of the world. ("peoples" as in multiple societies of different countries and "people" as in many persons).
A "people" can be the entirety of all persons in a county, being singular. The difference becomes clear in the pun "We are a cute people." (singular) / "We are acute people." (plural)
@Braiam It is a strange inconsistency of English that we say inordinate and incoherent ("in" prefix) but prefer immature and immutable ("im" prefix). And of course we also use "un" prefixes.
@Braiam A people can be a finite group, like "the people of the UK". Thus "the peoples of the world" implies that people are placed into distinct groups, even though "people of the world" still works fine.
This is quite archaic, and most native English speakers won't know some of the words, but it is a fascinating insight into how cobbled-together English is: en.wikisource.org/wiki/Ruize-rijmen/De_Chaos
> from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition [dis– + gruntle, to grumble (from Middle English gruntelen, frequentative of grunten, to grunt; see grunt).]
looks like borderline spam: stackoverflow.com/a/62612531/2275490 I mod flagged already, user has written 8 more or less identical answers within 1 hour
@AdrianMole that's probably the greatest synonym I've heard of spam :D
user12867493
@Vickel Please do pop-in and say hello :)
user12867493
@Vickel I don't think you have Smokey privs so just linking to the user's profile and saying about the repetitive posts would be fine. It helps it get flagged more quickly and the user can be blacklisted :)
@10Rep No. We do not review your flags. However, if you have flagged something that really needs to be closed and after some time you see the flag has not been handled and there is a chance that the post will never be closed you can ask for closure here. I think this would be acceptable, but please read FAQ fully first.
You can always ask for advice whether you even should flag something or not, but don't do it on all your flags. That is what the review queue as for. Their primary job is to review your flags and act accordingly.
Thanks. Just curious as a post I'd left open when I went for dinner now has 32 comments going back and forth about whether the question is answerable. I thought it probably would get flagged as I've seen shorter exchanges moved to chat.