@10Rep In this case, the user lists the site in their profile. BTW: it's preferable to have such conversations in here, or Charcoal HQ, rather than in comments on the post.
@RyanM Judgment call, as always. But if an answer is 90% copied, that's probably worth a mod flag...
@RyanM There is, in fact, no one on this earth who can do that, as there are no moderators in common between Stack Overflow and Super User. ChrisF hasn't gotten elected on SU yet. :-)
Or...perhaps there are some gold-badge holders on SU who are also mods on SO?
Related to the earlier discussion about migrating posts older than 60 days, it's not simply that a CM needs to be located and persuaded to do so. It's also that we are generally discouraged from doing so, since the purported target sites generally don't want these.
When you spin up a new site, like TeX.SE, it is hard for a unique community to get off the ground there if they are simply seeded with Stack Overflow's unwanted TeX questions.
I have been itching to ask about having migration powers or at least a way of fast tracking the migration of specific joomla questions from SO to JSE. @Cody.
Not all joomla questions should be migrated, of course. I can do the work of filtering the ones that will be best served by the specialists there. (I am not one of the specialists.)
JSE will be in perpetual Beta while it is competing for attention versus SO and Joomla Forum.
Sure. Is there a pipeline where I can dump specific pages? I think it would be better on a "drip feed" rather than a bulk dump.
I don't have a list compiled. But a way to request migrations would be a godsend.
I am less interested in the ultra old joomla questions while it was still in version 1 and 2 -- at least for now. Most recent Joomla questions die a lonely death on SO.
But again, this only works for questions < 60 days old. Anything more than that requires a CM, as you know, and... I don't know how that's going to work.
then I'll start at 59 days ago and keep chipping forward.
The good news for SO is, that we are happy to claim the "rubbish" questions that would otherwise get closed. We handle users with kiddy gloves over there and volunteers are patient enough to talk users through diagnostic steps to form a complete question. Win-win.
This is a luxury that we can afford with such dismal daily question volume.
I assume you have tried gently encouraging users who post Joomla questions on SO to check out JSE?
The only little concern that I have is mass migrating all Joomla questions on SO to another site. When there is overlap between sites and a question is on-topic for both, we do tend to allow askers to ask wherever they want.
Joomla configuration questions are an easy thing for me to migrate, but if it's actually programming with an MCVE, etc., it's a bit more difficult, since those are arguably on-topic for SO, too.
Does anyone know what the proper quicklink is for the "minimal-reproducible-example" page? [mcve] used to work, but it doesn't anymore. I just tried [minimal-reproducible-example] and [help/minimal-reproducible-example], but neither of those work. It aggravates me enough to have to type out "minimal-reproducible-example"; I really don't want to have to manually type that and the entire URL.
@bad_coder Yeah. I know where to find it. I want a quick way of referencing it, without having to type out the entire page name. I've already figured out a solution, though; thanks.
@ArdentCoder That's a clear low-effort copy-paste of someone else's answer.
We don't allow users to copy and paste other people's answers without giving them credit (that's plagiarism), and there's no point in posting a duplicate answer anyway.
@ArdentCoder Yeah, so what?
That just suggests that there's some voting fraud going on.
@CodyGray Yes, even I think there's some voting fraud. Even the question was basically unclear as to what the expected output was. Still it got many upvotes as soon as it was posted.
@CodyGray Lol, I stopped using mod-flags cuz that's very slow and I still have one mod-flag pending today
Yeah, mentioning your suspicions about voting fraud in the flag would have also made sense. I looked at that, but in this case, there isn't enough evidence. Two votes is below the threshold we have arbitrarily drawn for a "pattern". But users aren't expected to know that, and mods still appreciate your bringing suspicious-looking voting to our attention.
Um yeah, it's slow. Flags aren't meant to be a real-time response mechanism.
I mentioned recently on Meta that Stack Overflow gets over 2500 flags per day. With < 20 moderators, it's kinda hard for response times to be anything but slow.
@ArdentCoder I didn't think you actually meant to criticize me. It was a joke. But, uh, I'm not sure which of the moderators you think are truly any of those things.
@CodyGray That person should take lessons from halfer and Makyen and learn to be polite and make low rep users 'understand' the strict rules instead of shouting at them everywhere.
Yes, shouting at people is a bad idea. But not everyone has mastered the soft touch. It's a difficult skill and requires a lot of patience, experience, and practice.
@ArdentCoder I could point out 2 RO's who have a long track record of selective snark. That doesn't especially bother me, what is shocking is seeing others sit by idle without saying a word. But that is actually good!! You get to see who's who. So, it's better they be themselves.
@bad_coder Perceptions vary. If you have concerns about someone's behavior, it is often useful to make constructive suggestions.
@Vega Nah, it's not. It's just the usual gibberish. Not worth fussing over which type of flag to use for that. I personally nuke that kind of thing as "rude/abusive" to keep it from becoming an audit, but it isn't your job as a regular user to think about such things.
@ArdentCoder Well, as I believe I may have told you before, if the user you're making the suggestions to has already seen the comments, then they are obsolete and do not need to be kept around. Also, if you post the comments on unrelated questions, then they're likely to be deleted because they're noise. We work very hard to keep the site free of noise and clutter.
The mention here was about room owners (ROs), who can be talked to in the chat room where they are ROs, without needing to leave noisy or unrelated comments.
@CodyGray Ok. If such (as said a while ago) a person becomes a moderator then I think it will ease the burden on other moderators because then he need not cry or flag in front of other moderators to get the comments which are criticizing him deleted haha
@CodyGray No problem, I'll believe it cuz u said. That's the point, if someone treats someone nicely then that person need not shout or any such tactic to get other people listen to him.
@ArdentCoder No I'm not. My expertise is electricity and mathmatics. That's why I'm a bad coder, I've always been sidetracked with other areas of science.
After the Thanksâ„¢ feature, we should also be able to rate users on cuteness as well. It will boost the spirit of users with low scoring Questions if they can change their avatar and a get good rating..
@Scratte That depends on 'all' who want to collect 'thanks'. Users may tend to collect upvotes cuz of the reputation system here, but I don't see any significant leaderboard for 'thanks' which may prompt users to 'collect' them.
The reason I think for the introduction of that feature is to treat people like humans and not bots.
@ArdentCoder I don't think so. If the idea is to remove the human need to express gratitude in words and replace it with pressing a button, then how is it not the reverse of what you just said?
@ArdentCoder If you want to count your thanks, it would be a bit tedious to do it manually going through all your answers. A script could do it for you.
@ArdentCoder The only way to satisfy humans with urges that they cannot suppress would be to make the button bigger and red and have the tool-tip say "Do not click" ;)
@Scratte I said there's no need to count thanks like counting upvotes. Just 'seeing' a thanks is enough to realize that the community cares new users as well. If the new user answered a really bad question, I see people downvoting it. It might not be upvoted cuz then the question can't be deleted. In such situations, a kind user clicking 'thanks' might improve the situation for that new user.
@ArdentCoder Yes. Because then everyone else has to read it, which is a waste of time. You don't want to see "thank you" scrawled all over pages of an encyclopedia, do you?
@Scratte Of course. The user will not go back if such things doesn't affect their spirit, but if all those negative actions did affect them, they will go back to their answer to check it and a small thanks beside the answer might make them cheered up.
@ArdentCoder Maybe. Or they'd be annoyed with it, or assume the thanks was made by the downvoter. And then they'd put a "Why the thanks and the downvote?" comment on their post.
@Scratte Assumptions need not be true always, and if your assumption is true then it will definitely hurt that user but that's why these things are kept anonymous.
@Scratte Your assumption involved "downvotes AND thanks". Simple boolean algebra: If downvotes are anonymous, then "downvotes AND thanks" is also anonymous.
And I don't really know whether thanks are anonymous. If they are not anonymous, there may be some reason which I cannot guess cuz I'm not experienced with the site.
@Scratte Putting comments or not is upto that user
@Scratte I don't really mean to be harsh on you lol I remember the good deeds you've done to me that day and I'm sorry if the arguments got a bit too much. It's good to have your own opinions, and I don't disagree with that :)
@Scratte Awesome, but I think that displaying thanks in the activity timeline hides other important information. I don't have any problem as long as the number is displayed in a corner without affecting other information.
@Scratte But I am annoyed! It is my lunch time, I came here with a small doubt and the convo got diverged too much lol jk it was fun talking here cyu later. Have a nice time!
@ArdentCoder lol. Not that much of a coincidence. Actually, I've read somewhere on meta usernames are supposed to be "significant" and easily "distinguishable" so anything containing common words like "coder" is discouraged. But I've resisted changing my username since...
@Nick that's probably how I ended up with Nick. Strangely it would take more digits than I have to count the number of times I have been called Tim in real life...
How should we do with this one? It has two cv as a dup, but the dup is incorrect. It should be closed as "need more detail" stackoverflow.com/questions/62634486/…
@klutt your only option is to close vote it now, then either edit the dupe list for a better dupe or re-open and re-close. The latter is rather pointless.
find a gold badge holder in either C or Python to assist in the dupe list editing
Hmm... I'm disappointed to see that Rust considers it safe to "Overflow integers". I thought that was one of the things it would prevent. Integer overflow (and signed-unsigned interconversion, which is related) is pretty much the one thing I don't like about C++.
@AdrianMole What caption? Man, are you guys going to make me actually go use a review queue to see how they work? I've been pretty good about avoiding that this entire time.
@Scratte "Help and Improvement": Mr. X only knows about correcting punctuation marks. He opens that queue, and offers his help by correcting punctuation marks.
I asked that question on Meta. They closed it. I found the answer myself. My argument against the closure of the question was deleted. Then I wrote a post on deleted comments. And my comments there also got deleted. Lol, that's why I avoid metas.