Thanks, fixed the code too, which does make the post better (do people not read their own posts?) but I think it still lacks enough details about what all they did
In retrospect, I could've reject+edited it, but I didn't notice the first time that it had made one improvement among all that random code formatting
@RyanM The code wasn't added by the OP. So it's dubious, a random member adding code to a question without visible prior dialogue in the comments. The original question was a definite close.
@bad_coder for the record, it's not too uncommon that users post HTML which disappears from view entirely but which is actually there, just not rendered
that actually just ends up looking like there's something horribly wrong with the font hinting...like I was transported back to a Linux system from 10 years ago
I bet this guy has a lot higher paying job than me. Some recruiter saw his GitHub and said, "wow, major contributor to a large number of open-source software libraries!"
That would not pass code review for me until you add parentheses around the groups of expressions
I do not wish to memorize the associativity of operators and work out whether that logical-AND has higher or lower precedence than the arithmetic comparison.
@CodyGray That code is very ugly and useless. To write a one-liner one needs to install 25 files, consume electricity and Wi-fi, etc.. I am thinking of polar bears ;)
I am skeptical that all of those terms are enforcible quite as strictly as they are set out there (for instance, a 40-word purely descriptive quote linking to their website is almost certainly fair use under US copyright law), but it does make their site significantly less useful.
@Adriaan Topological sorting is patented. Also, algorithms can be patented if you want to protect from others reusing them. The problem is that it make the algorithm public
Oh yes - the only reason I know of topological sorting is because it's an algorithm used in spreadsheet software - if you modify a cell and want to propagate this to any other cells that use the value of the original. It's not at all obvious that's the case but you would be breaching the patent there.
I checked, the concept is called "topological sorting" - it is also used in spreadsheet software. However, you have different implementations. If you're writing a spreadsheet software, you might clash with a patent if you don't check all patents on topological sorting.
What would be a mostly reliable question to distinguish a request posted here via a userscript? Would it be something like "[tag] <text> <link to post> <more text>", so I can grab the last link to a post from a message?
@tripleee no, I want to find reports, even manual ones. The script appends a link to the username, so I want to accommodate for that but manual reports will just be [tag] <text> <link to post> - that should be easier to parse.
I just want to know if I'm missing some type of report here.
Also, I'm OK with the odd false negative I want a rough look of how to find requests.
so "mostly reliable question" is a typo and you mean "mostly reliable method"? You want to be able to separate the generated ones from the manually composed ones?
@Lankymart I don't personally see how that is a duplicate of the target. It sounds like OP is trying to replace all instances of | with , in a file rather than copy data from multiple files into one new file.
Yeah, they combined the reason name and the "(too old to migrate)" fragment into the same element, yay...
@VLAZ The script tripleee is using is the URRS - I'm not sure if you're looking for a userscript that does that (which this does) or if you're looking for code that parses *-pls messages, but either way, this has it
Unrelated: Does a spam post with only -3 points (i.e., not to -6 yet, with no upvotes) being "flagged as spam or offensive content and deleted ... by Community♦" mean a moderator cast a binding red flag on it?
@Vega I'm not sure if the post is intentionally offensive, or just invoking a command, multiple times, with a name and options that are intended to be offensive, but sound cool to people with a teenage mentality.
@VLAZ Well, you could look at the scripts we use that do that. If you're getting the information from the DOM, then the URRS does what you want. If you're getting the events, then the Archiver parses those.
@Makyen I wasn't aware of the internal API. Basically, next time I have free time I want to make a script that decorates any *-pls I open from here to provide context. I often open several then forget what the reason stated was. So my idea was to parse the request and if I visit the link I'll get the *-pls message on the page itself. To that effect I was hoping to just scrape chat. However, if there is a chat API that might be an even better source.
I'd have to look into it more, I was collecting ideas for a start, so that would be useful information to pursue, thanks. I'll also have a look at what the script does.
@10Rep If you look at the why data, it will tell you why the user is blacklisted. You can get the why data through a variety of methods. The three most common are use the FIRE userscript, which displays the post and the why data as a popup, go to metasmoke, using the MS link in the chat message, or ask SD why and have the why data put in an additional chat message.
In most cases, the user will be blacklisted because another post of theirs received tpu feedback.
@Scratte ID by default if someone blacklists you, but occasionally Charcoal people will watch your username as well to prevent...exactly what you just suggested (I'm not sure of the criteria for this; you'd have to ask someone in Charcoal)
@10Rep The VLQ flag sends the Question to the Triage queue. If it should be edited, then it may get 3 "Requires editing".. then it goes to the Help & Improvement queue.. where someone will edit it.
@AdrianMole Then.. it actually goes back to Triage! I made several jokes about when being bored, one could ping-pong a post between Triage and the H&I queue.. until Samuel sees it, of course :D
@AdrianMole Not sure if I'd call it a ping really. I would image a push of a button with a "There are no review queues available to you" as a result for ..a very long time? :D
Okay, I read it all. I don't think How to approve android SDK Licenses issue on Linux (GalliumOS)? is general computing, but I think it could use some info on why the canonical question for their error did not work for them, and I've commented to that effect. I'm also out of votes, so they're in luck for the next...oh, 64 minutes.
@Dharman if only there were some useful explanatory text next to the giant honking edit button (I assume there's not - I don't have any closed questions).
@Scratte Please recommend me the best libraries and also provide a complete tutorial for how to make an app that uses machine learning to detect whether an X-ray image contains cancer. I also need to know how to deploy it to all of the enterprise-managed devices at my company, which is especially hard because my Windows keeps crashing. Also, my current approach isn't working: why? It says there's no package named "tesnorflow" or something.