@dbc Yes, I said plagiarism because of a previous conversation, where a duplicate answer was considered as plagiarism. It was looking like 'thank you'. I haven't flagged that one, just DV and delV
@Scratte Approximately zero Android questions are literally copy+paste runnable. For an Android app, you just need too many files to reasonably put them all in a Stack Overflow question. That said, it's not an MCVE because it doesn't include the initializePlayer call site (or, for that matter, the entire stack trace: we're just assuming that it's the setPlayer call that they did include). Also it's yet another NPE in user code, and none of those are at all useful questions...
So curiously, despite rene's complaints that it's too much code to be minimal, it's really not enough code :-p I actually don't think they included anything unnecessary.
I don't know the answer because I don't know Xcode, but it seems to basically boil down to "What do I need to do to ensure that I ship all required dependencies for a command-line app developed in Xcode?"
OMG, stop the press, breaking news. A 1 rep account self deleted their Q after it was closed as a dupe, it even had an up vote. We now return you to your regularly scheduled closing
@10Rep There are plenty of on-topic questions that don't include any code - they just need to be about a programming tool being used for programming (I'm paraphrasing the rule badly, I'm sure)
@Scratte Act in any way that will accomplish the post's removal.
@tripleee It seems some mods are more likely to perform merges than others. I'm a big fan of them myself, and I do it a lot (relatively speaking). It's difficult to find cases where a merge is truly applicable, though, because the questions really need to be exact duplicates, or at least such that the answers from one will not look out of place on the other, because there's no indication that they've been merged in from elsewhere.
@TylerH No, and it won't be the last. But I'm confident that I'm not wrong on this. Answers should be evaluated in terms of the question. Anything else is just nonsense.
@Braiam I suppose it does happen, but it's really not a good idea, at least not if you aren't going to go edit the answers.
@Braiam Sure, yeah. The use case for merging is when there's a good answer on one question, and several good answers on another question. If they're just rehashing the same thing, then I would also prefer to delete.
Ah, it threw off your pattern recognition. Yes, that's definitely a thing.
For Andreas, I just look for the yellow coral reef. Even though, upon closer inspection, it appears to be a gemstone, not a coral reef. But I like the idea of a coral reef.
@10Rep Already handled now, but for future reference: no. Specific performance optimizations to code are on-topic here for SO. They weren't asking for a general code review, so there's no reason to migrate that or anything like it.
I voted to close this question yesterday, as although using the LinkedIn API is on-topic, they had addressed their question to LI customer support and were asking why LI numbers didn't match their own numbers, which seems unanswerable by anyone but LI, who deny even owning their own API, apparently...
Is this just the usual LinkedIn avoidance of responsiblity? Is this answerable?
I voted to close because I can't tell you why the API responded with what you weren't expecting. It's weird LinkedIn won't support their own API in that regard
I'm happy to reopen if we can get more details regarding this, but it sounds like LinkedIn expects us to have that answer
Yeah please bin that del-pls. It seems less clear to me now that it’s not sincere. But what stuck out to me was “I was trying to add a honeypot field into my form” but with no code — and then even after the code was added, just a dump of the “500 lines” of the entire HTML, with zero indication of what/where the “honeypot field” is in their code. And then the “I'm very very new to coding” — which, yeah, could of course be sincere.
@sideshowbarker Then it would be a bad question. A troll is when a question is not even a question, like explaining how cats work, or something like that.
@10Rep A troll would also be somebody trying to abuse our collective time by posting a fake question where they pretend to be a naive user and then sit back and laugh while we post comments asking them for clarification.
To del-pls, or not to del-pls, that is the question; Whether 'tis nobler in the mind to suffer The slings and arrows of outrageous questions, Or to take arms against a sea of them And by opposing end them.
Friends, Romans, SOCVR-denizens, Lend me your votes. I come to del-pls questions, not to cv-pls them. The evil that bad questions do lives after them; The good is oft interred with their downvotes; So let it be with these posts.
"To del-pls or not to del-pls” — Shakespeare; “To del-pls is to do” — Socrates; “To do is to del-pls” — Jean-Paul Sartre; “Do del-pls do del-pls do” — Sinatra.