@oguzismail I think it should be reopened. Most of regex questions are like that. If it was a duplicate I'd have voted to delete it. But just because it is low effort and code dump, no. Certainly not in regex.
Just had a first for me in the suggested edit queue: deliberately approved an edit just so that I could almost entirely revert it. They removed a link that had since turned into a bunch of ads, and I wanted to reward them for their cleanup effort, but I also wanted to put the link back via the Internet Archive...I did @mention them to give them a heads-up for the future, though.
@Scratte Moderators can see comments, the full answer, and question when handling flags, but doing so requires a click (two if you want to see the question too, for flags on an answer or answer's comments). However, only an unformatted excerpt of the post, or the full comment, are in the immediate view. In general, NAA and VLQ flags are handled by just looking at the post with much of the Markdown formatting removed (e.g. no code formatting).
@Scratte Yeah, I considered rejecting it at first, but then I decided that it was a useful contribution: it brought the post to my attention, and did so by making it arguably better by removing what was currently a spammy link. So I figured approve + teach was the way to go.
@Scratte Double edged sword. It's helpful to run through and clear a bunch of obvious ones out. If you ever see a bunch of helpful NAAs cleared all at once, that's why
But in a lot of cases you still have to click through to find the context, because the mod page provides you none.
Where is the appropriate place to ask a moderator to clarify the reasoning behind their actions? And is there any unwritten rule that "requires" them to answer? I already posted to Meta, mentioned them in the comments and mentioned them in the Meta room in case they missed that comment.
Wasn’t there a conversation yesterday or so, in here, about the kind of users answering everything they come across, and not doing their job, as in flagging/cving off-topic questions?
Hey hello everyone ! I'm looking desperately for some tips on Google Apps Script, consent screen etc... I cant seem to find the correct channels or sites or documentation ...
@PatricioStegmann Hi, this is not the right room for that. In fact, it's not really the right site. Perhaps try asking on a google apps script subreddit on reddit.com
@10Rep The question “How can I set Visual Studio in a way that when working with Django, it signals errors only when there is actually something wrong with the code?” doesn’t seem obviously off-topic to me at least
@10Rep yeah — now that I re-read it, it’s actually not clear to me what “errors only when there is actually something wrong with the code” means. It makes me wonder what other kinds of errors it would be reporting other than code errors
@10Rep I'm familiar with the problem domain; needs details or clarity because we don't know what kind of library he's wrapping and what platform he's targeting (iOS, macOS, SPM cross-platform, etc)
At least they know how to deal with my vandalism properly: "I will have to give up, get another account and ask my question in stackoverflow elsewhere."
@10Rep This had already been handled. An additional message to the user wasn't needed an hour after the initial message had already been replied to. I'm mentioning this because we prefer not to pile onto users, and the user could feel like that's what this was doing.
Another time, I expect a polite message like this to them, were no one else has replied, would be appreciated. A message this far removed from the initial posting, where someone else has replied with more-or-less the same response, doesn't go over as well.