So I posted an answer and someone commented on it pointing out something I missed. I quickly fixed my post and flagged their comment as no longer needed. The flag was validated and comment deleted. Now the commentator has commented again asking why I deleted their comment. Any advice what to do? Flagging as unnedded is likely to backfire. Is there a meta about this I can link maybe?
@Chipster Well, I see three options: A) Ignore it. B) Tell them that deleting their comment was not personal. Explain accurately and truthfully what happened and what you did, or did not do, and why, along with how your actions and the moderator's actions were in keeping with how the site normally works/is intended to work. or C) Raise a custom moderator flag explaining the situation and asking a moderator to handle it/explain it to the user.
Personally, I'd choose B, then if that went sideways, I'd go with C.
user10957435
@Makyen Thank you. I appreciate your help. I think that comment has now been deleted already (likely by a moderator), but I'll keep that in mind if they decide to comment again, or for future reference if I run into a similar situation.
@DavidBuck Yes, raise a mod flag. Especially if the OP has vandalized the answer and/or replaced it with a mere stub because they can't delete it. That's worse for everyone than just removing it. Be sure to explain in the mod flag why you are mod-flagging it.
@Chipster Education is rarely successful. Just flag the new comment for deletion. Or do what Makyen says, but that's more work.
python Anyone has a better dupe target for this? It basically asks how do I fix floating-point arithmetic in Python?, there are many related questions (not closed as a dupe) and the answer is always use Decimal library
Thank you. I was curious, because when flagging as spam the post seems to be deleted at different counts of downvotes. I know the spam flag automatically casts a downvote, but people can still cast another DV. So I couldn't get an accurate feel for what the number was. Sometimes a post would disappear at -7 other times at -10, for example.
@DavidBuck I suggest you to mention that it received a new answer (reported by SD and since deleted), because the question is rather old and cv-pls requests need recent activity (last 6 months). This way people know why and that it's a valid cv-pls request. The OP's self-answer about the libraries they found makes it further clear it's a recommendation question.
@MrUpsidown I am sorry, I was rhetorical. I wanted to express my surprise for that duplicate question. Was wondering why the OP would post the self-duplicate of a well received first post. Usually the self-duplcates are after a question is closed/heavily downvoted. It wasn't the case here.
Should this be flagged to migrate to security.stackexchange.com? It's obviously a hot question but it's also off-topic here (as verified by 3 failed attempts to reopen).
@DavidBuck I'm not very familiar with Security.SE but it at least seems like a candidate. Perhaps somebody more familiar with that stack can weight in.
@DavidBuck I'm guessing they would simply close it as a duplicate; I found a related post by quick search but perhaps Sec would still be a better home for it
@DavidBuck Not sure. Some strange errors can be cause by some other known part. Like a trigger getting errors due to another trigger. So when the Question is asked, someone immediately knows that there's another trigger one needs to look for.
Is this on-topic? I think we do algos here, but it feels like set theory to me, and I wonder if it would be better on Mathematics: stackoverflow.com/questions/61612689/…
@MartijnPieters technically speaking you needed to go through the full burnination process as it was 54 at the start ;) I leave it to @CodyGray to lecture you on that ...
@rene Not sure what the Dutch word for "snark" is! But, some years ago, frequent flyers had the habit of calling KLM stewardesses Snork Maidens. Never did really understand why.
@Machavity There will no doubt be at least a few in the reopen queue - where I removed the tag from already closed questions. (Maybe I goofed - dunno?) But I've emptied today's cup for the reopen queue.
Apparently we should be lucky that there were only 50-odd fine-tunning posts. There are nearly 2500 posts about parameter tunning, performance tunning, but thankfully no more tunning tags.
Am I wrong about this question? To me it appears to be broad and unclear and possibly a recommendation question. It also has rather broad tags so may not be programming related. But I'm not an expert on Single Sign On, so I might be missing something.
@DavidArenburg do know that we have a rule here that we don't ping mods unless you continue an ongoing conversation. Next time leave out that @[any mod] and you're fine. Thanks ;)
@DavidBuck Devs. With a proper burninate request, we run through and clean up the tag as best as we can. [ibm] took a couple of months and we got maybe 25% of the tag. Then a Dev bulk removed the tag
To me, closest looks pretty meta (it has a usage guidance: "Closest is being the nearest to a number, object, quantity etc."), applied to 496 questions. But I guess it doesn't cause enough harm to warrant a burninate request.
Hi! Sorry, everyone, I didn't mean to leave so little context. I had name-dropped the SOCVR as a place someone might get help with off-topic posts if they wanted to tackle removing the tag from the remaining 39 posts.
Thank you so much for stepping up and getting the tag cleared!
@DavidArenburg I do see messages that ping me directly after I just have been in the room. That specific answer was removed for moderation issues. Sorry, I can't go into details.
@MartijnPieters Yes I know you are, this is why I pinged you. But I was told not to ping you (while simultaneously my message was removed), so this is why I said that you probably won't see the message if I won't ping you directly. Thanks for the clarification and being helpful (I hope I didn't break another rule in a meanwhile).
@DavidArenburg you did break the room rule, which exists to avoid pings like that as mods often come in here for other business and not for general support requests.
@MarcoBonelli I don't see any indication that the OP is affiliated with the project or has participated in promoting it in the past, but I'm lazy and on mobile
I really don't have time to read them though, so I'll just won't post here anymore cause I don't want to break any more rules. So many thanks for the help and see you around
@MarcoBonelli I declined it. Yes, it's their repo, but it also looks relevant to the topic. I'm a bit less inclined to spam people linking their own repo
The catch has to be someone repeatedly linking. If you have a pattern, that's very different
@ChristopherMoore The OP has just added code to their post and has explained what result they were trying to achieve and what result they were getting.
@DavidArenburg Don't take it too personally. I'm not sure what rules you've bumped into, but mostly the rules have been developed by consensus, and when people post to Meta asking whether they should be changed, the community tends to disagree. The posting rules on the main site are, I would say, the reason why everyone wants to come here, and why quality is maintained here in a way that does not happen on other websites.
@oguzismail You can always post it for them as Community Wiki, then delete it from the question, then ask them if they'd like to copy the answer and repost it under their own account (nearly no-one ever does repost it for themselves).
I tend to prefix CW answers with a prefix of (Posted solution on behalf of the question author in order to move it to the answer space.). That makes it clearer what my posting role is.
@oguzismail Yes, I would ask OP to self-answer and give them an opportunity to do so, if the content is valuable to keep on the site. Or close-as-typo. I don't know enough about the subject to know which of those options is better.
thoughts on stackoverflow.com/questions/3965547/…? It got a NATO today, doesn't seem on-topic to me by today's standards. "Why doesn't X language have N feature from Y language?"
@rene Don't be so unwelcoming! He might be new to SO and not know what constitutes a good question worth answering. Show him this blog post first to teach him.
@janw Maybe they've taken pity on all those Low Quality Posts reviewers that only have 996 reviews. Given them a small opportunity to make the badge now :)
@Scratte NAA and VLQ flags don't enter the moderator queue for the first hour after being raised. This is in order to give time for the community to handle the flag in the normal review queues. Moderators can choose to go around this and see recently raised NAA and VLQ flags, but that's going to depend on the moderator and the current state of the mod-flag queue.
Just as an FYI, the mod queue has been hovering around empty for a few days, so it's much more likely mods would look at recent NAAs. When there's a lot of flags, not so much
@Makyen Yes, I know. But some moderators are going this :) So when my flag is 5 minutes old, I'm wondering what's up :D My flag was not 1 hour old when the Answer was deleted by moderator :)
@Scratte I remember those times. You go through a spurt of flags handled in 60 mins or less, then when a flag hangs out a week, you're like "Mods are slacking. I should complain on Meta".
In want of a SO lobby I'm back here again :) Hope you don't mind asking meta questions here once again. I've got a question that's more of philosophical / best-practise than pure technical nature. Looking at https://stackoverflow.com/help/on-topic I guess you could argue the following two criteria are at least partially met: - software tools commonly used by programmers; and is - a practical, answerable problem that is unique to software development
@Anticom Meta is actually a good place for meta questions, for what it's worth. If your question is about best practices, though, it's probably not on-topic on Stack Overflow.
It really depends on how you structure the question. Asking questions is a gamble. The topic primarily has to be of value for future readers and reasonably scoped. There's always some degree of opinions.
@Anticom Er... what is your question, then? What you asked here is "would you say this question is suitable for SO", which is basically the same thing as "is this question on topic"
@TylerH But that question is just a consequence of my original question. "Is question X on topic" is no tthe question i wanted to ask on SO is what i was trying to say :)
I think you might be misunderstanding us. Instead of asking here in chat if a specific question is okay for Stack Overflow, ask the Meta community (post a question about it to meta.stackoverflow.com), instead.
Obviously you should not be asking a meta question on SO itself
aside from that, you can do a search for questions tagged with k8s or whatever subject you're curious about, with some of the keywords that you would use in your question. If there are a lot of questions that aren't closed, then you're more likely to be safe asking the question
If there are a substantial number of questions that are closed, it's best to ask about it on Meta (or just ask on Quora/Reddit instead)
@Scratte Mod flag em. We don't have time to trawl the queues looking for bad reviews. But it either needs to be egregious (i.e. they approved a spam edit) or a pattern.
Should this be deleted or reopened? It was certainly closed due to multiple language tags, and I'm not sure whether R folks would close it if it didn't have awk tag.
@Machavity Thanks for the assessment and also for the heads-up
Okay so I'd like to give something back for the support. I currently got access to Triage, First Posts and Late Answers queues. However I rarely ever looked into them. Is there any way to do a couple of "pair-reviews" of some sort? I'd like to get some assistance to gain some insights into the decision making process when it comes to reviewing questions / answers in those queues.
@Anticom If you haven't seen this already, here's thorough guidance for each review queue. I'd recommend picking a queue, reading the guidance, and just jumping right in -- you can always skip and/or ask here if you're unsure about a review
@desertnaut If a question is tagged awk, is non-trivial and boring, and doesn't include any awk code in it, it is most likely to be closed. Even though it's on-topic and answerable
@Anticom I haven't been in any of those queues for quite some time so I'm not sure, sorry. Someone else in the room might have an answer for you though
I'd start with First Posts. It always has something, and you can help spot bad questions. Remember, you can flag things for closure even without 3k privs
@Anticom Late Answers are easiest.. but read the meta posts about "Not an Answer" flagging. Which are also mentioned in the same conversation as the other link I gave you. I find Questions to be more tricky than Answers.
Guidelines for reviewing First Posts says in Common reasons to edit at the end "Explain our normal procedures to them." Without ever mentioning what the "normal procedures" are (or linking to another resource explaining those)
I guess it's editing the question upon request via comment instead of replying with yet another comment but it's not 100% clear on that
Reminds me of the scene in National Treasure 2 when Nicholas Cage just says a bunch of dumb British phrases to annoy the Buckingham Palace security staff in order to get locked up.
@TylerH It doesn't include "desired behavior" for instance. Currently, it's just some code without any description of what it is supposed to do or what the expected output is. Then there is no "shortest code necessary to reproduce the problem". OP hasn't done their homework of debugging the code. IMHO, there is nothing useful to save there.
Ok jumped into my first question in "First Posts" queue and already have a question about it: I can see that it has been edited already but it still contains "Ok now I gonna show you some code that can help". https://stackoverflow.com/review/first-posts/26848753 Would you edit this again as well or would you leave it as-is?
I'd remove that sentence and change up the wording but since it has been edited already maybe I'm being too strict?
@Georgy Sure, but it wouldn't be helpful and would likely get downvoted :-)
Implicit in any question posted about getting an error is the question "how do I fix this error". Sometimes people don't explicitly say it and users will get a bit cheeky and leave comments like "sounds good. so what's your question?" But... it's still clear what the desired outcome there.
Now I don't write Python so I obviously have to defer to Python SMEs about whether it's a reproducible bit of code. seems to be complete enough to provide an answer, though, judging from the 2 answers.
But anyway, thanks for responding. If others come along and see it/agree, that's great :-) Just wanted to see if I could see what your perspective was on it
@TylerH as a python SME: I think it's borderline. The code seems like it can be copy-pasted, and the offending line is specified, but the error message is paraphrased and we tend to demand a proper, complete traceback with debugging problems involving errors.
that being said the question seems answerable, even if OP should just learn to debug small pieces of code
@oguzismail I get your point but since it's my first question I'm properly reviewing I want to get things straight so I don't get into bad habbits and that almost by definition will take longer than 10 seconds every time
@Anticom Some user will put in a very small edit, and still get it approved. But I do not think it's a good idea unless everything on the post has been dealt with. There are some meta posts about how to edit, if you want more reading material :)
@TylerH Well, in the current state I don't see this post to be useful to anyone except the OP and I don't see how it could be improved. So, I just picked the most fitting reason, so that eventually we could get rid of it.