I mean, you're actually not that far off. Part of the email is about our upcoming 4 day (YES YOU HEAR ME RIGHT) meeting where we plan out what our department is doing for the next 3 months.
days 3 and 4 are 8 hours each, and it's department wide
@akrun You linked to the answer (it should be pointing at the question). I am not sure, but isn't this asking specifically about merging on dates? Is it actually the dupe of r-faq? I haven't had the time to read the question carefully as I am in the middle of some work (taking a break right now), but thought I'd ask that.
@akrun Besides that, we usually try to not get involved when there's dispute, specially between gold-badgers. This is more suited for a post on MSO. Not sure even if a mod-flag would work here. @Machavity @Makyen you guys can explain rules of the room and the mod-flag idea better I bet.
@M-- Thank you for the message. My point is that it is a class conflict in merge and should have been closed. Anyway my flag was declined. Seems like only when I reopen a question, moderators will send some warning messages
@akrun Open/close disputes should be taken to Meta. Unless there's a pattern of abuse, or conflict clearly between users, it's really not something which moderators will normally step in on. Basically, for a single post without extenuating circumstances, it's better to take it to Meta. That's particularly true for disputes over duplicates, where you're basically asking moderators to step in and rule in a dispute on technical matters between two SMEs.
Unless it's really obvious, or the moderator handling the flag happens to be a SME, it's something which will usually be declined, and Meta suggested.
@akrun This has been through a close/open cycle. At this point, it appears to be an opinion dispute between gold badge holders. That's really not something which SOCVR should get involved with in an organized manner. Our best recommendation is to take this to Meta.
@Makyen Thanks. I also get messages from moderators when I reopened a couple of questions that I am abusing the gold badge (even a threatening of suspension). So, I cannot even reopen questions that I may not agree
So basically the moderators have no issue to step in on technical matters when I reopen some questions?
@desertnaut I will read the messages from moderators "It has come to your attention that you utilized your gold tag badge powers to reopen, answer, .... " and at the end of the message "please help us keep the site clean and reduce duplication."
@akrun I see. That's not something I've looked at, so can't really comment on the specifics. Basically, any comment I make here beyond that could be taken the wrong way (due to my lack of information on the specifics). However, if you have an issue with how things have been handled by moderators, the correct place to deal with that is to create a Meta question and/or use "contact us".
@Makyen the issue raised by moderators were not even factual. They stated that I reopened a question to add an answer and then closed it afterwards. When the facts were, 1) the op showed a incomplete example, 2) I posted an answer, 3) somebody dupe tagged it, 4) I reopened because the question was not clear, 5) then the OP clarified and updated the question, 6) I noticed it is a dupe, so tagged it.
My point is that moderator message missed some key information (may be they were give misniformation by the flagged person/persons),
If a question should be closed, leave it closed even if it's closed for the wrong reason. Do feel free to suggest improvements that aren't mentioned in the close reason that the question is closed for.
Although I am neither Moderator nor RO, I think protracted discussions about specific moderation actions taken in the past are not really appropriate for this room. As @Makyen already suggested, such issues are better suited to Meta.
@akrun We're not going to get into details of moderator messages (all the messages in your account predate myself and Makyen being mods). If you have a specific issue, please raise a mod flag and we'll address it in a more appropriate channel
@akrun Thanks for taking it out of SOCVR. (I'm not wanting to pile on, but there's additional information): There are 3 places where it's appropriate to discuss this: in a clear, reasoned response to the moderator message, in a question on Meta SO, or via "contact us" ("contact us" is primarily useful if you feel there's been actual misconduct by a moderator).
@akrun I asked the moderator who sent that latest message to reach out via another message. They should respond soon. Give it a day or so. Just to reiterate, we don't discuss moderator actions in here.
@desertnaut Another time, if you are also going to close-vote, please close-vote then edit, so your edit doesn't inadvertently push the question into the reopen queue on those occasions where the question is closed prior to your edit being applied.
@Scratte Chinese numbering system is still hard enough to get right (it goes 一十百千万 for 1, 10, 100, 1000, 10000, and then above that it starts again in multiples on 10000, not 1000). This is harder.
@Braiam No, I definitely meant close-vote then edit. Edits from users who have close-voted or flagged the question do not push the question into the reopen queue.
@Makyen Then it doesn't matter, if I edited before voting to close, then it wouldn't push to the reopen queue anyways since my edit went through before being closed.
Edit (by close voter) -> question closed -> no push to reopen queue Question closed -> edit (by close voter) -> no push to reopen queue
@Braiam You tried to edit before voting to close, but someone else cast the last close vote. You then submit your edit, not knowing that the question is closed, and now the question is in the reopen queue.
@Braiam This conversation is predicated on the assumption that you are also going to close-vote. If you don't think the question should be closed, then this conversation is moot.
@Makyen Yes, I would also vote to close, but I can edit at any time only if my vote is cast. If I haven't cast it the only way I'm in the clear is if I edited the question before it gets closed.
In all possible scenarios, editing before the question gets closed wouldn't push to the reopen queue.
@Braiam You have continuously ignored the fact that you are not the only person on the planet and that someone else might come along and close the question prior to you clicking "save" on your edit.
@Braiam No. It's not. You claim that trying to edit then close vote has no chance of putting the question into the reopen queue. You are not considering the fact that you are not acting in a vacuum. There are other people who might act. Those people may close the question while you are working on your edit. That's just reality.
@Braiam You are clearly not recognizing that here, because you are objectively wrong, in that you are not considering the possibility that someone other than you may also act. If you were the only possible person to interact with the question, then you would be correct. You're not. Stack Exchange sites have more users on them than just you. They may act. Their acts may affect the state of the question. That's objective reality.
In fact, what Makyen's original recommendation was aimed at preventing has actually happened to me. I saw a question that needed closing (a dupe) but it also needed a wee bit of 'cleaning up' (code-fences). So I thought: No problem: Do a quick edit then cast a close vote. But, by the time I actually clicked "Save" in the editor, a gold-hammer had closed the question. Thus: my edit pushed it into the reopen queue!
... I later came across the very same in the reopen Review Queue; I voted to (erm) "Leave Closed!" ;)
@Braiam For what it's worth, I've been in the exact situation Makyen described: I made an edit to a post with 2 close votes, intending to then cast the third close vote myself. Between when I checked if the post was closed and when I applied my edit, someone else cast a close vote, closing the question and causing my edit to be applied after the question was closed, pushing it into the reopen queue.
It's uncommon, but those of us in this room see a lot more of these posts than most people, and often simultaneously with others, so the probability of it happening to us is much higher.
@JohnDvorak -1, we can fix the easy stuff easily, and we should do so if we're willing. Adding code formatting, trimming please-help begging, removing blatantly irrelevant stuff.
I've even made an edit, then opened the same question in another tab, checked it wasn't closed, flipped back saved the edit intending to close immediately after the edit, only to find that I save the edit and it's been closed in the intervening 3 seconds. So now I try to close first.
@JohnDvorak For me, editing a question I feel should be closed is commonly just to clean up common formatting issues. Making the edit potentially helps the OP get the question into shape, or at least we can hope that they will edit it and make it reopenable. I also find it valuable because it prevents someone who hasn't voted to close or flagged the question from coming along later and making the obvious formatting fixes, which then push the question into the reopen queue, for no good reason.
@Makyen Note that I'm not all that willing to spend a lot of time on such edits, usually only a few seconds to about a 1 minute (OK, maybe a bit more than that).
Overall, I really just wish they'd change the auto-push-on-edit into reopen queue to being the OP only. Making that change would eliminate the convoluted thinking that has to go into handling a question post-close.
@JohnDvorak I sometimes will try to make or approve edits for questions that should be closed under the thought process of "someone else might come along an edit this question after it's closed, which will put it in the reopen queue", which is something I don't want to happen unless it's OP (or usually never, based on the question...)
@Makyen I did not know that. That's awesome; wish it were more publicized on the edit page...
@AdrianMole That would be very mentally tiring if I was thinking about that every time I'm editing a post. I prefer not thinking about it since if I win the race, nothing bad happens, and if I don't I can easily solve it.
I don't feel that adopting good habits is mentally tiring at all, especially when such habits are really quite trivial to adopt. Just get used to the "VTC then edit" concept and all related problems disappear.
@Braiam How can you solve it? You will monitor this post? And be sure to get it opened if they themselves edits the post? Just because you refuse to close vote it before you make an edit?
One situation where I edit before closing is when I cannot read the post because of the formatting. I can't tell if it needs closing until I'm done editing, so I edit first.
Otherwise I've learned to CV before editing.
I suppose in that situation I could open a new tab and vote there
@Scratte 3k users can force a post into the reopen queue again by casting a reopen vote on it.
@Makyen will honestly try to keep in mind, but I regret to say I cannot make no promises; there is a certain level down the sub-sub-sub-rule hierarchy I am willing to go in order to make myself useful here, and what you describe is clearly far beyond my intended reach. I can only guess that, if very occasionally, some unintentional thing happens, we will all have to live with it. If I am guessing wrong, please say so explcitly
So far I was under the impression don't edit after closure, and that's why I was editing before CV-ing; now it turns out I can do this w/o putting the question in the re-open queue, but only ifI have CV-ed myself. Not very intuitive, to be honest...
@desertnaut I appreciate your keeping it in mind. Thank you. You trying to keep it in mind is really all we can ask for. The basic thing is: If you think it should be closed, then close-vote first.
And to be very honest, being called out for a practice that is not good, sensible, or intuitive, while I am investing my spare time trying to keep the site clean is not very amusing