So ... this chap is asking how to run someone else's tool .... stackoverflow.com/questions/63984800/… Does the fact that the tool is written in python make this a programming question?
I downvoted a post, and left a comment saying why the answer was wrong. Sad part is they replied by saying "Hey, give me back my reputation @10Rep". How does one avoid this?
@Vega I have a dislike for anonymous downvotes. I sure don't like getting downvoted anonymously. So I try to leave a comment. Maybe SO should just implement some "comment anonymously" feature.
@10Rep How about they too comment back anonymously and, taking advantage of that anonymity, with an agressive language (because the one you got was a bit fanny to me)?
For a question asking "where a class is defined in certain package" (e.g. stackoverflow.com/q/63982119/1426539), would typo/non-repro be an appropriate close reason? Should it be left open?
Is this question okay? It looks a bit broad to me, but maybe it's answerable. I also noticed a typo in the usage guidance of tag kiwi-tcms: "it's plugins" when it should be "its plugins".
I occasionally wonder why the → SOCVR Request Graveyard script doesn't also move its own prior messages to the graveyard, just leaving the most recent one.
Is there actually an answer in this PHP/Laravel answer? It's obviously incomplete, but I have no idea if what is there would count as an answer stackoverflow.com/a/63992650
@Braiam Not being prescient, or familiar with PHP, I do not know. All I know is that it doesn't sound finished.
My concern is that I do not want to be on the end of a "declined - flags should not be used to indicate technical inaccuracies, or an altogether wrong answer" message
@AndrasDeak I can get behind some of those, like debian-packaging where you need to interpret Debian policies about packaging, but for the OS itself... nah.
It states what the code is suppose to do, very clearly. Then asks if the code does it. There's code and.. it works ;D So there is an MCVE and it's clear and focused. I has a question.. there's not a single close reason that fits
@M-- It all seems a little bizarre, and that's not even counting the picture of a pigeon. I can't see all of the deleted stuff so I can't really be sure who said what to whom about what, but it's obviously gone off the rails.
@DavidBuck that user has posted their answer 12 times the one you see is the 13th). Every time the other user posted same comments, criticizing their answer. They've deleted and posted again. There were many comments fighting over who has posted comments first, who's harassing, etc. It's a hot mess.
@M-- well, Martijn has certainly done some cleaning up in that mess (even since you first raised the issue here) ... and he seems to be active now, so he's probably dealing with it.
@Machavity I certainly didn't mean to suggest doing them manually. Just an idle thought that the Graveyard script could catch them too to keep the place tidier, but if it's not possible, it's not possible...
@RyanM Never played it. Should have got the C64 version when it came out...
@DavidBuck I suppose it's possible, but I kinda like leaving them TBH. It's a visible sign the ROs are engaged (I'm not sure rene ever really sleeps anyways)
meh... it's difficult to say what is useful about proprietary system like SAP. e.g. stackoverflow.com/questions/9938477/… is a rather bad question but the advice is useful.
If there is no overt justification for closing an older page with a newer page, my gut tells me that the closure is reversed/inappropriate. This is why I want to hear if there is a "good reason" to chronologically reverse the closure.
A question with an answer was closed as a duplicate of another question with similar answer that has better explanation and other alternative answers. What's wrong with that?
The one that outweigh the other in the later two question is preferable to be the target. If the first fails then questions may be related but are not duplicates.
Seems rather unfair that Alex answered a unique question, then 3 years later it is deemed that the question that he answered is a duplicate of a page that didn't exist when he answered. I know folks say that a page's birthday shouldn't matter, but in this case it feels wrong.
@mickmackusa Stack Overflow is not about the users. It's about the content. We really do not care who asked or answered what. The reputation is only for giggles and to give you more work as a caretaker.
Not often I agree with Braiam, but I am with him 110%
Which moves us to the next issue: you should always make sure that the questions you answer are the best they can be so they become the canonical for the issue the question is about.
Hmm. As I read the questions again, I think the questions are related but not asking the same thing. The earlier one wants to produce a multidim array from the dot notation. The later one wants to traverse a pre-existing multidim array as dictated by the dot notation. In other words, the newer page does not ask the dot notation to be formed into an array -- only read as a path.
@EJoshuaS-ReinstateMonica it has been closed as a "not likely to help future visitors", which I think is appropriate since the answer is, "study the basics"
I generally always land on a no-code howto Question every time I need to know something, and find a good Answer.. I've landed on a few debug Questions, but they generally don't have any Answers I can use.
Maybe I'll write a self-answered Super User question for "how to install mercurial without root" since I don't think there's a comprehensive answer anywhere...
It's mostly that Super User answer I linked, but you also have to modify the launch script to use the local python location.
@RyanM Funny.. I get directed to the target and have to click the linked post on the sidebar to get back to the actual post :) But the MSO post is still ignored by moderators :)
@Scratte I mean to some degree it's a problem staff need to solve, since it's network-wide policy (and can't be edited by site moderators), and I think the suggestion from the dupe target is excellent.
@RyanM I know that, but.. the questions are not answered. There's no one who will say "Yes, please ignore all plagiarism on Questions", but also no one will say "Those declined flags were a mistake by the handling moderator". Not sure how staff can change that.
Mainly, it would be nice for staff to clarify what the rule that's supposed to be being enforced is. Moderators are currently stuck trying to interpret ambiguous rules, and coming up with different answers as a result.