@Xnero I don't exactly have the time to do that for you (and you can post in there as well), but you can always check with SOBotics and see if they want to help you keep it undeleted
> Rooms will exist indefinitely, so long as there is at least one person actively talking in the room. A room is considered worth retaining if it has more than 15 messages by at least 2 users.
It really seems like a moderator undeleting a room should count as activity, even if they don't subsequently post in it... I guess the moral of the story is that moderators handling chat room undeletion requests should also post a message when doing so.
@10Rep Yeah, a nontrivial chunk of mine is from a single answer to a featured post that a lot of people liked. The rest is answering random posts, and a few questions.
I got a very surprising amount for telling someone to stop changing "How to..." to "How can I..."
@10Rep Yep. I think it got more than it otherwise would have due to the asker continuing to press the issue (including a few post edits that bumped it). But also because the dialog managed to remain largely civil, the post wasn't simply deleted for being too ranty.
There were comments under my post that were wiped, though. I don't think they were super ranty, but I don't disagree with removing them, since they didn't add much, either.
Given that this has been closed after multiple attempts, then reopened by a mod, should it be closed again? (I thought the closeworthiness of a question was determined by the question, not the answers). stackoverflow.com/questions/5486789/…
@DavidBuck I can't see why it got re-opened to begin with although it does appear it got 3 re-open votes before the mod re-opened (and immediately protected) it. Anyway, it looks way too broad to me so I've started the close process again...
@DavidBuck By that standard, we should close What is a NullPointerException and how do I fix it?. The biggest issue with the one you linked is that the accepted answer really should be changed. Actually using the code there, as the additions to the answer note, is bad advice.
I don't see the value in closing useful canonicals. Is the point to tell people that they're too vague?
I could ask a specific version of that question that isn't too broad and is answered by the second answer there, but I bet you it'd be closed as a duplicate of that question, and probably rightly so.
Something like "How do I display a splash screen of an image on a solid color background while the components of my app are running their onCreate functions?"
@RyanM But "How do I make a splash screen?" surely could have hundreds of possible answers, therefore it's the poster child for Needs Focus. I note that the question you linked has become a community wiki which might be the answer?
As a hypothetical, how would you handle the question I proposed above?
I'm asking genuinely, not rhetorically: I'm conflicted on how to handle these myself and want input.
I also don't think "has hundreds of possible answers" makes things need focus. It's "requires solving multiple problems, each of which should be its own question."
I'd probably dither as to whether to skip it or select Needs Focus. To my (non-Android) eyes, it does have a degree of specificity that I'd probably leave to SMEs.
The point about "hundreds of possible answers" is that a question that has so many options that are left open, isn't specific enough, IMHO, as it means that people must be making opion-based answers, not specific answers.
As a matter of interest, what do you think the best course of action is for the splash screen question. I assume the options are: Leave closed, vote to reopen, mod flag for historical lock, mod flag for conversion to community wiki?
Yeah, I'm torn. I don't think it really fits the use-case for community wiki, as the answers were created largely by the original posters rather than a community effort. It really would be nice to get people to stop re-posting the same things over and over, so I wouldn't mind a lock of some sort (it's already protected, but that's little protection).
I think that the problematic types of opinion-based questions is where the only difference between the answers is preference, which isn't the case here.
One of the answers objectively works a lot better than the others (it shows up more quickly and doesn't add a second to your app's loading time).
The problem here is mostly that people keep posting answers that retread what's already there, which CW would help with since they wouldn't be tempted by rep
If I were a moderator, I'd probably delete many of the answers, but that's an unreasonable ask for a flag.
The issue with closing these and saying that they could be re-asked with more specificity is that they're already answered here, and it's not clear that it's useful to force it to be reanswered.
This might be an interesting meta post, since it's a recurring pattern. Definitely appreciate your thoughts :-)
There are plenty of weak, older questions with lots of potentially useful answers so this is definitely a decision that will recur. Like that one, I imagine a lot of these have been VTC several times over the years, as well.
@RyanM it seems to me that closing the question helps prevents lots of NATO that add no value. It's not as if the question will get roomba'd and with that many upvotes it would take a lot of effort to delete it.
@Nick @RyanM As this has just popped up from FP, this question has 52 upvotes and 26000 views, but it appears to be POB. What are the merits of leaving it alone? stackoverflow.com/q/6449072/7508700
Well, the question says, I think this (for this reason), he thinks that (for that reason), what do you think? The accepted answer includes "For most apps", "Depends", "a special case", "Personally", "Its usually good" and finishes with "Short answer: it depends.". If all that doesn't indicate a POB question I don't know what does...
If that question was posted today it would be closed within 5 minutes.
@DavidBuck Yeah, that's a great example of "the only difference between the [possible] answers is preference." Also, it's well established that software architecture questions are off-topic on SO.
(and also the new answer is NAA)
this question/answer pair seem like they'd likely even be too vague for Software Engineering
@Scratte Thanks! I already tried it out (who knows, it may be gone tomorrow) first posts, late answers and triage to see how they work. Mostly skipped, flagged a bunch. But I passed all audits (3 NAAs in late answers and spam in triage (it's kind of funny to see the full spam post though it's been deleted)).
@RyanM Thank you! But it's nothing to be impressed about. You just have to browse the front page from time to time (I have no ignored tags, so I get to see everything).
@Scratte When they look less terrible, they are probably from the queue
Tip: When you flag a post from the queue.. wait a few days before requesting them for closure here. This way the posts that would natualy be closed anyway don't take up votes on the room, and you can close more posts total.
This is actually usually what I do as well for the queue ^ sometimes it's something that I expect people will answer if not closed, like typos, so I'll send them here immediately, but usually I wait
Been away from SO for a bit and wanted to make sure I'm still aligned with the community on flagging. How do you handle a answer that duplicates the key content of an existing answer? python Is this a plagiarism flag?
IMO should have just been comment (but user can't comment yet). (also just realized this room was the wrong room to ask this question, so please forgive)
I'm no Python expert but that answer actually may have value on its own by claiming that import math is not necessary and using pow(i, 2) instead of math.pow(i, 2) as OP and other answerer do.
Weird question: can suspended users still edit their posts?
I recently encountered a case where someone repeatedly vandalized their own post (I won't link to the exact case per room rules). The diamond suspended them for 7 days and locked the post for 7 days - I was curious why both were necessary.
@Scratte True, the presence of the code snippets makes it more risky, but the person is obviously referencing another answer, saying thanks, and doesn't add any additional information. Flagged.
@MarcoBonelli I'd say it's in between not a programming problem and a typo. If it's a misunderstanding, it's a math problem. I wouldn't call those really bad reviews. If they had found the issue, they could have seen the problem, like JeanneDark did. But in my opinion, that's outside the scope of reviewing.
@MarcoBonelli But we're not suppose to find a solution when reviewing, are we? I mean lots of reviewers to them at 10 seconds each.. should we really favour only the closers?
@MarcoBonelli Effort isn't a close reason. It's just a downvote reason.
Who said that? I only said that when reviewing one must pay enough attention to actually understand what is going on, not just look at the post for a few seconds. That doesn't help anybody.
@MarcoBonelli No, I don't. Then I try to find an Answer and if I can do that then maybe I'll pick "Looks OK" still knowing I may get suspended for it. I think that's a problem.
@Scratte there are obviously thousands of garbage questions which do not take 15s to read... for those who do, one should try and understand the question. This is what I usually do.
I mean there's no need for Triage really. The bot that puts the posts there, should just close them when they come in, because when one picks "Looks OK", it's almost like it's a self-suspension anyway.
Like I said before, I think twice before casting a Looks OK because that requires more time and analysis than a random low quality post that should be closed. Of course the ratio is usually 9/1 close/ok..
@Scratte Rubber duck debugging also applies to asking Meta questions. Often in the process of trying to frame my question, and seek posts to cite to clarify my post, I find my answer already in one of those posts.
Plus for that one, I smell-tested it here, got one "me too" and one prospective answer.
@DontKnowMuchButGettingBetter Hmm... I don't think it's a good idea to close questions as duplicates of What is a debugger and how can it help me diagnose problems? when the questions don't ask about debuggers. I would close those as Needs debugging details.
@Scratte No, it means I've abandoned all independent thought, drunk the collective kool-aid, and don't post anything which I'm afraid would go against the collective opinion, right or wrong. ;)
The last Smokey report really only lacks disclosure. It seems otherwise 'reasonable'. (Sorry - this one: stackoverflow.com/a/48077266/10871073). Or maybe not - seems like a habit?
Can somebody remind me: When a moderator deletes a spam-flagged post and it is marked on the timeline as "via Vote" - does that mean the spam flags were 'disputed' and the poster isn't hit with the -100 penalty?
@Scratte Well, Martijn seems to have 'caught' all of that recent batch, and the user doesn't appear to have had a recent rep. hit. So I guess we do have moderators with some sympathy.
@AdrianMole If the post is deleted by a moderator (i.e., not Community), then the penalty is not applied. If the post is shown to 10k users as having been flagged as spam/abusive, that would suggest that they did not dispute the flags. If they delete without explicitly disputing the flags, the flags will be marked helpful.
@RyanM Yeah - I thought it was something like that. But it is a bit confusing to me, still. I remember Cody trying to explain it in here: something like "We understood why you flagged it as spam but decided it was 'innocent' enough to avoid the -100 penalty."
A common case of this is undisclosed affiliation on answers that aren't pure spam from people who have other positive contributions, especially if there's a bunch of them.
It is spam, per the rules, but applying the penalties would be overly harsh, so they just delete without applying the penalties.
@RyanM Eh, undisclosed affiliation isn't spam, if the content is relevant to the site.
If I happen to have created a library that solves a problem in python, and someone asks about that problem, I can perfectly answer with how my library solves the problem.
A good rule of thumb: if anyone else had posted the answer and it would be considered a valid answer to the question asked, it is not spam.
Is this spam? Username is obviously the same as the website ... but the question is asking for a (reliable) download source. (Maybe Q should be closed, but that's another issue.)
@Dharman why do you think this one is worth keeping? it's yet another forgetting to quote a string parameter question where OP should be using prepared statements anyway...
@Dharman yeah but the answer doesn't explain what the problem was, and it doesn't bother to state that the correct way to solve it is with a prepared statement, it just goes ahead and implements the code with no explanation. I'll correct the target but I'm still going to vtd
@Dharman I can't make enough sense of the original question to decide if the edit makes any sense. The edit seems to have been made to make the question fit the answer.
@Scratte it's just unclear to me as to whether they want a regex to match any of those 6 addresses, or whether they want one to match all 6 of them occurring in one line of text.
@Scratte that's certainly also the person who edited the question's opinion (they edited it to match their answer). but the title asks "how to specify 6 ip addresses in 1 line" which can definitely be interpreted the other way.
@Nick Yes, it can. I was surprised by that interpretation though :) I see the commenter also found the same "interpretation" as the answerer and I did.
@Braiam It is, I've seen mods delete many answers for exactly this reason (though generally without applying penalties). They must be either edited or deleted. I've occasionally salvaged the answers myself, but if I don't do so, they're almost always deleted. I reported an entire account recently for doing this repeatedly, and the moderator deleted almost every answer I didn't edit.
The ones I edited I couldn't quite bring myself to have deleted, since they were good answers relating to an obscure topic, but I'd be surprised if they weren't deleted without my edits
@RyanM Again, normative behavior may not be the same as positive behavior. There's nothing on the site that indicates that your answer would be irrevocably deleted.
If there was, the Jon Skeet couldn't answer any question with noda time