no, no, exception in the sense that it is off-topic, but if we close it, Loungers start raging outside their den, and we don't want that to happen - and in return they promise to keep it spam-free with their own force
Please have a look at this answer. It very well looks like an answer but I do not think it is when I read it completely. It is more like commentary on other post. Is does not propose anything; it just mentions the problem.
@AmitJoshi The question is pretty vague: "Could someone please point me in the right direction?" Making the problem explicit could be considered an answer. I'm not sure, but I wouldn't flag it as NAA.
@Lankymart As to your comment there: posting error messages (or having in-code comments or variable names) in another language than English isn't disallowed here. It's merely discouraged because of the understandability, but we don't force anyone to reinstall their IDE in English.
Point in this case is that the OP probably doesn't even have the error message in English, unless it's a common enough error that chucking it through a translator makes enough sense to get the official English message
@Scratte yea, IIRC the gist was: remove non-English inline code comments, leave variables if they're clear enough (usually when an MCVE is minimal they are), and for the most common errors, there's an error code (like in this case), which you can search for online to get the exact translated message if warranted; often the mere error code number would do
@Scratte yea, basically, as long as the language at hand accepts the variable name, we should to. Maybe with an exception for more arcane languages that allow Cyrillic (e.g. Russian) or Chinese characters
@Adriaan The way I see it is that variable, class or method names are just strings. One could have called them "aaaa", "bbbb", "cccc". That would be English :D So whatever they are called makes no difference :)
@Scratte Usually; although in my own codes I make the attempt to write understandable variable names. I might use ii as a loop index for a three-line loop, but as soon as that becomes a 20 line loop, I'd use row_idx or something
@Lankymart oh, I completely agree on the former. I just mentioned the latter, because your comment comes off as quite strongly suggesting that any non-English content on the site is inadmissible, which it is not, as far as I know, for the case of error messages and other code-related txt (variables, comments etc as mentioned above)
@Lankymart I do not agree with you. You've told them two things. One is correct, the other is not. They're probably more likely to give up their post since they're being asked to find the corresponding English error message, which they may not be able to.
@Lankymart They are. But we don't force anyone to reinstall their IDE in English to be able to provide English error messages. The meta-link Scratte sent up there has a good answer by Robert Harvey about that.
@Lankymart in this case it's rather easy IMO, there's a clear error identifier in that message. This suggests to me that it's a standard message which one could easily Google the translation for (which you can indeed suggest the OP should do for clarity)
If the OP wants to post an error they are encountering on an English language site it is their responsibility to translate that or use a site more suited to them.
@Lankymart yea, I see your point about the errors. That might be a thing indeed. Usually I don't really care, as most errors in my tag (matlab) are clear enough even in another language
@Lankymart doesn't work for many languages though; the post which started this discussion is in German. If the entire post is written in English with an error message in Spanish, I might suggest es.SO, but if the English is very good, I'd just suggest translating the error message, if I deem it necessary
Think there is definitely a mix-up here between what is "code" and what is "errors". To be honest, if the user-provided code that was illegible as all the variables etc are in another language I would still have an issue with that. Same as I would if every variable was a variation of aaaaa.
I work with French clients who have servers that exclusively use the french language that I have to work on, if I get an error on them there's a 0% chance I can translate the error into English, and also a 0% chance I can write a question in french for an fr.SO (if one existed)
What to do with this answer? The answer itself is NAA (me too question), but then they report a solution to their problem in a comment to their answer. (I don't know much about woocommerce)
@Nick there's always going to edge cases, but the site is an English language site and questions are expected to be clear and written in English, including the errors.
where I interpret error to be part of "Variables and the like can be written in any language. A code snippet containing non-English variables that can easily be followed does not require flagging or editing."
@Lankymart Yes, it suggest that one may translate them. I do not see that posts that do not have them translated should be closed due to that. I do see some users saying non-English errors are a reason why they downvote a post.
@Scratte errors are NOT part of the code, stop lobbing the two together. You obviously feel strongly about this, like I already said there's no good canonical answer I can find so why not ask it.
@Scratte I disagree with that duping, since the duped target does not, at this point, address how to deal with errors specifically. Of course it would be the place to add that too, once a consensus is reached.
I found another one, that very confusing: How do we handle console output in non-English languages?. Note: The error in Question is "FEHLER: Syntaxfehler bei »FOR« LINE 1: ...dren WHERE children.categoryid = c1.category_fk ) FOR $2 I..."
To where the Answer says "Leave it alone. The fact that the error identifier is in a different language is irrelevant if the rest of the error is in English." but then goes on to say that "If the entire error message were in a non-English language, then.."
@Scratte I kind of agree here; if the error is understandable, such as here, there's no pressing need to translate. However, if all you get is six lines of pure Spanish, then there is a need to translate
But then the post we have been discussing is fine too, no? There's an error code that's easy to look up. and "Typenkonflikt" isn't far away from Type Conflict :)
@JeanneDark I once had the impression that Cody was resident to ensure things were OK in here. I suppose we could start making huge messes and hope to get Cody back :D
I closed this c++ question as a dupe. OP says they want a modern answer (i.e. c++17 onward), which is not in the dupe. Should it be reopened, or should a modern answer be added to the dupe (maybe ask the OP to put a bounty on it or something?).
Note that ^^ was said without actually looking at the question, but just from the description of the problem (a new question wanting a modern answer to an old question)
Any language but Ruby (to program in), Javascript (to compile into for web) and x86 ISA (to implement Ruby and Javascript in) can die and it would be no loss
@TylerH If you think of the different services exposed as part of Azure as one cohesive API, is this question the same as asking 'which function do I call to do this?'. And isn't such a question on-topic?
[elixir-framework] is a vague and pointless tag. There are currently 145 questions with this tag. Its excerpt is:
Frameworks for Elixir like Dynamo and Phoenix, that leverage the power of the Erlang VM to build high performance and concurrent web applications.
Elixir is a programming language (...
All comment flags can lead to the deletion of a comment. See the FAQ: "If a comment is flagged by a sufficient number of users, it will be automatically deleted."
It seems to me that search on SO currently doesn't work
@Makyen I meant because they don't have 50 rep. Obviously they can go and earn 50 rep like everyone else, but I've come across a few people from Microsoft and others who don't have the rep so resort to posting potentially useful to the OP but still NAA answers.
@TylerH Indeed. I didn't mean those like Uber that direct people over here and we're forever closing tickets only they can handle, but those where they do have that support infrastructure, but people still post over here, then they take the time to try to help. It was just a stray thought. Not looking to change the world...
@Scratte Raise a flag. You can raise a custom flag ("flag for moderator") on a chat message from the popup that opens when you click on the down-arrow indicator (trying to indicate there's a popup available) to the left of each message when you hover over the message.
@Scratte There's no official way to do so. However, ROs can move all (or most) messages from one room into another room. Note that you can only move a maximum of 2048 messages per move API call.
@Scratte A moderator is quite unlikely to do that, unless it's a small number of messages. Without userscripts, doing so for any substantial number of messages would be ... quite a pain in the rear.
@Dharman The usually used close reason for non English language questions is "needs details or clarity". No reasons to apply a custom close reason. Though if it's done like Jon Skeet did with the link to the correct language specific site it's OK IMO.
@EJoshuaS-ReinstateMonica I was not targeting a single user with my question to the room. I was providing an example of 3 different users that commented a solution instead of posting an answer. The only reason that I mentioned Wiktor is because he is the only person of the 3 that I've seen in this room and I felt it was decent to ping him so that I wasn't talking behind his back.
But why are you talking about users at all? If they are breaking the rules or contributing in a negative way to the site then flag and ask moderators to talk to them. There's no point in discussing other users
@mickmackusa I do it too. If I think there's a risk the post will get closed, I'll answer it in a comment. And I've been doing it more and more since I'm at a point now where I do not trust that any Question will stay open.
Would it be helpful to have a specific comment flag that says "this comment is providing a solution and not seeking clarification"? Then as the number of these flags are accrued by a given user, moderators will be able to say: "You have had 59 of your comments flagged as providing a solution. Please post solutions as answers as per site design"
@mickmackusa I am exposing that behavior all the time, when I CV for typos for example. It's problematic and contradictorily to answer such questions if you CV at the same time. Answers (especially upvoted ones) may hinder the process of deleting the question (which we clearly don't want to have here).
I also do not trust that they will stay un-deleted, if they are closed. The 206K viewed duplicate that was deleted as a meta effect made me rethink the entire answer in the Answer box thing.
@mickmackusa But what is the point? Chances are the post is closed and deleted anyway, no?
@πάνταῥεῖ I can agree with that. If you think a question should be closed, then express why you think the question should be closed WITH your resolving comment. e.g. "This question is Off-topic Typo -- you are missing the & before the $."
@mickmackusa Moderators on SO have way too much work as it is to be bothered by small stuff like this. Don't take it the wrong way, but I really don't think this is an issue worth discussing over and you can spend your time in more productive ways. If you see a useful solution posted in a comment then just add an answer of your own with a proper explanation.
Here is the page again: stackoverflow.com/q/63781485/2943403 Notice how the question is on-topic and answered. It has 2 answers, but it should have 5 answers posted. The Stack Overflow Q&A metrics are getting skewed.
@mickmackusa ..and maybe that explain why they posted comments instead. Like I do. I do not want to spend an hour writing an Answer when I can do it in 2 minutes in a comment.
@mickmackusa Ahh.. I'm not sure that is correct. High reputation users do not post a lot of "I got this issue too. Any update?". And yet, I see a lot of those Answers. So the role model behavior is probably not what's going on. Reputation is what users want, so they are inclined to use the Answer box already.
There is also the matter of question clarity. With regex, too often askers do not fully represent the variability of their input data in the question. I often people dropping unexplained regex patterns. This is very different from asking for clarification such as: "Does this regex pattern work for all of your input data? [regex101demolink] If not, please edit your question to show what else needs to be considered"
@Scratte I am not at all talking about "I got this issue too" comments. I am purely speaking on comments that directly answer the question and have no capacity to be downvoted if they are incorrect/suboptimal/ill-advised.
@mickmackusa Yes, but not explaining how things work is not a comment isolated problem. Just search for "Try this" and you'll get more code only Answer than you will ever have delete votes to cover.
@Dharman I'd say that if the question is answered by another page on Stack Overflow, then the question should be closed as a duplicate instead of answering it.
@mickmackusa Funny thing though. I have seen some of my comment-answers being posted in the Answer box by someone else :) I usually delete my comment when I notice this. It solves several issues, no? :)
So, are you complaining that you found something useful in a comment? That's not a bad thing. That's not something worth fighting against. Fight with stuff that should be a comment but is an answer. Things that should neither be a comment nor an answer. Let's remove the bad stuff, and if you find something useful in comments you can always add it as an answer.
@Dharman The problems with answering a question as a comment (in addition to the fact that the UI (placeholder text) says not to) are (to name a few) that there is reduced formatting options, insufficient text to provide a large amount of detail/explanation, and voting numbers only go up -- so bad suggestions cannot possibly be downvoted.
@mickmackusa Sometimes there is no Answer. And a comment is better than nothing. If a user posts a useless comment, there is almost always someone else replying to it saying it's wrong.
But I don't want to lose good advice either. I am sure there will be cases where the comment offers good advice which I am incapable of providing a good explanation of the advice. The advice is the poster's advice -- I prefer to leave them in control and accountable for releasing it. I am not looking to kill content, I want it to be posted in correct place on the page.
When I go searching for stuff on Stack Overflow I have always found as much good information in comments as in Answers. And critique of Answers in comments too. Flag all those a No Longer Needed, and the internet is not a better place, if you ask me.
The problem with old questions with lots of comments is that the UI collapses the comments by default and shows the most upvoted comments only. Then the comments that says "^this suggestion is wrong" is buried and researchers may not see it.
@mickmackusa I understand what you want to have happen. I think it will help if you understand that it takes a lot longer for some of us to post an Answer than a comment. So the choice is not between the comment and the Answer, it's between the comment and nothing.
@Scratte The fact that answers posted as comments under the question is leading to better outcomes for you will not be damaged if the same people post their resolving advice as answers.
If you don't have the time to post a complete answer, then why are you reading questions? Why not go to the Review Queues if you KNOW that you don't have enough time to type out a complete answer?
I flag a lot of comments and I flag comments that do not add any clarity to the post. If a potential solution was posted as a comment then this adds some clarity. If I know how to use it in my answer, I can write a proper answer, and if I can't write an answer then that means there is no answer, there is just a comment clarifying the issue. I can't force users to write answers and I do not want to do that.
@mickmackusa I am one of the "same people". I can't remember when I last posted an Answer. I lost interest in posting Answers.. so yes, if I took the time and did it, maybe it would be better. But I don't.
@mickmackusa Reviewing takes even longer. I read the posts.. I don't skim them.
People look for interesting questions to answer. After some time you get bored with answering the same question over and over again. You post a solution as a comment, downvote and move on.
Another reason not to post a solution as a comment (and I mentioned this in my meta answer posted upstream) is that the OP will read the comment in the first 120 seconds, deem it working, then abandon the page. Then other people doing the right thing will post answers that never get dignified. So this potentially "hurts" multiple people.
@mickmackusa That's not really the message being told again and again and over and again. The message is that posts are not for the author but for anyone else that has the same issue. They will evaluate the post, no? The author can only vote as many times an anyone else, so they are only one user that may find a post helpful.
If we are trying to help many instead of just one, then don't try to speak directly to the OP as comment under the question. Post your advice as an answer to the question -- where researchers are trained to read/look for resolving advice.
@Scratte Don't I know it. But that should be a deterrent for grooming users to understand that ideally all questions should progress to a system-recognized resolution (green tick / closure / deletion).
@mickmackusa I'm trained to look at comments on posts that I have found in a search when I'm looking for Answers. I may be doing it wrong, but I read all the comments as well as the posts themselves.
@Scratte If you are offering resolving advice, post an answer. If you are giving some kind of vague hint that doesn't fully resolve the question, offer it as a comment. Not an overly complex algorithm.
@mickmackusa That is not at all what the help center says. I does not in any way pressure users to check the gray mark. It's only if they wish to do so. Not having an accepted Answer on a post does not mean it should be closed nor deleted.
@Scratte That is because too many people have violated the site design for too long and there is a messy mixture of signal-to-noise sprayed all over the page.
I remember a post about acceptance ratio, that was removed due to too many useless ticks, that worsened the site. So I do not think that no tick means it's against design nor usefulness
@Scratte Like it or not, there are three end points for any question: Green tick (resolved), Closed (question not suitable), Deleted (not worthy of keeping). Anything in between is Unresolved/Abandoned. This status suggests to researchers that there might not be a suitable answer on the page, despite potentially receiving answers. I know this is not a support ticketing system, but there is nothing wrong with seeing things to completion.
Giving people the sense that they should always see their questions progressed to completion, means that volunteers that devote time and energy into posting answers will have the best chance of being dignified and rewarded for their efforts.
@mickmackusa I do not agree that the green tick is necessary at all. If you ask me, it should be removed all together. If a post is suppose to be for everyone, what the author liked the most is irrelevant.
@mickmackusa Right.. except.. I'm not. I don't care who gets the green tick if I post an Answer. I just hope that if I get the green tick that I don't also get a vote.
So.. I try to make my Answers a little less.. appealing.
I have twice as much helpful flags than reputation. I have cast more votes than I have reputation points. Soon I will also have cast more close votes and edited more posts than I have reputation points
Again, I don't want to remove valuable content. I just want content to be written where it is expected. If I flag a resolving comment, I don't want the outcome to be comment-removal. I want the OP to be triggered to write an answer. If this happens too often, I want a moderator to warn the user. If there was such a thing as a comment ban, I'd opt for that.
@mickmackusa Have you considered the consequences? Rest assured that you cannot force users to bend to your will. You may very well just make them stop contributing instead.
And flagging the comment is likely to just removing it. Not converting it into an Answer.. so if that's what you want to happen, flag away.