@Makyen I do, but the explanation behind the "needs focus" does not do justice to the expression, hence some reactions from puzzled OPs, like here, are not to be unexpected
think we have discussed in the past, but no conclusion was reached
in other words, "needs focus" <> "multiple questions"
@desertnaut It's not really that no conclusion was reached, it's that we can't do much more about them. The primary close reasons (i.e. the ones on the first page of the close popup; the non-site specific ones) are established by SE and used on every site on the SE network. SE made the choice to change them at about the same time they made changes to the post notices. Personally, I find the changed version of the primary close reasons be overall substantially worse than what they used to be.
@desertnaut Yeah, I'm sorry that my initial comment was more clear that I was being facetious. I should have at least included a :; or :) with my initial comment.
@desertnaut Yes, in the name of being more "welcoming", the reasons were changed to being substantially more confusing for both close voters and question authors.
@desertnaut I was definitely not trying to "call you out". My intent was more of "commiserate with you" in a poor situation.
An alternative justification for the change is that it's more objective: asking multiple questions doesn't require a subjective judgement about when the scope is too broad. But of course, that doesn't address the issue of a single question with extremely broad scope, such as "how do I classify lung cancer using an SVM model in CT scan images?" (real question, paraphrased down to a sentence)
I'm not exactly sure how to reconcile both of those things: we already have a problem with people thinking that any question that's not a specific debugging issue with code for an attempt is out of scope. This is a real problem for content quality, because it often eliminates the sort of questions that are useful to a wide range of people.
Half-baked attempt: "This question either includes multiple questions in one, or it is so broad that it cannot be reasonably addressed in the space available for an answer. It should focus on one specific problem only."
Ideally, it would link to a page giving advice on question scope (e.g., if your question would require a new software library to be created, several hundred lines of code to be written, or scientific research to be done to create a way of doing it, it's probably too broad)
...or heck, just add that onto the end. An extra sentence won't kill anyone.
@desertnaut I really don't have enough knowledge about the subject area to render an opinion about the specific question.
I can say that I don't really like the idea of questions which ask the type of question which they are asking: "Is this code an implementation of X", as it doesn't really seem like such questions would be all that useful for future visitors (not that most debugging questions help anyone other than the OP). However, I don't see that questions like this one are explicitly excluded from being on-topic, per se.
The irony is that if their implementation had not worked, they would have posted one with an error or a wrong result, and that would have been a perfect fit for a debugging Question.
@Scratte Yes, but a debugging question which says: Here's my code; here's what it's supposed to be doing; here's what it's doing that I think is wrong; is substantially more narrow than "Does my code implement X", particularly where X isn't very commonly known.
@Makyen Then I think I missed the point of the post. Are they asking how the algorithm works? If so, then I agree that it's probably not for Stack Overflow.
Trying to figure if one asks "Is my implementation correct for bubblesort?" would be OK or not.
That would be transferable to a debugging Question, as one can simply mess it up and produce an unsorted result, no? And then get an Answer with a "fixed" implementation of the desired algorithm.
@Scratte But, you'd have to very clearly indicate what your intended operation was and how your code was deviating from that, not just say "it doesn't implement this".
@Makyen Yes, but.. if one clearly states that it's an attempt to implement a specific algorithm, bubblesort, it's not really very difficult to say what the intended output is :) I didn't investigate what that other one is about though.
@Scratte I agree with Makyen that the OP would have to be specific about what they think wasn't working.
user10957435
However, if the OP has a a bubble sort algorithm implemented and wants feedback for it, that would be a good question, but probably only on Code Review.
@Yatin As a reminder, please don't downvote just to cause a question to be deleted by Roomba. If you feel a post legitimately should be downvoted based on it's content, that's fine. However, the motivation for downvoting shouldn't be "this will make it Roomba". OTOH, it is OK to approach it from the other direction: "The quality of this question is poor, so I will downvote. Oh, now that it will Roomba in a few days, I'm not going to bother with other actions."
That may sound like a fine line to be walking, but it is important.
@AmitJoshi When the thing that is preventing it from being Roomba'd is that a question or answer is not at a low enough score, please don't include that information in your requests. There was a brief time during which the Request Generator included that in del-pls requests, but we found that including it made it too likely that people would downvote specifically to cause a question to Romba, which is something we strongly discourage.
@Makyen Ok I will keep that in mind. I had downvoted the 2nd request because it was opinion based. Although I will admit I downvoted the 1st one just to allow it to Roomba.
I am personally unable to cast a close vote on stackoverflow.com/questions/64420305/… because I already voted to close on Oct 19 ... Is it acceptable to reraise it here at some point? How long should I wait?
@Makyen Ok; got it. My objective was to provide information why the roomba will not work. One question. I see many request here include additional information with del-pls requests; so I followed that path. Is it enough just saying "-del-pls "No roomba" [link](about:blank)"?
@rene Yep. What we are not supposed to do here are things that are easy to see would be effective, so people re-discover them. :;
@AmitJoshi np. There's a fairly long history here of trying things and finding out that they shouldn't be done. :; We all learn from experience. That you and @Yatin happened to also try things which have previously been found to be undesirable isn't a big negative reflected on either of you. Just learn that they are not things we should be doing and move forward.
We, on the other hand, should consider if there's a way to communicate these sort of things to users prior to them encountering them. The obvious place to put such information is in the FAQ. We should probably include something there about both issues.
That is what I was thinking. There was a PayPal link hiding in there. But that is it. A PayPal link to well, the PayPal website and not an account... So... not worthy of spam flag
@DavidBuck "very.poorly.it’s server IP address could not be found." :) But it seems I was wrong.. "http://127.0.0.1:1566/e[enter link description here][1]nter code here [1]: http://paypal.com" <-- actual content of the post.
"nested classes are simple to understand just go with the basic first I am definitely sure that you learn nested classes easily. for vaping you can visit on vapeon9.com"
@Yatin You can make the answer community wiki, since it's not yours. It's what I normally do when I find a comment which solved the question, but hasn't been added as answer. Alternatively you can of course ask the original author of the comment to add an answer, so that you can accept that
Yeah it is long story... basically there was a heated debate of sorts under an obvious homework question. They were there and were more or less adding fuel to the fire. I @ them and said "Please don't add fule to the fire" soon the post was deleted...
The OP was definetly in the wrong (they admitted that they knew nothing about programming) but I didn't like how they (the commentor) and another user were almost trolling the new user :/
@Scratte can you remove that upvote from my question please. I rather not have it
But aside from that. Someone votes on a post.. it's not your call to decide what the score of a post should be. You can influence the score of a post that is not yours by voting. You just have to accept the score on post that you wrote. That's how it's suppose to work :)
If you really, really don't want the reputation, you could flag your question and ask for it to be converted to community wiki.
but...it was your question originally (you asked it in a comment), so the reputation for the question is rightly yours. that the answer came from elsewhere doesn't make your question any lesser.
@cigien Disclosure is a fig leaf. All they needed to do was say "I work for X in this field". But they link to their own company twice, and for no really good reason
@AmitJoshi I'd leave it. Even if the links go bad, there's enough material there to find an answer using what's left. The linked page doesn't have any handy blocks to further the answer
Do you mean they posted something like "Posting this because the question will be closed soon, I'll edit a real answer into this soon"? That sounds like a problem
If I remember correctly you can post an answer up to 4 hours after the question got closed, but you need to either re-enable the submit button in inspector or have your own UI
@CertainPerformance No, but they said "Here's a solution:". That's it. And then posted an actual answer 5 min later. (Which seems to me to be the same thing). But I think Adriaan's point is good; no point flagging till there's a pattern.
@cigien That isn't so uncommon, people do occasionally accidentally submit answers before they're actually fully composed. This is even more frequently seen with comments. Could well not have been deliberate.
@CertainPerformance I'm certainly happy to give them the benefit of the doubt. I just found it a bit fishy since the question was very obviously (to me) going to be closed soon.
@Dharman I would say that Maven is on-topic as a programming tool (there are nearly 80,000 questions in the tag). The question is whether installation problems re: programming tools are on-topic.
@Dharman The "official" stance?!?.. Remember the Thanks™ "feature"?!? :) I'd think Stack thinks emojis are fine. Well.. except if you're trying to make a point.
Do you know how much it annoys me to see poorly written posts? I try to focus on development but I still Google stuff. When I open a and I see Hope it help, kind Regards Johnny I remove it instantly and I forget what I was searching for.
@Yatin I've seen many posts closed (even with code provided) because they were deemed only to help the one person asking. Too specific to be of general use.
@user3150635 You should not asnwer this question until the person who asked it provides an English version. No one else can translate it. I rolled back the edit
@user3150635 We require that every question on Stack Overflow is asked in English. The person who asked it must speak English to an extent that they can communicate in English.
@user3150635 Which is exactly why we close questions. We want to prevent people from answering them
@Yatin Indeed. There are some serious problems with that dupe target. It often gets used by gold-hammers to close questions that should be closed (easier than waiting for 2 other users). If you have suggestions for how to tackle this, please let me know, I'm quite interested in solving this if possible.
@Tiago This room is not the right room for your question. You may find a super user chat someone on chat.stackexchange, but make sure you read the room rules, before you post a message in the room.
@user3150635 No, Stack Overflow is not a personal tutoring site. We do not offer personal help and there is no way you can reach out to them personally.
@user3150635 Yes, because we want Stack Overflow to be a repository of useful questions and answers that are easily searchable. There are very strict rules about the content that can be posted here.
@Yatin Yes, it's not an easy problem to fix. I have a decently sized list of questionable uses of this target (and all of them in c++, I don't have a sense of whether this is an issue in other tags, but I suspect it's similar). I've been meaning to make a meta post about it, but apart from complaining about it, and saying something should be done, I don't have any constructive suggestions.
Well, banning it outright would work, but the platform won't take that, I've been told :(
@Scratte I don't think so. It is a useful question. And while it might be overused as a dupe target, it is a valid target at times. Just a couple of days ago I used it to close a question that said, "this code throws a segfault, what do I do"? I'm not inclined to throw the baby out with the bath water ;)
Then you should probably keep collecting your list until you have enough to categorize them into wrong target/reason, shoudn't have been closurd, and fits.
@cigien yep I agree with cigien here we can't just delete that post... I was wondering if this keeps happening with this one exact question then the chances are that some specific user/s are doing it... maybe a moderator can talk with them about it :/