@πάνταῥεῖ @πάνταῥεῖ Can you take a look at the question? I think it's ok now. Still a bit broad, but is answered quite comprehensively.
@Yatin I edited that bit out of the question, but that might mean editing out the last paragraph of the answer responding to it, and I don't want to do that :( It's sweet and helpful :)
1) How do I insert a number into data? 2) How do I move from one node to the next? 3) How do I call the Node class in main and print out the data values?
You can ask 3 questions and move the relevant content of the answer in the new questions
@πάνταῥεῖ Oh, I didn't know that. The other day I just removed a request I made accidentally, and an RO said it was fine. Maybe they meant only in that particular case.
@Braiam I think the issue there is, those 3 individual questions could not really be answered very well on their own. It makes more sense to explain it all together, as done in the answer. And in a sense, the OP is really only asking one question.
@cigien The thing is... have you seen the views? Unlike many other "bad questions with good answers" that question is underwhelming. There's no difference between a deleted question and a question that can't be found.
At that point, our energy is better spent making useful questions that people can find. Also... that whole questions smells like OP doesn't know how to use linked lists which have several better resources on the internet
@Braiam There seem to be 2 parts to that question. First is the quality of the question, which I think is ok. The second is valid, it doesn't have many views. Speaking for myself, I intend on adding that post to my dupe list. If I have cause to use it enough, maybe that will change slowly. One can hope :)
Now here's a very dodgy audit. First Posts Queue. I was so tempted to just pile in and make the required edit ("wandering" -> "wondering") ... but then I noticed it was Haskell, so I checked the link and, voila!
@Braiam What would be your view on a post that was intended to be a canonical "How does a linked-list work?". Let's say the question and answer was posted by the same user.
@cigien That particular point was raised on Meta a while ago. Somebody complaining about all the "linked list" questions in C. So somebody else suggested they write a self-answered canonical.
@Braiam Indeed :) But more specifically, would you vote to close, vote to delete? I'm just curious.
@AdrianMole In fact, it was brought up in this room within the last week, if I'm remembering right :) There does appear to be some interest in that materializing.
It would be a good thing to have, but quite a bit of work involved. One could just end up effectively paraphrasing the relevant chapter from "The C Book" (by Brian & Dennis).
@cigien When the question is basically answered by reading a book, isn't that text book too broad. Why are you suggesting that it would be anything different?
@Braiam Specifically, I'm imagining a canonical "how does a linked list work?". It's fairly short, but dense, and it even has pictures, and the reader truly understands the fundamentals when they walk away from it. I can't imagine it well enough to write it, but I think it exists. Maybe I'm a romantic :p I certainly wouldn't vote to close a post that came anywhere close to achieving that.
@AdrianMole Yeah, I've read that, it's very encouraging :) But actually writing one is hard. And who has the time to write a short letter? Or however the saying goes :p
The post we're discussing might be the closest thing I've seen to an actual reasonable canonical. Maybe I'm imagining it.
Is it NAA when someone says thanks but describes what made their code work (which is one of the answers to the question)? stackoverflow.com/a/64601706/9473764
@cigien hence my original question... I'm tempted to just downvote and vtd it... and possibly flag it NAA as well... I was hoping for more feedback but it seems most of the usual suspects are not hanging out here at the moment
@cigien Yes, it's acceptable. "Grok" is hacker / Science Fiction slang for "deep/intuitive understanding". It originated in Heinlein's Stranger in a Strange Land.
@Makyen Thanks, I didn't know the etymology, and I've read that book :p I was wondering if it was acceptable slang though. I take it it's sufficiently in common use to be ok then?
Admittedly, the title of the question will probably be better without it, as "grokking" will not be something many people are going to be searching for, but it's not something that needs to be removed.
@cigien As far as I know, there are no negative connotations.
@Makyen Right, I meant acceptable as in, do people generally know what it means. So, it's ok, but I can edit if I think it makes the title clearer?
@Makyen Hmm, that's a good point. It's not just whether it's clearer, but whether it makes the title more searchable that should be considered as well. Ok, I'm going to edit that.
@cigien I personally like it. You're probably going to get objection from the OP if you remove it. However, the question is probably better with it removed, as it's not something people will be searching for, unless there's something more directly tied to its use than just that the OP happens to know the term.
@cigien I'd probably edit it out too, but I'd leave a comment explaining why.
@Makyen How about I try to ask the OP to change it? If that works, it's a more searchable title, and there's no question of them objecting. And no, there's no additional meaning to its usage in this case.
@cigien Yes, it's something which moderators can do. Moderators can perform edits, delete, and some other actions, to any chat message. If you're not a moderator, then you have 2 minutes to edit or delete your own chat messages after you post them. After that, the only thing that can be done (other than flagging) by a non-moderator is that a room owner can move the message to another room where the room owner has the ability to post messages.
@cigien np. Great! That sounds like it worked out well.
@cigien Yeah, it's a nice perk, but, of course, comes with the responsibility to be more active moderating other areas of chat, so it's a trade-off. :;
@cigien I generally find that people are usually amenable to politely worded requests. Obviously, it doesn't always work, but it's a really good place to start.
I wrote this answer to a question. When I first looked at the question I though OP had a genuine problem and I suggested the "old solution" as a possible method to get the answer. But then I later realized that all OP had to do was to add a time delay for the webpage to load. That makes this question a very common duplicate question. I didn't flag it as duplicate as I should have and OP accepted it.
Now I think I should delete my answer but I wanted to know if it would be considered vandalism...
@Yatin Can one even delete an accepted answer? But to address the issue, I think you can make the answer a community wiki, and then cv-pls as a dupe. You should get a confirmation, but I think that's allowed according to the rules here, and would achieve what you're trying to do.
@Yatin Like I said, I'd rather you got a confirmation that it's ok before doing that, I'm still learning the ropes myself. You could ping Makyen I suppose, they're the last active RO.
Does this question look like spam? The website doesn't look like it is trying to sell me anything right now and is under development. The affiliation is also clear as day... So I am thinking no
Is this answer NAA? I read the comments but am still somewhat confused. They seem to just have created an MRE (and also actually asked a new question). They say it is some kind of answer. (the javamaven question asks: "What can I do in order to have a JAR file with all the dependencies and my obfuscated code?")
@JeanneDark Yes, that is definitely NAA - they say in the comments "it is not a new question it is the same problem". They are using the answer box like a reply function in a forum.
@tripleee That makes sense. What about cases like this, where there's probably not an obvious dupe target? And assuming someone doesn't add a useful answer ;)
@tripleee Please don't use "GMTC", or other things which stand for "Give me the codez" in requests. It's something which we don't permit in requests, because, in the past, it's generally been used as a derogatory way of referring to a question.
@tripleee The OP has 2 problems, they are mixing recursion and iteration, and they are discarding the return value. I would actually be surprised if such a specific dupe existed, in any language for that matter. I've been surprised before though :)
@JeanneDark Yeah, that's a bit annoying, but can be solved by adjusting the z-index for the popup or the or the action bar. Sounds like a reasonable thing to report as a bug.
@Makyen I was unaware of this. Is phrasing like "cv-pls OP is asking to give them code" ok? And is there a list of these terms somewhere? I can't find anything in the FAQ, maybe I just missed it.
@cigien while the wording isn't exact, other question that make no effort end up being too broad...So that can be a different wording for essentially the same idea.
@bad_coder Sorry, I should have been clearer. I'm asking about acceptable language in requests. e.g. I can understand there being historical reasons for such language being not allowed, but there might be other examples that I'm unaware of, and I'm wondering if there's a list.
@cigien if you search on meta.SE there was an historical tag called "plz send teh codez" but Rene summed up the key ideas, wording isn't important to that end - OP might as well know next to no English.
@cigien Yes, just state boring facts, free of opinion, why a question should be closed. Once content is posted we shouldn't care anymore about the user.
Is this question typo / no repro? It also lacks a programming language tag but I guess it's c. I guess the problem with no such file or directory is sprintf(name,"%03i.jpg",count); with that .jpg file not being present.
@JeanneDark While that is not new, there's another bug that I've noticed. If one picks "a duplicate" on the first level, the page will scroll to the bottom effectively hiding the dialog completely above the top of the screen. It does not do that if "Duplicate" from the second level is picked.
@Scratte With first level you mean "Flag" and with second level "Needs author edit"? I finished my Triage reviews for today, so I can't check. In case of duplicates, I clicked "Flag." It's possible that happened but I'm not sure.
@JeanneDark Heh.. Yes, I suppose. Though Flag will not prevent your from picking "needs improvement" in the first level in the dialog and go to the second.
I found them a little confusing, so I've merged the two buttons into one big one that opens the normal flag dialog, which is "Flag" now.
@JeanneDark It's just been deleted, so I guess the answer was yes. It did seem to amount to "Google recursion and debug your code" which doesn't seem like an answer, more a "the answer's somewhere over there"
I've just tried it on this review (I didn't read the post, so I'm not actually going to pick a target). Picked "Flag" then picked "a duplicate" <-- getting scrolled past the post and dialog.
@JohnDvorak I don't think it can ever be provably inspired by... but they did have the same column names in the sample output as mine despite having slightly changed ones in their version of the query
Please don't use the "Post Your Answer" button to submit content which does not attempt to answer the question at the top of this page. If you want to comment on the answer you copied, click "add a comment" underneath that answer instead. — tripleee1 min ago
to my understanding, bringing up a post for discussion should always be okay; there is admittedly a grey zone where some members of the room may infer a cv-pls even when you didn't post one, but I don't think this one is particularly in that zone
I have no idea what this is trying to tell us: "Please help to run by Yarn install, try this Thanks" (doesn't seem to have much to do with the ubuntu raspberry-pi question except for "install") (flagged it as NAA btw. I wonder if in such cases VLQ would be more suitable)
@JeanneDark I hate that phrase, lividly, on SO. Why should I, the OP, or anyone else for that matter "try this"?!? It makes the answer sound like an unverified slight of hand, especially since it's usually followed by an unexplained code dump
@Adriaan It's not great, for sure. Unfortunately there are several such phrases that you come across just so people add some text to their code. (the worst is in code-only questions when they just not format a part of the code)
What to do about an answer like this? It doesn't really answer the question, reads like an ad (but contains no link) and just copy-pastes some text (google search shows several sites with that content).
@JeanneDark plagiarism maybe... Kinda doubtful about spam. Their profile clearly says that they are affiliated. So it is kinda undisclosed affiliation... I am also not sure in this case
@Yatin definitel delv material, it was posted to promote a URL and is useless and pointless if the URL is edited out
the general recommendation is to not edit out links from spam because that tends to make it harder to get rid of it; but rolling back is usually not very attractive either
I've just noticed that when looking at the result of a Triage review, the fact that two different buttons are in fact the same thing, it makes it very confusing to see what the consensus was.
@Scratte I don't think that extra button was actually necessary. It also won't be helpful to people who don't know which questions are on- and off-topic on SO.
@Scratte Even renaming "Requires editing" (missed my chance to ever push that button) to "Needs community editing" will only help those who were genuinely confused about its meaning. Not those who robo-clicked "Looks ok" (or now "Approve"), were suspended and "learned" their lesson (Seen that myself after a user had complained on MSO about their suspension (post has long been deleted since)).
@Scratte Wait.. what?!?.. Looking at this again, I see a problem! Three users flagged this post an hour before the review ended. That should have been the result of the review. But it wasn't. It looks suspiciously like it's possible to override 4 users flagging a post (2 using "Flag" and 2 using "Needs author edit") with "Approve" or "Needs community edit"
@JeanneDark Deleted comments are gone for everyone except moderators. Deleted Answers just go pink for a lot of users. No hiding a pink post.. You can post it as an Answer, if you like. I'll remove my comment :)
@Vega Not really. OP wants to know "how to do X". They've shown 2 incorrect attempts at the solution. I'm not saying it's a great question, per se, but "unclear" doesn't seem to be the right del reason.
@cigien if memory serves I picked needs focus ("What's a mouse?") but majority vote was already set. Probably prior voters saw first revision of this question which had broken code formatting
@gnat I was actually referring to your delete reason, not the close reason. But also, I'm not sure either of those close reasons apply. The question is clear, and asks a fairly specific question, so it doesn't lack focus either.
@Spectric I think you can trash your own comment within 2 minutes of posting it.
@cigien please have a closer look at the code and comments in the question. Asker needs to learn about language basics (indentation and return). And even if you ignore the question text and keep in mind only the title, 7 answers posted in 10 minutes suggest that there are way too many ways to make it, a solid indication of too broad (aka needs focus)
@gnat I'm not sure if the OP's knowledge of the material, or lack thereof, is the important part. At least, I was more thinking about the utility of the question for others. Also, I'm not sure if a question having potentially multiple solutions automatically makes the question itself too broad. The question seems specific enough to me.
@JohnDvorak I agree this particular post should be deleted. But I think the legitimacy of the close, or delete reason, is not irrelevant. It seems that if we don't have clear reasons for casting those votes, we run the risk of closing/deleting posts that we shouldn't, so I brought it up.
@cigien I am neither sure nor unsure about that because my evaluation only follows established meta consensus (check eg link "what's a mouse" in my prior comment). If you want to change that, no need to talk to me, just go to meta and try to change a consensus over there. If consensus changes I will change as well
@gnat I apologize for my tone, it was not my intention to make you change your mind. I was mostly asking so as to clarify my own understanding of what are appropriate close, or delete reasons. Thanks a lot for the link, I'll definitely spend some time reading that :)
@TylerH In the case of the linked question, I was in several minds as to whether it was fine (and could just do with the request for examples being edited out), or was Needs Focus as they were asking for something that can't be done, or should be off-topic as it's database and not software development.
@DavidBuck database questions are on-topic. If it's about professional server management, it might go on server fault, but otherwise there's nothing wrong with the subject matter
Likewise "can I do X" is a fine question, to which "no you can't" is a valid (and often correct) answer
“Requires editing” is renamed to “Needs community edit.” OMG, they finally did something about this. Nice to know it only takes a couple years to change the text of a button
@EJoshuaS-ReinstateMonica Assuming the edit doesn't change the original intent, especially just in order to make it a dupe, then yes, I think leaving it closed is fine. A comment on the post pointing at the target would be helpful though.