@tink Sure, you could vote to close a question, and also answer it if you want, though I would be wary of making that a habit. Regardless, requests on posts that you're involved in is not allowed here.
@tink Yes, and in fact you made the request about a minute before answering I think. Nonetheless, if you do decide to get involved after posting a request, you need to ask an RO to trash it first.
@tink Again, it's not your vote that's the issue, you could even leave that in. It's the cv-pls request I'm referring to.
@cigien Yep:: "If you make a request and later desire to become involved in the post, you must @ ping at least one active RO to ask to have your request removed."
@tink Minor note on terminology, just so it's not confusing to others, "vote" is what you do on the post. The cv-pls thing you do in this chat room is a "request".
Nice. Is the "new contributors" bit relevant to your question, perhaps because of getting them started on the right foot, or something? If so, you might want to make that clearer.
I think it should stay because it points out flaws of all the other answers. I look at it this way: Users that read this one will also read the others, so it's part of the thread.
It's not uncommon to start a post referencing another. Usually people start by saying "This other Answer didn't work for me, but.. " or "I'd like to add to this other Answer, that.."
@Scratte Where? Citation required! In my experience, Robert Harvey never agrees with anyone - just not his style. However, your auto-correction may be better: He allows people to agree with him, or to share his opinions - even if you expressed those opinions first.
@AdrianMole Yes.. I realized my mistake, which is why I corrected it. I'd do the same with Cody. If we agree on something, then Cody doesn't agree with me. I agree with Cody ;)
I think it's fine. Make your reason explicit in the request, and users will review it. So long as you're voting to delete it in good faith, I don't see why a request would be a problem.
If you feel that an answer is 'dangerously' wrong or misleading, then [del-pls] requests are fine, IMHO. (I did one yesterday for an answer that used #include <bits/stdc++.h> and users here obliged.)
Just a note here: If you really think it's a horrible way to solve the problem, then downvoting and commenting is much better than deleting. When you delete it, no one will know about what not to do. If it's sitting there as a "solution" with a negative score and a comment saying "This is really bad" new learners will learn.
@Dharman Ok, the second comment I made in response to this was unfair. I don't think users would be equally upset. There aren't that many highly upvoted/viewed del-pls requests posted here.
@Scratte Oh, no worries, there's a canonical for this :) It goes into excruciating detail as to why that's a bad idea.
I just recently found a Answer saying to apply specific a comment to do something in git. Trouble it that it will effectively remove every file in the repository. It's sitting there as a warning :)
@AdrianMole Yes, but it's less harmful with a note attached :) The problem is when there's no note attached at all and users try it out. Or if it's there intentionally to be harmful.
@AdrianMole Haha, possibly. Though I would leave a comment first, and wait for the author to see the error of their ways. So instant downvote and then about 5 mins before I cast my delete vote.
@AdrianMole That won't make a difference. It's definitely not NAA, or anything else so it won't get deleted. I think it might take 5-10 mins for that. Hopefully the OP won't take it seriously in the interim.
@AdrianMole I've noticed ;) I'm not a fan of doing that needlessly though. In this case, while I'm annoyed that users are going with their gut feelings rather than valid (IMO) reasons to choose to delete or not, those concerns are reasonable, and I don't want to sound like I'm dismissing them by being flippant.
@Scratte Now I want to know what the lowest scoring non-deleted answer on SO is. Should be a straightforward query to run.
@eyllanesc is that really the best target? It is a duplicate of another question which itself is also a duplicate of another question. I really hate to see that kind of long trail to the best answer...
@Baby_Boy In case it wasn't clear, most of the responses you've received so far have been joking around. There are no specific requirements to joining the room (beyond being able to participate in chat). You will, however, find that how much you can contribute wrt. flagging/voting to close/etc. will be limited by the amount of reputation you have on Stack Overflow, just because the ability to do some things comes with more reputation.
Thank you for reading the FAQ. We appreciate you taking the time to do so. Unfortunately, that's a step some people who are just joining ignore.
@AdrianMole I'm mostly assuming you're asking for fun, but just in case you're not: FAQ = "Frequently Asked Questions". However, in our case, the document is structured more as a list of rules/guidelines and Read Me First than as an actual FAQ (i.e. something structured as questions with answers).
@Makyen Sure, I'm joking. But (maybe relevant to @cigien): How do you pronounce "FAQ?" I've come across "far queue" (which, with little imagination, becomes quite rude).
@Makyen Thank you very much for the clarification on attribution. Not only did it make the meta post vastly better by providing context, but the rationale you provided also made me realize that I've not always been doing it appropriately. Not just on SE and related sites, but in general. One would think since I'm in academia I'd have a better grasp on this, but apparently not. This is the second time I've needed reminding, but hopefully it won't be needed again.
@cigien I'm glad I was able to help. I agree that it makes the post better, and generally makes things better when used. We're all standing on other people's shoulders to get where we are today. It's good to be able to follow things backward, if someone wants to.
Honestly, I think we need a Meta post. Esoteric languages like brainfuck are one thing, but esoteric joke languages that merely change the syntax of a standard language (like Arnold C) should IMO be restricted
@Scratte it's not exactly an opinion, that T-script stuff was just a political statement in disguise, not really programming related. So you can consider it a form of spam...I'm left feeling it wasn't worth my 2 or 3 minutes (and I'm generally a patient guy for VLQ stuff.)
@bad_coder If someone can find use for it then it's not just an opinion. Perhaps someone that doesn't speak english and have no idea that the words have meaning in English is using it.
@JohnDvorak Ahh.. well, I suppose it need to be enhanced then ;) Wonder if Stack accepts programming questions about creating languages and compilers/interpreters.
You mean it's a bad idea to ask if I should let my new language resolve the leftmost or the rightmost expression first? Or leave that undefined because c is so pretty when it gets confused? :)
@Scratte analyses of this goes along the lines of "click-bait fraud" you expect one thing, it turns out being another thing. So you were deceived on purpose.
click-bait is a type of fraud? I do guess it makes sense, but does it mean we can sue every newspaper ever? Intent, check. Unjust profit, check. Unjust harm to the clicker, nominal but check.
@JohnDvorak in case of media, if they try it twice they lost 1 reader (for good). There are lots of interesting news outlets that don't get my click because they lacked integrity twice.
Anyway, I read the page. I'm not inclined to spend time on it trying to make anything work with it. What I'm trying to say is that getting rid of it on Stack because one just doesn't like it, is not a good idea. It's censorship in the worst way. It's the same when users delete Answers on meta.
We all have different opinions of what we like. If we delete what we think is not useful just from what we like or that we (oneself) doesn't find useful, instead of seeing if maybe someone else finds it useful too, then all of Stack can go. There's no post where everybody likes it.
@JohnDvorak Was the post bad? Getting rid of a post to get rid of a tag?
@Scratte I think your point is valid. I suspect many users would be opposed to a tag with trump in the name, even if there was a serious esolang with that name. And it's not about trump per se, but any tag with a name that users might object to for personal reasons. There should be clear guidance on when such tags are appropriate or not.
@Scratte I'm against censorship on matter of principle. But in this case we can say the post, by its content, isn't programming related. On matters of opinion, some are so outright offensive they shouldn't be kept (you're from Europe, taking lessons from history a lot of countries forbid Fascist political parties. Yes it is a form of censorship and I'm inclined to agree with it.)
@bad_coder You see - that's my problem. The post could be construed as a programming issue. It's the tag (and the basis behind that tag) that sticks in my craw.
You don't have to remove the tag on basis of it being a political statement or a joke language if you remove it on basis of nobody actually using the language
... whichever side of the "political divide" you're on (and we're avoiding that, here, of course) ... it's a thinly-disguised political 'joke'. And, as such, it should (IMHO) be stopped from propagation on SO.
@Scratte nudity laws vary widely and are strongly correlated to cultural practices. So it's mostly a local matter. Quintessential example: you can walk in shorts on the beach but not in every venue.
@JohnDvorak But the only reason nobody is using it is because someone mentioned it and found the one post on it and decided it could go along with the tag.