Not normally an issue, until/unless I'm running low on my daily CV quota. Then, perhaps I should just stop doing FP reviews. (Basically - I'm thinking it's wrong to use a down-vote in lieu of a close vote, I suppose.)
@CodyGray I'm not sure that's essential. If the question is poor, it will get closed, and if the answers that arrive in the interim don't have value, the post can get deleted. The issue for me is that I have very few CVs per day, and I see way more posts than I can take actions on. I don't know how long you've been a mod, but maybe that's biasing your view a bit? I just feel bad wasting a CV on a question that I think could be improved, and then not be able to CV on garbage.
If not, you end up with a bunch of answers that will be invalidated once the question is tweaked to be compliant, and nobody but moderators can remove those answers. That doesn't work. It effectively prevents the question from ever being salvaged, because you can't reword the question to comply without invalidating the existing answers.
Even if the question is never re-opened and completely unsalvageable, having answers is bad, because it prevents the Q&A from being automatically removed.
@CodyGray I do that too. I hold off when it's just a minor thing. Mostly because I know that getting a post reopened is a lot harder than it should be.
@AdrianMole I'm almost sure that it doesn't.
@CodyGray Only if the Answers are upvoted or has an accepted one.
And I see a lot of closed posts. A lot have 0-scored answers on them with no accept.
Note that if you can yourself fix the problems with the post, then you should do that instead of voting to close. Then, there's no reason to vote to close.
@CodyGray Those are all valid points. But is what I'm saying not have merit at all? If I followed your strict definition, I'd be out of CVs within an hour of waking up. And several of those posts would be edited into shape, and of those that receive answers, many wouldn't be invalidated. Also, in my experience, answerers in the C++ tag are pretty chill about editing their answers if the question is edited, and are pretty chilled out about having their post edited by others (only SMEs of course).
So my basic strategy of late has been to get as many FP reviews done (40/day), so that I can at least offer a close vote on new questions, to get them into the CV queue, where others can 'finish the job'. This generally leaves me with less than 40 CVs remaining, so I can't then 'complete' my daily CV queue quota. That, in itself, doesn't bother me - I'm just looking for how I can best use my quotas for site curation. More CVs would help, of course.
I'm still confused, but... if it's unclear whether someone wants values greater than or smaller than, then you need to close the question until such time as it's clarified.
Ah, basically... when you're out of close votes, the site is telling you that you've done enough for the day. Just like when you run out of other votes.
@Scratte I seldom (if ever) have use up 40 CVs in FP. But if I do 40 reviews, I'm likely to cast 20 CVs. That leaves me 30 per day. Generally, 40 CV reviews will eat more than that. So I very rarely get to do the full 40 for both FP and CV queues. In the past few days, I've taken a break from FP, as that's the one I find quite tiring.
@CodyGray Again, do you think that has something to do with the fact that you are not constrained by the system yourself? To be clear, I actually agree with a lot of your ideas in principle, and if I had your powers I would do certain things differently. But given that having system constraints is a good thing, and I have to live within those constraints, living up to some of those ideals is simply not an efficient use of the resources I do have.
@cigien No. The system constrains moderator actions, too, and I was equally uncomfortable with people subverting the system for their own ends before I was elected as a moderator.
But that's just silly, Cody. What you say is that it's fine to not use a close vote on a horrible post depending on what time of day you see it :D If you see almost fine posts early in the day, then all the votes needs to go there. And later on you can just smile and look at the horrible ones.
@Scratte Well, yeah. I mean, that's what the system is telling you. I think that's kind of silly, but you literally cannot vote to close such posts, so... you can't.
That's 90% of why I ran for moderator: I was frustrated with that.
I could only spend < 30 minutes looking at the site every day. After that, I was out of close votes.
Most days, it wasn't anywhere close to half an hour. And in those days, I had quite a bit more time to devote to the site.
@CodyGray Ok, I'm going to subvert the system in the case of "closing posts immediately", for the reasons that I've listed above. I don't make rule subversion a habit, but when I do, I'm explicit about it, and why I'm doing it.
@Scratte Ugh. We're going to do this again? You remember one example where a thing didn't work for you, so you give up on it forever? "One time, I tried to put food in my mouth, but the food fell down into my lap, missing my mouth, so I've just stopped trying to eat because it's too messy."
@cigien So... how do you decide when a post needs to be closed immediately and when you can wait?
@cigien If you mean using your hammer on questions that aren't dupes, just because you feel it needs immediate closure ... then that's a slippery slope. If you want to do that sort of stuff, then take Cody's approach and run in a Moderator Election.
It's a slippery slope to a suspension if it ever comes across my radar. Note that mods don't have a way to take away close-vote privileges, so if we decide that's required, the whole account must be suspended.
We already did and starred the whole, "Closed as duplicate of RTFM is not OK"
@CodyGray Good question. Here's the rough system I follow: if a post should be closed, but looks salvageable, I'll ask the OP for clarification. If the OP responds with a good edit within 5 mins, I'll ask again, and this time I'll wait longer. If the OP responds again, I'll wait even longer. By this point, either it's clear that the OP doesn't really have an answerable question, in which case I CV, or the post is fine. If at any of the previous stages, the OP is unresponsive, I CV.
@CodyGray Hmm.. I'm feeling hungry now :) But yes, that's generally the way it goes. I just remember those very clearly and it makes me more reluctant to try again.
@CodyGray That's completely reasonable. I on the other hand, feel completely differently. I enjoy hand-holding when the OP is responsive, and I try my best to address an OP's responses to feedback. It gives me as much joy as answering questions.
I get that. But the site has evolved. That's inevitable with such a successful site. I also get that there's a caucus that doesn't like or want that evolution.
@Scratte Pretty sure there's nothing in the world with more options than fiddling with a regex, so that's kind of an unfair comparison.
@AdrianMole Evolution in a harmful direction, or at least one that gets away from the motivating spirit of the site, seems like a bad thing to me. Not sure if that earns me membership in the caucus.
@AdrianMole I hope so too. I'm aware that I could get burned out, and I have tightened up my expectations of what I expect from OPs already. It's good advice, thanks.
@CodyGray There are: How many different ways can you make bread? :) Just because one recipe doesn't work out, doesn't mean another won't. But.. if there are only 10 in total and they all take 4 days to see a result on and I've seen a bad result on 5-6.. then I start to wonder if maybe I shouldn't just move on and make soup.
@CodyGray Oh, I see. I disagree of course. In fact, I want to be more easily contactable, and was upset when I realized recently that I don't get pinged on posts I close, unless I was the sole closer.
@CodyGray No, I definitely prefer Q&A sites. The hand-holding, and chatting with users in comments is just to have more questions to answer, and so that everyone has a less frustrating time than they would otherwise. Is that so bad?
@CodyGray Ah, then you shouldn't participate in new posts. The bad ones will get closed, and the ones that can be salvaged will benefit from the hand-holding. The comments will get cleaned up, and future visitors will see the final result, which is just content.
@CodyGray Exactly. There are different ways people like to contribute to the site. So long as the hand holding, and chit-chat doesn't get in the way of good content being generated, what's the problem?
@CodyGray How many fresh posts do you participate in? And I mean interact with the OP, not just close/delete the post? My guess is not that many. I do a lot of that everyday, you can check my profile if you want, and there are many posts that I have personally salvaged by interacting with the OP. Posts that have gone on to receive good answers. Posts that would have likely died without some user interaction. I'd be happy to start compiling a list of these if you'd like.
@CodyGray My source?! Well, I'd start by saying that 802.11 certainly shouldn't be called a "protocol" (for networking guys that's like calling a ship a boat is for the navy guys). Reason being "protocol" is reserved for certain parts of the OSI layer 2-5. So what's the correct name? Afaik 802.11 is a "standard" with its bulk at layers 2 and 3 (but it's been over 15 years since I actually looked into this)...
@CodyGray then "over the wire" yeah...I recall that if you're transmitting over a wire with 2 wifi end points the packet might get a special treatment in between (depending...) And that does make some sense. But I couldn't go into specifics, and I honestly can't spare the time right now to look into it.
Wikipedia needs an edit, then. The first sentence of the article says 802.11 is a protocol: "IEEE 802.11 is part of the IEEE 802 set of local area network (LAN) protocols..."
I'll avoid mentioning the rest of the Internet, which we all already know needs an edit.
@CodyGray Exaclty. You asked a sincere question earlier, and I suspect you might have provided a partial answer yourself.
You're probably not going to like this, but a solution to that problem is likely to involve accepting that some form of hand-holding is acceptable. IMO, if that's a direction the site evolves in, I'm comfortable with it. I sincerely think that hand-holding not only doesn't detract from, but actively benefits the content on the site.
And I understand that not all users are going to want to participate in that way, and nor should they. But to claim that everyone who does that is actively harming the site, is going too far, I think.
@cigien We tried that. Multiple times, in multiple forms. It never worked.
I'm far more uncomfortable asking a question here if it's going to mean a bunch of people trying to hold my hand and get into a discussion with me. I just wanted an answer, not a bunch of comments. :-(
As a relative newcomer to the site (well, compared to oldies like Cody and rene), I also share the views of cigien and Scratte (even newer than I, both of them). The fact that some of us are happy to do a bit of 1-2-1 with users doesn't necessarily harm the site in terms of its original model. Just so long as such interaction doesn't become the expected norm - which is what I think is feared by some of the traditionalists.
@CodyGray But you're missing the point Cody. I'm absolutely empathetic to that. chit-chat annoys me a lot, my activity in this room notwithstanding ;) but we've agreed already, on more than one occasion, that you and I are weird. Your question is, how do we make the experience less unpleasant for the vast majority of users? What does your, or my preference have to do with it?
@cigien I forgot mention that most of the time it doesn't work out. I think users are sometimes hit like they ran into a wall when they realize the amount of pages there are in the help center.
Got distracted by looking for a discussion I remember from a CM about what metric most strongly correlated to user retention. Got a link to that one, perchance?
@CodyGray To clarify, I'm not suggesting that we introduce, or modify any policy. At least, I don't have any clue what that would look like. I'm just pushing back against your claim that any interaction with the OP is actively harmful to the site and the content, when my personal experience says quite the opposite.
I did say it's a red flag (perhaps "question smell" would be better, since we already have a specific meaning for "red flags" around here) when extended discussion is required or even occurs in the comments.
I also said that I think it is antithetical to the intended function of a Q&A site to engage in extended discussions with the asker, and that when that's done as a matter of course, something is going badly wrong.
But entering a short discussion with a new poster about how and why they should edit/improve their post is one thing; a discussion about the actual question, or possible solutions, is something different. I think it's the latter that Cody (and others) don't like and the former that Shog9 was recommending.
@CodyGray Yes, but didn't this discussion start with the recognition that something is going badly wrong? If we don't have a clear way of solving the underlying problem, and it seems that concrete suggestions have not been forthcoming, mitigating the problem by engaging with the asker is not the worst thing IMO. And yes, in an ideal world, a Q&A site would not need that, but we're in the world we are, and we have to deal with it.
@CodyGray Users don't understand what they need to do to improve their posts. Sometimes I even don't know what to do to make a post fine (keep it from being close voted definition of fine), like the keyboard shortcut one. Discussion helps with that. It's a learning curve. Without the back and forth, there's no learning.
I'm not sure. Posts with close votes shouldn't be ... maybe I'll vote to close, if that would kill it as an audit (it's been used quite a lot - look at the timeline).
At this point it'd need either a mod flag or a friendly lurking moderator. I'm not a super user participant so I'm not 100% sure, but it looks like a good candidate to preserve the useful info in a place where it wouldn't be closed.
@cigien They also wrote "Not sure it matters if you pick a different reason". I don't really see how they disagreed with me. A cv-pls request is just a request: Someone posts comes and says "Please have a look at this question, I think it should be closed for reason X". What matters is not so much whether they voted to close at all or differently but whether the question should be closed and if the reason fits. And people who consider acting upon it will form their own opinion.
@CodyGray Thanks for all the info! I didn't want to sound too whiny. Lately, my few custom flags have been handled pretty quickly (they were about undisclosed affiliation), so when this one took so long I was a bit worried.
@CodyGray No chance. I first saw it "18 minutes ago." But the timeline for audits does seem a bit screwball. See that one I raised on Meta, for example.
@JeanneDark I didn't say anyone was disagreeing with you. I was disagreeing with you, and using what other's said as evidence. I still feel user's close reasons should match their request reasons, but since there's no real enforcement of it, I'm not too concerned.
@AdrianMole That's weird. I don't know if you can see what I see on the timeline, but... based on what I see, the post was selected as an audit on Nov 19th and then you passed the audit 19 minutes ago.
@JeanneDark Yes.
If that timeline holds true, then it makes sense. The post had no downvotes on Nov 19th, which explains why it was selected as an audit for Adrian and many others. However, if the audit were selected less than an hour ago, then something does not make sense, as the post definitely had downvotes then, and downvotes should make something ineligible for an audit.
@CodyGray No. The question and the answer both are very common (execute SP/inline sql with Dapper) on tag. They are discussed in many (open) questions apart from duplicate target. Looking at view count (and title), the question is also not serving as good sign post. So, IMO, this is unnecessary duplicate.
@Dharman beats me, perhaps that's something in the SQL file the link points to. But OPs problem is that their code always dies, and that's because they always execute die.
@Dharman you're grumbling about the missing php after <?? If the <? wasn't there you'd have been quite happy to recognise it as PHP. and the python-requests tag is because they couldn't find one called song-requests "the tag it says python requests but its not its song requests". As for not doing anything, perhaps its just their connect.php that they include elsewhere. Regardless, it is an MRE for the error OP is getting.
@janw I asked this in CharcoalHQ a while ago, and the answer was "No!"
@janw Mod flagged just for a Russian edit comment? That looks destined for rejection, I would think. I've seen some comments that are far more bizarre than just in a foreign language: so long as they aren't obviously abusive, I just leave them be.
... typical comments are things like, "faxed spilling" and "edited answer".
@janw Hmm. You could 'improve' the edit (or one of them) trivially, which would allow you to add something of your own to the comment (assuming it was an otherwise good edit). Or something similar for a bad edit.
I may have asked on meta how to handle this, but last time I did something like that, it caused a hell of a meta effect and the referenced question got 20 downvotes...
@AmitJoshi yeah you're probably right that I should have picked a different reason. But I actually wanted to see if the question developed into something more concrete...
@AdrianMole I saw the account as having rep so I became curious and it had received an upvote first (maybe it was later removed, still in the grace period?)
Hello! I have a question: When a comment calls another user "stranger" out of nowhere, like It's still not working, stranger., should it be flagged as Unfriendly or Unkind?
Okay. This happened to me 4 months ago. I was helping another user through a thread of comments, and suddenly being hit with "stranger" by that user didn't feel right.
@AnnZen If it's a one-off comment, I wouldn't worry about it. One UU flag isn't the same as a post red flag either. If you're not sure, NLN will almost always get rid of it
it's still "please link me to an off-site resource which fulfills these requirements" (and I can say with some confidence that the only likely answer is "no, nobody has written anything like that")
now it's "please write this code for me" so still not acceptable
@desertnaut I know this rule, but I don't think this conflicts with their intent. But maybe I have misunderstood their question? They are looking for a way to run "watch" with a cron-style schedule.
@desertnaut Oh ok, IMO it was just unfortunate wording that made it look like a recommendation question. But I see where you are coming from. I will leave a comment, telling them that they may rollback if don't like my edit.
I'd pick them. All posts with trigger words, howto question, posts that looks off-topic if one just does a quick scan. Lets get those robo-reviewers :D Ohh.. and an image of code where the code is also in the post, but image showing highlighing.
We could have a Review Audit Review Queue (available at, say, 15K). It would go something like: This post has been proposed as an audit for the XXX queue. Click one of "Looks OK," "Too darned obvious," or "Nasty."
What to do when a low rep user points out a duplicate in the answer? Like this? I most cases I don't have the knowledge of the subject so I can't flag it as duplicate.
Plus, you could have a privilege (not sure at what rep. level) whereby we get to suggest a post as a known-good or known-bad audit for a particular queue. Limit to perhaps 1 or 2 per day, then send them for review and select the best of those offered.
@Yatin I check it out. If it's a duplicate, I post something like "Thank you for finding a duplicate. When you have enough reputation you can flag it as one." If it's unrelated I ask them to wait until they have enough reputation to leave a comment.