This question was closed as Seeking Recs. It wasn't the right reason in the first place, but regardless, is it on-topic now? Looks like a how-to question to me.
Not exactly, there were CVs cast after the mention of "tool" was edited out. And are we not allowed to discuss posts after they're edited, if they were discussed here before? I didn't make a request for action.
@cigien We are, I was thinking it was already discussed, post-closure, but a quick search didn't turn up anything.
At any rate, I have edited it a bit to improve it (OP's most recent edit had put it back into close-worthy territory), though I am refraining from reopening it because I don't personally know bash/cron jobs well enough to know if it is answerable/within scope.
Apropos of nothing, I heard Kubernetes is dropping support for Docker and I don't know exactly what that means but I'm thrilled.
I hope Docker turns around and drops support for Kubernetes in retaliation :-)
@TylerH Ah, I see. No, it wasn't discussed post closure. And yeah, I'm not comfortable enough with the subject to cast a reopen vote myself. Thanks for the edit, that does improve it.
Oh! I need to improve on my joke-skills.. :) It was a spin on "How do I create temporary access". However.. the reception was more as if the question was reversed into my joke.
@Scratte Believe it or not, Docker and Kubernetes don't technically do the same thing and you can use them together. I have no idea how, but that's what the docs say. Someone even made a kids book about it
@rene Dang it, now I have to do math to convert that into hours...
This looks like less of an answer to me rather comment, link-only at best (everything preceding the link seems to be a question, not an attempt at answering)
@Yatin Probably best to use NAA for potential "convert-to-comment" stuff, rather than a custom flag. Any handling moderator can then make their own mind up.
@AdrianMole I'd say rather that custom moderator flags should be used anytime an issue should be seen by a moderator and the issue is not obviously one of the named flags.
@Makyen When you have a minute, can you take a look at this? I moved a solution out of a question into an answer. The attribution of Piotr's comment in the answer doesn't work any more. Also, how do I attribute the OP exactly, in the moved answer?
@Yatin @TylerH is correct. I must admit that I didn't remember the name and found it easiest to determine via a Google reverse image search. Although, I was aware that it was a Hubble image by NASA, and thus in the public domain (which was one of the reasons I picked it).
@MrUpsidown "did not read the docs" is not a close reason, that's a downvote reason. What specifically is that post missing in terms of an MCVE? It looks like it already contains sufficient information for someone to answer in a comment.
@cigien You really do need to flag things like that, even if it's only for mods to delete or edit that portion out of the comment. Let us decide if it's worth reaching out or not to the user.
@cigien In general, particularly when the user is still active on SO, I'll first rollback the question and leave a comment asking the user to add it as an answer, and explain that A) answers shouldn't go in the question and B) that if they don't want to create an answer with the content, then I will create a community wiki answer with the information. I also give them a link directly to the source for the version prior to the rollback, to make creating the answer easier.
I'll then revisit the question in a couple/few days to see if the user added an answer. If they didn't, then I'll add a community wiki answer which gives attribution to the OP and explicitly stating that it was originally added by the OP into the question.
I'll also explicitly state which CC BY-SA license applies to it, as my copying it into an answer doesn't change the license version, even though the site software will say that it is now under CC BY-SA 4.0.
@TylerH Has also given good advice, so the above is a bit redundant.
@Makyen Yes, it was helpful, but there are some other points here. It was a pretty old answer, and by a low-rep user, so I just assumed they aren't active. I'll make sure to leave a comment, and wait a bit for them to respond before editing next time. Also, I didn't realize that I should add the original license. Is that also necessary if the same license applies to both? I'm not sure what you mean by "give them a link to the source". Isn't that in the revision history?
@CodyGray Oh, the OP removed the comment in a few minutes, and were otherwise responsive to feedback, so I didn't bother. But I'll definitely flag any comments of that nature next time, sorry about that.
@CodyGray Ok, I see. I'll still flag if the comment is gone, if I think the author may have been serious, since the comment could have disappeared due to a NLN flag for example. And I do see your point about not making the decision myself; I'm not strictly speaking qualified to make judgements of that nature.
I just stumbled upon this question from 2013 with 1 answer with 13 upvotes. I answered a similiar question in february, which by the time nobody noticed the dupe, and it has 4 different answers. I'm wanting to vote to close one of them as a dupe, which one should I vote to close?
@cigien Yes, the source is available from the revision history, but many users, particularly newer users, won't know that, which will result in them having to put more effort into creating an answer, rather than just a copy & paste.
No, if the same license applies, then you don't need to say that. I include it when a different license is stated as applying by SO/SE, because just my copying the content can't change the license for the copied text, but the notes in the timeline will explicitly state that CC BY-SA 4.0 applies to the new answer.
@Makyen I see. I just added in the license, and I think I'll do that anyway to be safe. I think I've edited the answer appropriately now, do you mind checking? Also, I see the OP was active 15 hours ago, but maybe that was just because I edited their post. Regardless, I'll give them time to respond in the future.
@Scratte The title might have been a reason. Although the title on its own didn't explain the problem. What was the problem with the tool we don't know. It could have been a bug with the tool and the answers were taking wild guesses.
@CodyGray I know.. I have 5 already. But I bet it would make someone smile. Maybe I'll need to rephrase it. "Dear moderator. Hope you're having a good day. If not: Here's some ❤️ and a 💋"
@cigien Yeah, that probably OK. I'll usually also add the question title with a link to the question, because, well, the license requires it. I also feel it's a good idea for times when the answer gets copied to other locations (i.e. sites which scrape SO). Adding the question title and link is probably being a bit pedantic, but I prefer to try to be thorough with attribution.
@khelwood I don't see why that needs to be immediately deleted. I agree with the closure, but it's not something that is causing harm, and I see no reason why the asker should be denied the answer.
@TylerH Not unless they know how to. It's unlikely they know that if it's a new user. It took me a long time to find out that one of my posts had been deleted.
@Makyen Done. Pedantic maybe, but nothing wrong with that :) And I asked you explicitly because you're particular about this, and I agree that it's better to be clear in these matters. Thanks again.
@khelwood for what it's worth, our group FAQ #11 covers this: "del-pls: Unless there's a good reason, it doesn't have to be now (i.e. unless there's a good reason, wait to post the del-pls until the post is actually eligible for deletion-votes)."
So given a question closed as a typo, eligible for deletion but that will not be eligible for roomba, what's the appropriate amount of time to wait before deleting it?
Everything we do here is evaluated through the lens of, "is this causing harm?" If the answer is "no", then there's probably no good reason to request that something be done about it.
@Braiam Obviously I do not agree with that. And that the asker had all the time in the world isn't a very good reason when the Question isn't bad at all. They just didn't understand the operation.
@khelwood We don't have a specific minimum outside of what our FAQ says. However, a few days is usually plenty of time to ensure OP has seen any answers.
@Scratte I doubt it will ever be found. And if we keep allowing typos to live then the site will be full of typo questions that can't be found and won't be useful to anyone but the OP.
@Makyen This request was made yesterday. After a bit of discussion with the poster (it's in the transcript), and some more thought, it seemed to not satisfy the criteria for "recent activity".
I pinged the most recent RO, Machavity in this case, to bin the request. They haven't responded, unless I missed that in the transcript. Regardless, the cv-pls hasn't been binned. Am I misunderstanding something here?
@TylerH Sorry, I didn't mean to imply they were slacking or anything. I figured since they didn't respond, I missed something. I take it from your binning the request that there was no recent activity that the poster was referring to?
@khelwood To be clear, folks issuing their own opinions is just that: opinions. The relevant aspect is what I quoted earlier. You won't be chastised or punished or anything like that for posting a request as soon as it's eligible... just know that sometimes someone may suggest waiting a little bit more time for OP's sake.
@Scratte In general, I agree with you. On the other hand, in this specific case, I don't think that question is a very good reference point, so I don't have any objections to its eventual deletion. I just don't think it qualifies for expedited deletion, if for no other reason than to give the well-intentioned asker the opportunity to read and benefit from the answer. The Q&A was not a violation of our rules as such. Closure and deletion of that question is just the "long tail" cleanup.
@Scratte I agree that not all typos are bad... some are very useful and very hard to catch. Maybe mark it as a duplicate of another question with the same typo?
@cigien Correct, you can see the most recent activity for a post at the top of the page under the question title. If it's over 6 months for a cv-pls/reopen-pls, then it needs to have some special reason for being closed (e.g. "this is a virus/spam that was missed" or "being used as justification for other really bad questions")
@TylerH Actually, there's subtlety there. There are other valid reasons for making an old post eligible. I had discussed this with Makyen at some length, and there seemed to be too many corner cases to justify a rewording to the FAQ. I assume Makyen is looking through the posts, and giving it their usual attention, and writing up a detailed response :)
part of the reason why we don't enumerate a ton of reasons is we are still limited on CVs per day and there are always too many questions that need closing that were asked recently
so we don't want to encourage hunting old questions (and there are other reasons, too)
Ok, swinging one way is less problematic than the other. I see that. The FAQ is currently very strictly worded though. I do like TylerH's "exigent circumstances". Something could be done with that phrasing.
Yeah, enumeration is out in this case, that's for sure.
So... are you wanting to change the definition of "recent activity", or are you just thinking to add another bullet that would cover "other exigent circumstances that would motivate the question's expedited closure"?
@Scratte Well, you can answer that question by enumerating the options. But, fair, good nitpick.
@CodyGray Not another bullet. IIRC, Makyen had said something like "recent activity defined as "the post was brought to the attention of a wider audience"". I would add an explicit "decided at the RO's discretion", and I think that should do it.
@CodyGray Well, ok, I'll add that to the list of things I want to make PRs for. It's low on my priority list though. Somehow I prefer writing code to prose, even editorial.
That reminds me. Your point about the "do an action" in the SO help-pages is good. I can't seem to find references for where that's used, even in technical writing. I think I'm not looking in the right places.
I made a mistake in thinking an Answer wasn't one. It says it's a known bug, and links to the bug report. But it also asks for votes on the bug report. Is that OK?
I don't think it counts as spam to link a bug report. And that is the answer.
If it looks too spammy or annoying to you in terms of how it's phrased, just edit it.
I've posted answers saying essentially the same thing myself. Except they've all been turned into true NAAs now, since Microsoft keeps shutting down their public bug trackers... :-(
@cigien Basically, "recent activity" is intended to be a indicator of how likely it is that that question being closed, or at least getting more attention wrt. evaluating if it should be closed, is substantially more beneficial to SO than most of the other questions in the close-vote queue getting that attention.
The reality is that this room only has so much attention bandwith and available close-votes. [See note] We must limit the number of requests which get posted in the room to a level which the room can handle. If we don't limit the number of requests, then the room will become just as ineffective as the close vote review queue.
Requiring "recent activity" is one of the ways which we use to limit the number of requests in SOCVR and attempt to focus on questions where the actions of people in the room will make more of a difference for the site.
In general, making more of a difference means focusing on questions which are more likely to be seen by others and/or have answers added to the questions (i.e. focusing on questions where the closing quickly, or at all, makes more of a difference). The "recent activity" requirement is attempting to distill the level of benefit down to a metric which can be reasonably and quickly evaluated.
[Note: yes, we now have some moderators who also watch the room, so, in theory, there are more available close-votes. However, moderators only have so much time to spend on SO and their time is often better spent on activities which can't be handled by non-moderators. So, while each mod does have an unlimited number of close-votes, that being relevant implies the mod has the time to spend evaluating a large number of requests in here, which won't be the case most of the time.
Overall, this means even moderators have an effective limit on how many questions they can/will close.
The benefit of moderator involvement is also proportionally reduced vs what it was when 5 close-votes were required. In other words, by the time the question is posted in here it usually already has 1 close-vote. Thus, a mod acting on a cv-pls is commonly only saving the attention/close-vote from one, maybe two, other people.]
On Overall, this means even moderators have an effective limit on how many questions they can/will close. ... two words come to mind, one of which is "Liew."
@AdrianMole Yes, that's the one I noticed when I took Natty for a walk :) But.. I'm looking for a more clear guidance than "Naah.. not risking a flag" ;)
Hmmm. Maybe if they could include a short summary of the bug report, showing its relevance to the question, then it would be better. Just as in other "link-only" cases.
@CodyGray Depends. Is it more likely to get deleted by users or by a moderator handling an NAN comment flag? :)
@CodyGray I know.. but everyone slips up at times. Some thing wasn't considered that led to a bad conclusion or action.
@CodyGray It's against room policy to solicit votes :D Besides.. everyone in the LQP queue can vote on it, no? I know it's a review action in First Posts.
@Scratte You keep trying to delegate things you can do onto other people.
Anyone can vote on it, yes.
The voting wasn't the point. The point was, if you want to be sure that a mod approves community-led deletion through LQP, you can achieve that by upvoting the post, because that will raise an autoflag.
@CodyGray Not sure what you mean.. I will not vote on a post that's about be reviewed. It'll get countered and then I have no options. Once it's countered, the score will be zero, no? Will that raise an autofla?
@Makyen I think the problem is I’ve been focusing on this issue in terms of having rules to follow, rather than why those rules are framed the way they are. I’m going to change my position on a rewrite of 11.1.3 yet again. The current metric is very easy to evaluate, and changing the wording in any way that makes that more ambiguous is simply not worth it. The small number of posts that this would allow in could be argued on merit anyway.
Also, to expect that changing the wording would significantly impact members’ actions would be optimistic at best. I’m giving too much weight to my own fondness for precise wording again. So yeah, scratch that.
More generally, I realize that several of my suggestions for wording changes, and enforcement of existing wording, have not been framed in the context of the effectiveness of this room in relation to other curation efforts. I participate in this room, and in the tags I follow, but I hardly ever visit the review queues. So I really have no sense of their effectiveness, or lack thereof.
To have informed opinions on policy in this room, it seems I’ll have to participate in that effort as well. I’ll have to decide if that’s worth it to me, I don’t particularly enjoy the queues.
The note about moderator involvement is very interesting. Recently, I had the experience of seeing more than half a dozen of my votes get wasted in quick succession.
The mod in question was happier with thinking of the votes as redundant, rather than wasted. But I’m not entirely convinced; I feel I could have cast votes on posts that would not have otherwise gotten them. Anyway, as you point out, it’s irrelevant, since we can’t/shouldn’t account for mod participation since it can’t be relied upon.
Your vote isn't wasted just because it only took two, not three. And if you post something here with no votes on, users will wonder why you're asking for others to vote, if you don't :)
@cigien To have an opinion, you don't need to be participating elsewhere. Participation in SOCVR is by people with a variety of usage patterns. That other people have a different usage pattern than you do doesn't make your opinion invalid.
In all fairness you can look at it a completely different way: When a moderator closed a post you requested closure for, they effectively "free" two other votes for other requests in the room :)
@Makyen Ok, invalid might be strong, but biased for sure. At least, I don't think the confidence with which I have voiced my opinions on some of these matters are warranted. I'd be more comfortable if I had some knowledge of how those usage patterns are relevant.
I wouldn't do so in a comment, but I would consider bringing a cv-pls here (if I know there's a suitable hammer recently active). But that's a bit different.
@cigien I think it sets a bad example. If I have the ability to close vote, then I should. Maybe two other 'ordinary' users will see my vote and follow suit ... quicker than waiting for a hammer, sometimes.
And there's also the appearance of the final close banner. For potentially controversial dupe closures, having one or two other votes, prior to the hammer's, can add a bit of 'weight' to the decision.
If/when I earn a hammer (still 28 votes short), I can imagine occasions where I'm not completely sure that it's a dupe. If I see someone else put a CV (maybe a silver-badge), then I would be more comfortable wielding my hammer.
@AdrianMole I don't follow. If a hammer is not willing to stand by their unilateral decision, they shouldn't be using their hammer. What additional "weight" does a hammer need?
You cannot not use the hammer when you have one. You can't close of a duplicate and have others also weigh in on it. So a hammer may just wait until someone else suggests a duplicate.
@AdrianMole Well, I don't do that. When that happens to me, I simply don't act, regardless of whether others have voted. My gold badge still appears on the banner, and I'm not comfortable with my hammer being in question.
@Scratte Yeah, maybe. I don't like it. A hammer gives one an additional responsibility that others don't have. I don't use my hammer on a post unless I would be willing be the only voter. Before I got my hammer, existing votes would bias me for sure.
So.. Nick is not going to hammer it until you put your vote on it first, @cigien :)
@cigien Well, I hope to never get the hammer for the reason of responsibility. I'd use it only if someone or two other users had already voted. The fact that I have answered 1950 noob debug Questions, doesn't make me qualified to hammer posts that doesn't contain the Scanner object ;-)
@Nick To clarify, do you do that just because it's easy to find dupes that way, or also because you don't have to worry about the correctness of the closure as much?
@Vickel I'm not sure. I spend longer than others answering, so I think it's fair to say they're probably better at it. Last time someone answered in 2 minutes. I can't even properly edit a chat message in 2 minutes :D
@Scratte Sorry, I had to check your profile to see how much of a hypothetical that was :) I suspect by the time you get a hammer, you'll be comfortable enough to use it in that tag.
@cigien I do it because it's more efficient. I don't want to spend my day looking at hundreds of posts trying to find ones to hammer, this allows me to use a lot of close votes in one day. I do end up using "Leave Open" a lot though even on those posts as the posted dupes aren't always correct.
@Scratte I don't like to write FGITW questions either, at all, but if you look in your programming tags you are comfortable in, then there is always a couple of questions worth an answer, and no rush needed
@Nick Ok, that makes complete sense, thanks. I'm very fond of the hammer privilege, and I don't like it being misused, so I'm sorry if my question was a bit aggressive.
@cigien For some context, part of the reason this room was created is that the close vote review queue was hovering over 10k questions. It became sadly apparent that far too many questions that were in need of closure were never going to reach that state, so the room was created to give the questions in the highest need an extra boost of attention.
Later, too, the close vote review queue started "aging away" close votes that weren't actioned within a certain period of time, which addressed the symptom (too many flagged questions, not enough closures), but didn't address the root cause.
The aging away is still a thing. But now, the threshold for number of close votes required has been lowered to 3 (from 5), which is a huge improvement.
@Scratte If you look at my profile, you'll see I answer, if I have time to spend. But then I loose interest to answer quite often, as my niche tag is a php framework and it is really hard to find new "good" questions, so mostly I spend time to CV.
Wondering what to do with this NATO, claiming it's a "fixed version" of the one just above it w/o any further clarification/justification. Any ideas (not a Java expert)?