It was implied. PHP always treats UNIX timestamp as seconds since epoch but some systems create it in milliseconds and here is where the problem for PHP users is.
But the question was difficult to read without a proper example, which is why I added it and clarified that we are talking here about timestamp in milliseconds
Yes, well, I think that proves that you definitely improved it. It is much clearer to me now. I'm not sure if "people who do not know PHP" was your target audience, though.
@cigien Trying a risky flag and getting it marked helpful doesn't mean anything other than the one that handled it agreed with you. It doesn't teach you anything other than that. It's not a measure you can use to predict what will happen next time you flag.
Not flagging corner cases is basically a reaction to the non-concensus of flag handling. Someone will say it was wrong to flag while someone else will say it was right. And there lies the non-dilemma for me. When I'm sure that someone will have an issue with the flag, and geting it marked helpful is just luck. It's like rolling a dice, and I don't like to gamble :)
@cigien That is slightly misrepresenting my approach to things. I try out lots of things and fail. I just stop trying the things that I know I will fail or that gave me greif. It doesn't make me happy to keep doing something that doesn't make me happy..
As far as things I've decided not to do, I usually carefully think about the consequneces of either doing it or not doing it. If I have to circumvent the system in order to acheive the goal of the people that in charge of how the system works, then I'm not inclined to do it.
The reason is that whatever policy they have in place that make it harder to achieve the goal should be changed, and me participating in the illusion that current policy is just fine is undermining the importance of changing the system.
Sure. i didn't look at that. Make a request here if you feel like. I suggest not interacting with the user directly anymore in this case. Best to step back from situations like that.
Yeah, I was a little confused by that myself. Possibly, you've interacted with that user before, and they remember you closing one of their previous posts.
@Scratte I was thinking more that getting a risky flag declined will teach me something. If only that there is no consensus on that particular topic. I see your point that there isn't all that much to learn from flags getting accepted/declined. However, Samuel's badge thing incentivizes playing safe with flags more than necessary, I feel.
There are already mechanisms in place to prevent users from being silly with flags, and it's unclear to me what purpose that incentive in particular serves.
@Scratte It's often the case with jokes that they end up misrepresenting one's approach. However, it seems that I wasn't misrepresenting, given your clarification. I find that every thing I do has some aspects that I dislike, and make me unhappy. It comes down to whether the activity as a whole is positive or not.
My impression so far has been that you give more weight to the perceived negatives than the positives, and this prevents you from trying some things in the first place, and I was referring to that. Of course, you are the best person to judge this, so if my impression is completely off, I do apologize for that.
@Scratte I'm not sure I agree with that. One can participate in something while actively pointing out the issues that one sees with it. Participation by itself does not necessarllly mean that one agrees with any or all of the policies that system currently has. In fact, participation gives you the voice that is needed to effect the changes that you want to see in the system.
@cigien That depends how one participates and doing what. Lets say someone gives me a task friday at 15:00, then tells me it will take 2 hours and it needs to be done by monday morning. If I find that it will take 30 hours to do it, I can inform of that. If the message is: The system says it takes two hours and it needs to be done by monday, then I have a choice now. I can work on it all weekend, get my 2 hours of pay and be ready on monday morning. In this case the system "worked".
The system wasn't "wrong". It payed out for 2 hours and the task was completed on time. I can also refuse to do it. Stand my ground and make the system fail, because it's wrong. And it needs to know it's wrong.
@Scratte Your example is interesting, and in that case I would agree. If the system failing or not depends on your participation, then abstaining is certainly a valid and effective way to make your voice heard. However, the example seems to fail when used as an analogy to the SO ecosystem.
There are many participants in this system, and it does not depend on any one user to continue operating. I can assure you that your refusal to participate will simply go unnoticed; it will have no effect one way or another on how the system operates. If you want to make any difference at all, you have no choice but to participate.
To be clear, if participating makes you unhappy on the whole, then you definitely shouldn't. There are many other things in life one could spend time on, and SO is simply not worth your time if it makes you unhappy.
However, I would like to mention that I find you to be very cheerful and happy whenever you participate, even though you go to some lengths to claim otherwise. I sure hope that this impression I have is not just an effect of communicating via async chat. Not that I know what you look like, but I frequently imagine you with a smile on your face when you're chatting in here, and I do hope that reflects reality at least partially.
Sometimes I let stuff get to me though, and that's when I feel I should probably do much less. Not that much less would be noticed, as you clearly point out. Since there's noway this system will notice me not editing posts, posting stuff on meta or flagging stuff that is meant to be flagged. But to keep my sanity, I need to not do what I feel helps to directly not change anything. Something about being part of the problem is worse than not being part of the solution, I guess.
@Scratte Great, I'm very glad to hear that I wasn't imagining that. I think I do understand the logic of not wanting to be part of a system when one feels completely powerless to change it. I must admit that I find it a little difficult to empathize, since I fancy that I have an effect on the systems I participate in. To be fair, I feel that way even if there is no evidence for it, which I'm sure is problematic in its own way.
Do note that I'm only pushing you on this because I believe you do make a difference by participating. For what it's worth, you have informed my views on certain things, and I value that very much. I would personally be disappointed if you were to reduce your participation. Again, I don't want to pressure you in any way; you should do what makes you happy, and participate in the ways that bring you the most joy.
@Scratte Hmm, why wouldn't it? Participation can take many forms, and I don't see why constructive discussions in a chat room would not count. Chatting in the Ministry of Silly Hats wouldn't, sure, but chatting in SOCVR about site curation I would most certainly count as participation. You're not giving yourself enough credit as usual.
@Scratte FWIW, you participate here often enough that your views shape the "opinion" of the channel. It is valued. I still think you should ask a question on the main site ;=)
@cigien I see :) Sometimes the Ministry is very serious though :)
@halfer Thanks you.
I guess being involved makes it harder to see things from the outside.
But.. I don't have time for Quesitons. Yatin posted a link to how to improve ones touch typing and of course I had to go and check it out to confirm I wasn't all that bad. But.. I am. And learning that Cody types 120 words per minute has left me ..feeling I need to try to at least do something about it :)
@eyllanesc Please note that asking for users to re-tag a question so you can use a dupe-hammer is explicitly disallowed in the FAQ#17: "Do not request to re-tag a post so you can use your dupe-hammer".
@CodyGray fair enough, but their code isn't really a debugging they just don't know what's available and they've tried something hoping it would work. The dup actually explains what's available and what can be done.