@Scratte actually I wanted to apologize to you for 2 things. First, I sent that video with a remix and the imagery was poor. Reason was, remixes always have that theme (I only noticed 1 minute after posting, and on youtube there were like 40 vids of that song, but only 2 didn't have a feminine theme... :(
@Scratte Second, I sent a link to a poem by the an author that's considered the second best writer in the Portuguese language (you can check youtube there's hundreds of folks reciting that poem). Problem is, the translation into English starts with a word "licking" that somewhat surprisingly a synonym to "taking a beating" or "going through difficulties".
Come to think of it, there's a Danish pop song I like to hear sometimes. There's only one video and the image is quite poor, but it's the only one there is.
@Scratte So that leaves room for ambiguity and misunderstandings, I really try to avoid that when I post. So, after writing all of this, just in case, what I wanted to say is: I'm sorry.
@bad_coder OK. This was a big hit in Denmark in 1993 Hvorlænge vil du ydmyge dig? Which means "How long will you let yourself be humiliated?" It's both a sad and a happy song.
ydmyge means humiliate. Google translate says demütigen
They say she was such an awesome singer that she could do the songs for the album in just one take.
She didn't have an easy life and I suspect the band members wrote the song for her, about her. Which makes it kind of ironic that she sings it so well :)
Unfortunately less than a year after the release of that song she died 26 years old of cancer.
@Scratte the video is really cool, very uplifting. Outdoors, social, flooded with light at the beginning, and a myriad of colors alterning with b&w. The singer is really good, it reminds me of a kind of Rock from the US, perhaps Whitney Houston and gospel.
@Scratte ydmyge : demütigen=nicht möegen -> that must come from the common root "mygen" which might mean "mögen". hence admyge means "sehr mögen", or like a lot
@Scratte it's a pity she died young. It's somewhat amazing when singers grow to parents that are musicians, two recent example are Sia Furlow and Norah Jones.
It can be used as in English. "I was humiliated. It was horrible" or "I feel humble in the presence of these great moderators in this room :)" Or the meta version "I humiliated a humble moderator" :D
What to do with this question? Self-answer clearly says that it is dupe. But it has an active bounty. Is it a good idea to mod flag it to remove the bounty and close the question as dupe?
I wrote an answer to a question yesterday (the question was asked yesterday too). Today it is closed as being "Not suitable for this site". Can I link to the question here and discuss the closure?
@Yatin While the close reason is not shown to you, it is possible to obtain it from the SE API, while the question is closed. Once the question is reopened, it is no longer available to you.
I asked the editor about the latest revision of this Answer. While they did format the link, it seems very odd to me. Is this considered a properly formatted link?
@cigien Personal attacks need to be mod-flagged. If that was just something like, "All these idiots downvoting", then editing out is fine; that doesn't specifically need moderator attention. But it was directed at @Dharman, so I think that definitely needs moderator action.
@Dharman You voted to close their question, the same one they posted that as an answer to.
You've also interacted with them before, leaving comments about SQL injection, their answers being non-answers, etc. They probably remember.
Either way, when it gets personal like that, a mod needs to know. I've stepped in in this case already.
@Scratte You can practice by typing out questions and answers ;-)
For what it's worth, I pretty much agree with what cigien and halfer have said. Your feeling of "powerlessness" really resonates with me. But I have some bad news for you: when I really started to feel down and powerless with respect to Stack Overflow is when I decided I had to stand in a moderator election. :-)
@Lankymart No objection to your linking to it in comments, and I agree it might be helpful, but I don't think that is a productive closure. If you don't think that the code in the question is sufficient as an MCVE, I'd rather close it as that. Or a different duplicate.
@CodyGray Nope, but you think fast. And from where I'm standing, you don't make a lot of mistakes. Even if I don't always agree with you, you're very clear about your reasoning. You're also very good with words. You're an excellent moderator.
@bad_coder That's not an uncommon meaning of the word "licking" in English. "Take a licking and keep on ticking" (meaning, to be tough enough to absorb stress or damage and continue operating).
@Scratte You may be somewhat less eloquent (or, really, just less forceful) than I am, but you are not all that far away from your own description of me.
Being fast isn't necessary.
@Scratte Wow, that's one weird-looking word, at least to me.
You need to be a moderator to see the specific subset of the "not suitable for this site" reason that was chosen. I do not understand why we are working so hard to hide that detail.
@Scratte I think the person is saying that "here" is not very good link text, and that they'd prefer to see where the link is actually going to take them before they click it. I agree with you that descriptive link text is probably preferred, but either way is fine, both are better than just editing that to say "here".
That kind of thing is OK when the link is truly supplemental, as in some of my Meta answers. But it doesn't work well when the link is an important part of the answer.
@Scratte If you delete a comment in the forest, and no one is around to hear it fall, does it still make a sound?
I only ever did it once, with two tabs. I noticed my comment, and I thought that maybe I had just imagined I deleted it, so I went and deleted it. Only to realize that I had already deleted it.
I have to be somewhere in a few hours, so I think I may need to sleep or something..
So, I just had to look up the language "S", and, to my surprise, I find: "The modern implementation of S is R...". That's weird and puzzling on many levels, not the least of which is that the letter R precedes the letter S.
Hmm. Has it always been that you can't use the "Close" button in review when viewing the "Duplicate" tab? I have to keep going back to the "Question" tab in order cast my CV. Bug or feature?
OK, I was exaggerating a bit. But that still requires two clicks to get to the suggested dupe, and then returning to the review. The dupe tab(s) in review go there much more quickly. Just a shame that you have to go back to the 'original' in order to cast the CV.
Sorry, I was being too terse. I'm surprised to hear that you used the tabs/buttons on the HTML page. I thought everyone just opened the two questions in different browser tabs, which can be done simply by middle-clicking the link to the master question while you're in review.
I can't stand that tap-to-click business. I am always doing it accidentally. I turn it off on every computer I use, which apparently drives nuts the coworkers who share laptops with me.
They are wrong.
God invented physical mouse buttons because he is not evil.
@Scratte Technically, it's not sarcasm. A lot of people sloppily misuse "sarcasm" when they mean "irony". The Wikipedia article for antiphrasis does note that it is commonly treated as being a synonym for "irony".
I also think that perhaps my 10 EUR cheap keyboard is hindering me a little, though I think it's really just me, because it's a lot easier to use than old mechanical typewriters.
@CodyGray You're right, it'd pain me. Hmm, interesting - one of the answers on that Q turned out to solve it. I thought it was turning into a guessing game.
Closing for "Needs details or clarity" can get a bit odd if/when somebody posts a good answer that is accepted. But that just means they guessed correctly.
Well, we don't have any ministers associated with the government, because we don't call it that. But...we do perhaps have too many religious ministers.
I didn't finish watching all the episodes of the latter.
Oh! And Wikipedia says there was a new series of "Yes, Prime Minister" that launched in 2013. (But I wasn't talking about that, because I didn't know about that.)
umm... there was a good show on the BBC sounds thing a while back that had 4 episodes of the Yes, (Prime) Minister shows and a lot of commentary, but it's unavailable right now
You'd have thought spending a few £billion building a ship - top of the list of requirements would be "shouldn't take on water and should remain afloat"... but... on the plus side - it does look quite fancy :p
seriously though, I still wonder why we get rid of all the jump jets (sold 'em to the US or something - can't remember) and haven't just produced more modern versions of those
Oh... according to wiki - actually been used as well... 90 million EUR a pop - bargain...
In 1985 the estimated cost of 250 UK aircraft was £7 billion. By 1997 the estimated cost was £17 billion; by 2003, £20 billion, and the in-service date (2003, defined as the date of delivery of the first aircraft to the RAF) was 54 months late.[44] ... However, in 2011, the National Audit Office estimated the UK's "assessment, development, production and upgrade costs eventually hit £22.9 billion" and total programme costs would reach £37 billion
@cigien You can do as you like. I believe we discussed this before: whether you want to get involved on a mod-flaggable offense like that is determined by your concern over possible retribution.
Not entirely. Though there's some new stuff as well. Of course, the books are different in that they can cover more of the characters' thought processes. It's all done through text though; journal entries, official documents, and such.
@AdrianMole True, though this one has managed to age pretty well I think.