@Dharman There's people who want their conversations to remain because "it makes SO friendlier". They don't seem to understand that people don't come here for friendly answers. They come here for useful ones.
@SurajRao looks like it was created somewhat whimsically by a 9th grader who has only been on SO for a few months but has several thousand rep. Certainly no effort was made to add tag wiki information
@AmitJoshi Don't think it's opinion based. There are definite criterias to evaluate whether to use DFS or BFS. Yes, in some cases it doesn't matter, so you can go with either, but the criteria is there. Whether you want the "best" (shortest/longest) path or to find any path the fastest, for example.
Oh? It asks multiple questions. I thought that would be a pretty clear application of the rule. Q1: How to, given a problem tell whether to use BFS or DFS. Q2: What are the advantages of BFS over DFS
@code11 I take it as two parts of the same question. It's essentially "when to choose BFS or DFS" and the advantages/disadvantages are there to help guide the usage.
@AdrianMole I'm not sure which of the two answers you're referring to, but if you mean the one you edited, that one definitely warrants a mod flag, and it won't get declined for sure.
@Braiam Oh, I didn't know you were against any spam post being an audit. I'm not sure I'd go that far myself, but I'll have to think about it. Thanks for the link.
@Braiam You're making it sound like I'm violating the CoC when you say that, but no. If people are under the impression SO is the go-to place for answers on everything tech, pointing them to AU could at the very least help them to find an answer. If it gets closed, it gets closed.
I'm really starting to appreciate the efficiency of SO mods. Take PSE for example, it has low traffic, yet my simple "No longer needed flags" have been pending for 15 days already and are still pending.
Honestly @Braiam, in this case, I'll rather point the user to a site where it risks getting dupe hammered rather than ending up with a user who doesn't know it's not okay to ask SU questions on SO
One creates a small amount of trouble in the short run, the other creates lots of trash in the long run.
Neither are optimal, but I'll pick short-run cleanup over long-term trash any day of the week
And the title box shows relevant questions when the title is added on a site with similar content. It's per-site, not cross-site, so it's easier to miss dupes when it's posted on the wrong side
I don't think I can find the beginning of this thread but there is a difference between "you should migrate to site X" and "your question might be acceptable on X, but check their guidelines before you ask, and definitely don't post duplicates"
@Braiam While qualifying that as "network wide" does make that accurate, it's not accurate for Stack Overflow. On SO, the Triage queue also has direct access to the flag dialog.
On MSE I sometimes offer a link to a search and say something like : maybe this search results helps you find your answer and/or better suited site but I've had feedback that that it also rude so obviously you can't do it right for all.
@tripleee yes there is a difference, though I think we shouldn't have to bend over backward when informing people their question is off-topic here and another site is more appropriate. They should already know (and are prompted to by the system) to check guidelines before asking and not post duplicates if and when they go to the other site.
SO should not have to be everyone else's laundry service
You assume users are gonna blindly follow a plain link and then ask without looking at anything on the site, blatantly ignoring all signs and all related questions. There's a good probability that by indicating the existence of that site, they're gonna search and potentially find something useful
I rarely suggest asking unless I'm completely sure it's on-topic and not a dupe, but you cannot prevent me from recommending looking around on other sites
@desertnaut It's OK to have a discussion on that subject. It's not OK for the discussion to get personal. Once it does, and the people don't tone it down, then it is time to stop the discussion.
I think I lack imagination as to how that can be abused. Unless it used to not count down and people would make silly edits to NAAs to improve their metrics.
@Scratte I'm not sure that's conducive to a healthy work place environment. I can understand there being cultural contexts where that might be fine, of course.
@janw oh, sorry, yes I believe this feature is not turned on for Meta posts, so that it doesn't encourage users to moderate Meta as Braiam already mentioned.
@janw The URRS is currently written such that it will only request information about a single site. Getting information about posts on other sites, including Meta sites, would have to be additional, separate requests. It's not currently written to be able to do that.
> ------------------------------------------------------------ > Try to explore the new [link to my thing]! > [link not *directly* related to the question]--- Hot issues November > [link not *directly* related to the question]--- Hot issues November
@janw Ah. I misunderstood what it does. I though it would modify one's posted chatmessage, not just what one sees.
Heh.. the ghost of the microsoft post is still alive. To be honest, I'd have failed that one too. I'm not a trained spam-detector. I just review sometimes.
@10Rep There is additional context, but the additional context just makes it clear that the advertisement is an organized campaign, rather than a one-off. The additional context is that there were ~80 similar answers posted over a few days by a few different accounts.
I definitely FPed the first few but then when we saw more of them it became apparent that this was problematic ... this is one of the challenges with audits which SE has never even tried to correct AFAIK
@code11 Yes, but they are usually very similar to the Question they post it on. So it doesn't make sense to tell them to post a new Question. Then when they post that, they'll get told not to post duplicate Questions. A lot of the times, they're not given a link to help center so they assume they can just post whatever they posted in the Answer box directly into a new Question.
When I comment and I see that its a question rather than a answer and its missing something, I'll say "You might think about posting this as a question but be sure to address <missing part>"
@10Rep I'm not sure why you're asking why it would show up in Triage. Why wouldn't it show up in Triage? Triage is, actually, a reasonable place for it to be, given that flagging is considered a normal response in that queue.
@eyllanesc Please note that 'no roomba' is not a reason to delete a question; del-pls requests need to have a reason the post should be deleted, not simply commentary on whether it will auto-delete or not.
@JohnDvorak maybe, but in this case definitely not: it's closed as a duplicate
and duplicates by design won't roomba unless they are really bad
Further, it's sort of inherent that it won't roomba if you're posting a del-pls request (especially if it doesn't show '20k' [for script users], indicating it's bad enough to need deleting ASAP), so it doesn't even add much value in cases where the question isn't a duplicate and would roomba if not for some accepted answer, etc.
@TylerH Currently, it's something which is automatically added by the Request Generator, because we do get a considerable number of requests for questions which will Roomba, which makes the requests mostly redundant.
@code11 Interesting point, check for what? Typos? Syntax rules? -The Q starts by conflating those. Yes, the question is both about vanilla PyCharm and also a library request (admittedly, it would be on-topic since it's about programming....) Ok, but there's also a duplicate for this somewhere. So I'll look into it later.
@TylerH Maybe? It seemed appropriate to have in the requests when I added it a year or two ago. I'm not all that tied to having it in there, but it is information which is reasonable to have available to people who might click-through. The Request Generator should already be giving people a warning that it will Roomba (if they have Roomba Forecaster installed). If Roomba Forecaster isn't installed, it won't have any information about the Roomba (i.e. no warning or in-request note), IIRC.
@rene then why have 'no roomba' added to requests if only requests that won't roomba will get through?
@Makyen So the request generator, instead of checking for whether it will roomba on its own, looks for 'roomba' text on the page, place there by the roomba forecaster script (or some other rote method)?
@TylerH the scrip warns it doesn't block. So the reason for the del-pls is the fact that it won't roomba. So maybe adding n-th dupe helps for context but I need to click anyway to make a judgement call. I definitely want to know no roomba is the reason, so at best you want to achieve elaboration. not removal of the no roomba hint altogether
@TylerH Don't get me wrong. I agree that just "no Roomba" isn't a reason to be deleting the question. It is, however, useful information to see in the request, under many circumstances. I wouldn't have a problem with the Request Generator requiring additional text prior to permitting the request from being sent.
Delete privileges come at 10K, do you really think we need a full track record in our transcript of the rationale why something needed deletion? Specially when most users can't even see the deleted posts.
@Scratte Ahh, but things do get deleted automatically, which is a significant difference. If you knew something was going to be closed automatically, wouldn't there be a reasonable number of times where it would make sense to just let that happen, rather than expend close-votes to make it happen faster?
@Makyen Yes. But that wasn't the point I was trying to make :) The fact that a post is not going to get deleted by itself isn't an argument for deleting it. Just like a post that isn't getting closed by itself isn't an argument for closing it. There should be an actual argument too in any case of a request.
I also put the user in a link, like so [username](userlink) answered this correctly in a [comment](commentlink) in case the comment goes missing. If it does no one will know who the user is that once answered in the comment
@Makyen when it doesn't need to submit a request at all due to info gathered by that script? In other words, if a question will currently roomba, the request generator shouldn't post a request in chat. And such functionality shouldn't rely on if a user has another script installed
These two questions are from the same author, they are almost identically worded. Both had identical answers from the same person, but one was deleted by a moderator. That answer was replaced by another answer. Both questions have accepted answers. Only two users are involved. Is this suspicious Q&A and voting? See stackoverflow.com/questions/65250218/… and stackoverflow.com/questions/65250013/…
@Makyen At the very least I think additional text this is needed.
@rene If we want to be above board, yeah definitely. Otherwise I can see it now: countless meta posts "why is this room deleting questions without even giving a reason why". Reminds me of the 'cleanup by downvote' debacle the room suffered a few years ago...
@AdrianHHH I was about to say no.. since they answered the duplicate before the target and your comment probably let them to the target, but.. seeing what SurajRao just spotted, I take that back.
@TylerH There are legitimate reasons why someone might want to make a del-pls request for a question which will Roomba. I don't have a problem with requiring the user to confirm that they know about it, which the Request Generator currently does. I do have a problem with outright preventing a user from making such a request, unless we change the room rules such that requests are not permitted for questions which will Roomba.
My primary issue with having the request generator also compute the Roomba information is that I'm resistant to having the code in two different places and the additional maintenance work which that entails.
@TylerH I think it's reasonable to require additional text than just "No Roomba". It was never intended that that text would be the only thing in a request. It was automatically added merely as a convenience with the expectation that the user would add additional text. I'll change it such that additional text is required.
@TylerH While I understand your point, this feels like it's going fairly far with hyperbole. The Request Generator has been adding that text for a bit over two years. While that doesn't mean that there will never be problems caused, it does tend to indicate that such problems are a bit unlikely. Also, I'd note that we already haven't generally considered just "no Roomba" to be sufficient. I believe that it's been mentioned multiple times, going back quite a ways, but I haven't searched for it.
@Makyen Eh, I suppose there might be. Ideally (to me) there would be some separate elevated or manual method to get a del-pls through for something that will roomba but really can't wait (moderator flag? :-])
@Makyen this is a fair point, though now I have suggest, combine the two into one larger script? :-)
@Makyen It's true it's a 'worst case imagined scenario', but the point of my pontificating here is to avoid that exact outcome (in other words, design the system to handle edge cases). But these are all just stream-of-consciousness thoughts of mine (if I had some thorough, reviewed thoughts on the matter, I'd be posting them as a room topic or a bug report/feature request on GitHub!)
@Yatin I'm not sure such a thing exists. Most that you might flag VLQ just fall under the various close reasons, and since that's a far more efficient way of getting them closed, it should be used instead.