@SurajRao it is appreciated if you link to the actual item you want us to remove. That prevents that we have to guess and by accident remove the wrong request.
@Scratte I edit-improved it and changed discoulored back again, as the title wasn't changed either and I remember we had a discussion about UK-US English to do so...
@Scratte I would have rejected that with a custom reason saying that we don't change posts between British and American English, unless the usage is not consistent throughout the post. I would then separately edit in changes to inline the images. This provides the user with an explicit reason why the edit was rejected, rather than just a "Reject and Edit", which just leaves the different edit without explanation.
@Scratte as the consensus in this room/Meta was not to change US to En and vice-versa BUT if some edit was useful, rollback the en-us part and use edit-improve (that's if you are >2k)
@Makyen isn't this the same as I did, just a bit harsher for the editor?, at the end, I rolled back the "grammar" thing (even removed that from the edit reason) and editor gets the credit for their effort?
@Vickel I think the editor should not have been given the credit for their effort in this case. The edits made were 5 second ones, so unless I missed something, it wasn't a major investment on their part.
@AdrianMole The additional diamond is an overall change to chat. That change is currently causing problems for displaying some usernames, so I expect it to change. I'll adapt the userscripts once the change is stable.
@Vickel We want the editor to not make such changes. They need to be informed of that in some way. Approving their edit basically communicates "this was good/fine". The user is relatively unlikely to even revisit the question, so they are unlikely to see that the edit was rolled back.
@Scratte Much the same as in our own Milky Way galaxy. Not as extreme, perhaps, but the same general issues. Without all sorts of stuff shielding us from all sorts of other stuff, we'd all be fried.
@CodyGray While I agree that a typical "programmer" and maybe mature/old peeps taught.. like me. No doubt we suffer a lot young people arriving to SO used to only "like" finding their first question at -10.... I don't really have a solution but for sure it's a problem for the future to get people involved and maintain what has been build. It's much harder now to post your first question then what it was when you posted it.
@Scratte It depends on what you think is bad. There's certainly areas which will not be habitable, at least by life as we know it. However, there will also be large portions which should be fine.
@Vickel If their other changes substantially outweigh the changes between different styles of English, then "Improve Edit" is probably reasonable. I'm a bit biased towards rejecting these, because if they are not informed, then they will just keep making such changes, which creates a larger and larger issue.
@AdrianMole That's worked for you? When using "Improve Edit", I've never found that any of my edits to the edit comment have ever stuck (i.e. they have always returned to exactly what the original editor used).
Yeah, I'd also assumed that, but I've never had those changes stick on ones I've checked. Note: I mean change the edit comment for my edit, not their edit.
@Makyen @AdrianMole if you look at the time line of the post we discussed, there states now comment: "embed image" and not the previous comment "Grammar and embed image"
What about the other edit I mentioned here. This was an improvement to the code, but it got rejected. I wanted to approve it, but I'm not sure of the policy.
@Scratte Plagiarizing is when you implicitly or explicitly take credit for someone else's work, or don't give them credit for that work. The CC BY-SA license permits you to copy content out of other answers, as long as you give appropriate attribution/credit to the source.
@Scratte while it's java... and you understand it... the question is bad and all answers are bad who in the world would every implement equals like that... the subject is more complex... what is meant by equals, hashcode etc...
@Scratte Generally, we don't edit to convert between two different ways of representing the same thing in Markdown. This is similar to how we don't edit to convert between two different dialects of English.
While getting rid of the extra indentation (i.e. the indentation which was displayed within the code block) was OK (although I'm not sure it was worth a suggested edit), changing to using three backticks rather than a 4 space indent shouldn't have been done. I'd also note that doing so was more editing work than just highlighting the code and clicking the code button once in the editor.
Com'on you got a great challenges now... post a decent answer to a such important canonical... better then answering all the debug my loop questions :)
Personally I like solutions that somehow create a key.. and then equals and hashcode on that ;)
@Scratte Yeah I have mine... but refuse to post it, I get paid and SE refuse to pay me :D, these internet points do not buy food for my children :)... just joking but well personally I don't like the answers on that canonical... I would define a key that is a composite of properties that are key (normally the key is a string) and then do equals and hashcode on that... or use a library like commons... all that code is mess, hard to maintain (if you add properties), hard to read etc.
Note that depending on what you want to do, something nice and static like a string may not cut it. The example I run into all the time is a Pair class that represents combinations, where order does not matter.
I think what's meant is what if you have an object that just holds the values of two dice. Die1 and Die2. Then you want 6 and 5 to be equal to 5 and 6.
That is what I meant, but scratte, you have a point, if there exists some ordering you can impose on the properties, in this example list by greatest to smallest, then the combo 5,6 ("6,5")== 6,5("6,5"). Maybe I've been complicating things!
I'm a bit jokiing... sure no need to make reflection on a simple class... but yeah you need a method that define the key... this can be a simple string concat or something else... then you you equals and hashcode...
for me the question is more conceptual hence how do you define the key...
aah @Scratte did you understand why it was negative in that java loop... I'm not sure I explained it well enough..
basically Integer.MAX +1 gives that negative value...
anyway it was not worth an answer because the main problem was the mess in loop... hence only peeps like you actually are interested why it would return that exact value :)
Hehe.. it puzzled me. Also, they said it returned the same value every time, but that's impossible for different values of input in the code that they ran :) If I remember correctly it was closed too, no? The entire code was in an image, which is why I made an error when transcribing it :)