It seems someone has created a vanilla in reference to Vanilla Javascript, which isn't a thing. The language is Javascript, We don't have vanilla-c# or Vanilla-Java so it makes no sense to have vanilla js or the vanilla at all. This is related to this question Synomize or blacklist [vanilla-js] t...
Hey guys, not sure if this is the right place but I have a bit of a problem: my question was answered in comment but has also been closed, now I'm not entirely certain on how to proceed, do I try to get the questioned opened again, or leave it closed or what. (question stackoverflow.com/questions/65337345/…)
@Yatin It was not trolling per se. They just wanted to post thanks, so they entered it in the username. The user is not registered so they can be removed and probably should.
@Yatin what would you consider a good solution in this case? I'm going to remove that part of the question once a proper answer can be made, but I can't answer the question myself and it seems unlikely that someone looking for the answer is going to go through that massive comment chain
@IanCampbell Yes. I went to the Winter Bash room with my suspicions, but at first they seemed to be more interested in getting the hat than figuring out the exact trigger, so.. I used you here :)
@IanCampbell The irony of the message I used is not entirely lost on me :D
What do you think about this question? It is an error dump followed by a link that has the instructions (sd report; not spam)... I wonder what will happen if the link died. How useful will the question be? Also is it flaggable? Closeable?
I expect those starred messages are going to get removed once a Room Owner comes along and see them. If you want the hat by unnatural ways go to WB Starring Room
So what to do with a comment that is using "Thanks <censored>. But I think maybe the ..."? When the user that posted the post, not the comment, has the username <censored>?
@Scratte you can flag it as NLN if the addressed user has responded. If the addressed user has not changed their name yet, you can flag the post and alert mods that the username is offensive
I have not experienced a declined flag when reporting an offensive username before (I think I've flagged a few over the years)
I'm not even entirely sure how offensive it is. I'm sure some users would find it very offensive though, but I'm not sure if that's the cutoff.
I noticed another one that calls themselves "IdiotSomething". Can't remember the "Something". Whenever someone pings them in a comment Queen sets off :)
@Scratte Someone ended their name with "Kkk". I don't think they were trying to evoke anything racist, but when someone flagged it I removed it. Remember, normal users can only change names every 30 days
My stance on offensive names is as it has always been: If there is some indication that it was meant to meant to offend people then it should be purged. If it's possible this is a coincidence and does not have an obviously rude/offensive meaning in English then leave it be. People have strange names in some parts of the world. Just because someone is called Hugh Jazz, doesn't mean they are trying to offend you.
@mck We don't discuss users in here. If you feel a user is engaged in bad behavior you can ask in Charcoal HQ or mod flag. In the case of socks, mod flag is probably faster
@10Rep What? Are you reading the question? The question says "I have a problem with code that I'm not showing", the answer responds "since you aren't showing the relevant code, I can't reproduce it"
I have to agree with 10Rep, if we boil the question down to "what 'encoding=' do i have to use?", and the answer to "df.to_csv(buff, index=False, encoding='UTF-8')". It seems like a valid attempt to answer.
@Braiam You can make it your mission to get rid of Answers on closed posts. There are some by very high reputation users too. Might get you a little push back :D
But recommending deletion in the review queue, for something that isn't truly NAA, is sort of cheating yourself into delete-vote privileges. Those who have 20K can delete-vote any answer they consider, of itself, poor enough. Even if it is an answer.
@10Rep The fact that you aren't addressing the main issue: the answer shouldn't have been posted in the first place. Instead, you argue saying that the rules don't say this or that when they are tangential to the point: the answer needs deletion.
You haven't provided any reason why it shouldn't be deleted.
While I provided several arguments that support being deleted.
If I come across a really poor answer in LQP (but that is an answer), I'll open it up in a separate link, skip the review, then cast a delete vote (and down vote, most often) outside the queue. That actually has much the same effect, in some ways (my delete vote will add to any acquired in review) ... but I'm a big boy, and I'm allowed to do that.
@Braiam Note FAQ#15, in particular "If you know a question is under discussion on Meta, that question is off-limits since Meta effect is in play and we are not above Meta. While we do not expect every user to know all discussions on Meta, we also do not want willful involvement of the room to try and resolve what should be resolved through discussions on Meta."
You made the request in here several hours after participating in the meta discussion. This counts as "willful involvement", and is not allowed here. Please refrain from doing that.
@Braiam That is a really poor argument. That argument implies that you were aware that you were breaking the rule at the time you made the request. Was that the case?
@Braiam It's against the rules, regardless of the closability of the post. If a question is being discussed on meta, and you know that, then don't post a request here.
@rene Well, then please, do not send users to ask ubuntu. We now have two questions about this both of which should be closed because OP didn't follow the manual correctly.
I'm all for following the rules, but when said rules produce an undesired effect and creating more work overall I really have to wonder "do this rule even make sense?"
You seem to miss the point. DO NOT POST CV-PLS REQUESTS FOR QUESTIONS THAT ARE DISCUSSED ON META. It can't possibly be that you missed it was discussed there as you answered it.
@Braiam Then bring up the issue of the rule. Do not just willfully break the rule because you think there might be a problem with it in a certain case.
@Braiam No. You're discussing it because the issue came up as a direct result of you intentionally breaking the rule. That's not how you should start this type of discussion. You didn't bring up the discussion.
@10Rep Because we don't moderate Meta. Once something is on Meta, it's something that should be decided by Meta. It shouldn't be something we organize to oppose by casting our votes on the post.
@10Rep There are many users who aren't very aware of or who refuse to participate in chat, or specifically in this chatroom, but they do participate in Meta discussions. That is another reason why, once something's on Meta, we don't apply our focused lens to questions under discussion there
@rene Hmm, the question could be that asking that, I can't tell. Maybe Needs Clarity, but I think I'll leave it. Thanks.
@Dharman That's what I thought till recently, but apparently discussing a single post is acceptable. It's only if the discussion goes on to multiple posts by some user does it need to be moved to Charcoal. At least, that's what I understood of Machavity's explanation when I asked about this.
@Dharman I don't see why not. You could say "Yes, I believe this is spam." And if someone asks why, you could say "My reasons for this are based on investigating the user's profile, and as such I can only answer this properly in Charcoal". A lot can be inferred from this response of course, but from what I understand of the intent behind the rule, this should be fine.
I don't really know though, so you should let an RO confirm either way.