@HovercraftFullOfEels Could you use a custom "needs to be in English" close reason? Or leave a comment if there isn't one. OP might just provide additional details in French otherwise :p
@HovercraftFullOfEels To my knowledge there is no meta on this, but I can take a look. I'll post a meta if there isn't one maybe. It's definitely come up in SOCVR several times.
Yeah. Also, it's specific to adding that as a standard close reason, and Hover is probably asking about whether a comment is necessary if no one closes with a custom reason.
Good point. If it becomes a standard close reason, presumably no comment would be needed. The comment is necessary now, because the rationale is not provided. Seems like a separate question? But I wonder if the answer is just, sure, it would help, but no one can make you comment on why you flagged.
@HovercraftFullOfEels Agreed. fwiw I think consensus in SOCVR is that it's preferable to be explicit to the OP that English is mandatory. Don't take my word for there being consensus though, it might be contentious.
@Zoe Well, that's a shame. Guess I'll have to do a bit of provoking then ;)
at the very least with that information we can discern if this is an issue with OP, a temporary issue with Oracle's site, or a permanent issue with Oracle's site
@AnnZen np. If you want to look up the rule, it's #9 in the FAQ: "We moderate the content of posts on Stack Overflow (closure/edit/review/delete). This means that we DO NOT moderate: ... Meta Stack Overflow ..."
@Braiam If you're able to download the file OP is trying to get, then (if it were to get reopened) it could be appropriately closeable as no repro cc @IanCampbell
@Braiam Right, hence my parenthetical. I wanted to reply with additional information based on Ian's original question: "what is the appropriate close reason for this question?"
If someone is asking why they can't download some file due to an error page, but you can download it by following the same step, then you can appropriately close such a question as 'no repro'
@Scratte When it's your own question, the inquiry gets questionable. We don't moderate (or attempt to) moderate Meta (emphasis mine). Why something happens on Meta is solidly outside the room's purview, and we don't want to encourage Meta-related discussions at length even if they aren't overt *-pls requests.
@Scratte Simply asking why may be ok. But I don't see how that discussion could progress constructively beyond that point without involving some level of moderation of meta.
@TylerH That's a bit strange, because people have tried to encourage me to post on meta and there's been discussion in here about posts on meta without it being moderated from here at all.
But if this is a hard rule, I can always reference this message of yours anytime someone asks me to post about an issue on meta. Since.. it would be my post.
I'm not even sure why if I were to post on meta and the post got closed or deleted, I couldn't ask about it here. Posting a new meta about why the previous got closed would likely not produce any answers.
I'm not sure why you think what TylerH said implies a hard rule. And discussing a post that exists on meta is considerably different that discussing whether one should post on meta. The latter happens here quite a lot, and I don't think that's an issue.
@cigien It could easily be "Perhaps rephrase this particular thing" or "You forgot to include that".. I mean when users come and asks about their main posts, we also just give advice.
@Scratte I see your point. I think this is one of those areas where "up to the RO's discretion" is a very useful caveat to have to the rule#9. I responded to AnnZen's question the way I did because I felt it was likely to end up crossing the line. It was just an opinion of course, and I've certainly discussed aspects of meta in here myself.
@Braiam Sorry, a question being uninteresting is a reason to close? Uninteresting to whom? I'm not sure where you're getting that from. Could you share a link or something?
@Scratte It's one thing to ask for some guidance on how to ask on Meta or to refer to a Meta post, whether they should ask about something on Meta, etc.. If you're asking why your Meta question got up/down/close/delete votes, however, that's really just asking for assistance with moderating Meta.
The issue is about what you're asking about
"Is this Meta canonical still in effect or is there a newer one" is fine. "Should I ask about this topic on Meta?" is usually fine. "Why did my Meta question get closed/downvoted" is not.
@TylerH I don't see why. What if I have no clue as to why it's being downvoted? If I ask that, it's not like I'm asking for upvotes. I just want to know why it's getting downvoted.
@IanCampbell That's what I can't figure out. And discussing a post isn't moderating it. That's just discussing it. Moderating it is voting on it whether that's up/down/close/reopen/delete or undelete. That's how I read rule nr. 9
So no requests and no sneaking requests.. but that's hardly the same as asking about why something happens or happened to a post.
@TylerH On ""Why did my Meta question get closed/downvoted" is not OK"
I've asked a lot of times about such on meta posts, though they weren't my own.
If it's just a random post of your own that has received downvotes/close votes/whatever votes, it's more problematic solicitation, either intentional or not, for attention in that form. You're leading the viewers, so to speak, preloading them with that mindset.
@TylerH That's a bit of a stretch. I expect users to be able to own their choices. I do not make anyone do anything. I have also linked to my own meta posts on many occasions and I have never wanted for any type of voting on them.
@Scratte I disagree; one is a general question seeking to get improvements, another is a specific inquiry about some moderation action which implies taking issue with said action
@TylerH No.. I like a big buffer when I do things. So I like to the post because I feel it's relevant to some discussion. But if I was posting something that got a heavy beating, I would certainly like to know why. It could be some phrasing I did wrong or the post seems ranty without me knowing about it. Getting feedback from experienced and trusted users here would be my first choice.
It would generally be better, I think, if such discussions were gently moved into the Ministry. The 'rules' there are more flexible and folks from in here can join in if they feel so inclined.
If a Room Owner here sends the discussion there, then the link is available for anyone to follow. The initial question (in some form) could be left in here, by way of a signpost, perhaps.
Although I'm rather on the fence between Scratte and TylerH here, what we must remember is that many of the rules are set here to specifically avoid the Wrath of Meta. If we start regularly talking about Meta posts in here, that wrath is likely to escalate.
@Machavity That Answer looks a bit odd. Not sure what's at the end of the ternary. I'll run the last line though. See what happens. The stuff before that doesn't seem to be sensible.
@cigien I'm not suggesting it shouldn't be undeleted. OP can always delete it themselves afterwards. It's a pity that these foreign language questions get so many downvotes when simply closing them is sufficient.
@Nick Actually, I don't usually see so many downvotes on non-English questions. I'm a little surprised about this one. It even had text, and some code.
@AdrianMole Yeah, that's definitely an issue. It's not an easy one to solve though. It's not like users can be expected to follow up on all the posts they take actions on.
@cigien My experience has been that the opposite, most of them get at least a couple. And as @AdrianMole says, they rarely get revisited to see if they have been improved so that they can be reversed.
I agree. It also crosses the "don't leave comments on downvotes" issue. In C++, on those occasions when I've received downvotes (on answers), there are generally comments left. If/when I address those concerns, I will normally ping the commentator, with something like: Thanks for pointing that out. See edit...
... more often than not, the downvote(s) is(are) quickly removed, or even converted to an upvote.
@Nick No, I'm agreeing they get a couple. 7 seems a lot though. And yeah, users don't follow up. I come across these translated questions every now and then. I don't bother with undeleting unless I think it can be reopened eventually. This one just needs some some details, and it'll be fine.
@AdrianMole That's true for answers, at least in the C++ tag. Not so much for questions, and I don't really know about other tags.
Of course, there have been a few occasions where the comment was along the lines of: This is just utterly and completely wrong! In those cases, I have always done the "Honourable Thing!"
I mean you should check who's saying it, but if someone confidently says that on a C++ answer they're probably right. Also, if you don't do the honorable thing, it'll get done for you. We're not fond of bad answers, so they don't live long :p
@IanCampbell Actually, now that you come to mention it: I have also had answers deleted by way of their parent questions (and no notification other than possible rep. change).
Seems wrong, somehow. I would like to be informed if the Community saw fit to delete one of my posts.
@Nick That annoys me a lot. I remember when I was starting out and had low rep, a couple of times I've had correct answers being downvoted. I had no idea why, and would anguish over it, wondering what I'd gotten wrong. It's only after participating in here that I learned why that happens. I think it's very unfortunate that users do that, just to be able to roomba the parent question.
@cigien it's because they don't want to vtd the question personally, as you will be able to see that they did that. By doing it this way they avoid potential revenge downvotes
@Machavity It works, but I don't consider it to be a stellar Answer for a few reasons. If I had come by it and checked it out as I've done now, I'd have left a comment on it and possibly a downvote.
I am curious if it was edited since it was deleted and if so, how it looked before. I wouldn't have deleted it though as I don't find it to be completely useless. It's certainly not harmful
@cigien There is a meta on that:Clean-up by downvoting? A ridiculous user experience. The LD/DR is: users should not downvote in order to cause the Roomba to delete a question. The question or answers might be otherwise deserving of downvotes, but just in order to trigger the Roomba is not an acceptable reason to downvote.
@Scratte Was deleted by 20k votes. The original was more some useless commentary. The main question for me was "Did the edit actually make this a useful answer?" I'm not inclined to override 20k votes just for an unclear edit
@Machavity Though I'm no Java expert, the edit made there seems so drastic that the answerer would have been better off (IMHO) posting the edit as a new answer.