@Scratte You could leave a comment on the new answer asking them to post on the target. Alternatively, if they choose not to, you can flag the answer to be moved to the target I think.
Not sure it's worth the effort there are like 100 of question on SO about generating colspan with JQUERY... anyone with interest (needs) can just go through a few of them and see what solution they prefer.
any advice how to act about these two answers: first and second, they are very similar although not exactly same, difference is however just an ID name
@Scratte I thought you were referring to the question that was already closed as a duplicate, sorry. But I don't follow your logic: if the questions are not identical, then how can you close as a duplicate?
@PetterFriberg I see. But since the duplicate has a different structure in the table, the Answer will look like it's answering a different Question.. sort of. Which it is :)
@Scratte Oh, I see. That's not a big deal, since Petter left a comment with the target. I don't think it's worth reopening just to close as a dupe. Reopen votes are cheap, but close votes are not, so unless you find a hammer who's willing to close as a dupe, I wouldn't reopen.
The best effort would be spent in convincing close voters to find dupes and people that answers to look for dupes first and if they exists answer on those...
@Scratte Yes, so find a dupe hammer who's willing to use it on this post. They'll almost certainly be willing to cast a reopen vote, it's not like anyone runs out of those :p
I just found the urban dictionary for rhetorical answer, but now it's getting quite convoluted :)
Like this one "A rhetorical answer is the instance where an answer is given to an unasked question but it is anticipated to be thought of by the majority of those involve in the conversation."
> Why is this question closed as opinion-based? I think it is rather about the advantages and disadvantages of two different implementations and the pros and cons can be supported with hard facts like mentioned in the previous comments
@JeanneDark That's a post that says you need to use code mapping. I don't see that as feasible without a link. And it's still an Answer without the link.
@Yatin Why did you add a comment.. that's identical to another comment? Well.. almost.
Someone undeleted their NAA deleted in the queue. I expect an auto-flag was raised. Does anyone know the ETA (Estimated Time of Arrival) by which I mean handling on those?
@JeanneDark Good one :) And on our own meta too :) "Post was undeleted by the author: after deletion by review votes, the author cast an undelete vote"
Interesting. I flagged a comment saying "Don't take the downvotes personally. SO is a great place for people to take out their anger on anonymous internet strangers that they can't take out on their colleagues." as NLN and the flag was declined.
@Scratte The comment adds absolutely nothing of worth. It would have been different if they had explained that downvotes are a content-rating mechanism.
Some people do, but that is not the point of downvotes. If you tell a new user that this is what downvotes are for then they will have skewed opinion of SO
@Dharman I'm not sure how they can have that. They're already fearful of posting on Stack Overflow. Telling them that downvotes are just content rating that will get them Question banned by really nice people, is hardly going to help hem.
I am also afraid of asking questions on Stack Overflow, but try and stop me. Just because one is afraid of something does not mean they won't do it. If you tell them the truth at least they will know what to think about unsuccessful questions
@Dharman Not like that.. there's fear that make you cautious and fear that paralyses you. The paralyzing is not good and it has physical health risks too.
@Scratte You mean they got a comment like: "Great question/answer but I'm so frustrated in my personal life and at work that I take out my anger on you and downvote you!"
@Dharman It's not voluntary. It's the opposite of voluntary. It's your entire being telling you there's a huge lion right in front of you that going to rip you apart. And it doesn't ease up.
@Scratte It's useful because then they will know that they can improve something. In case of mean anonymous strangers downvoting out of frustration, they can't.
@JohnDvorak If you contribute in other ways that are good, pretty sure you won't get a ban. I've asked like 5 questions that got downvoted, still no ban.
@JeanneDark I understand how you see it. I can see it both ways. If you're fine then Stack seems like an OK place. If you're not, then having that in the back of your head saying "maybe it's not just me that's horrible" is not a bad things.
Let me say this: Stack Overflow was a much nicer place when I didn't contribute here.
Since I started to get involved in curation efforts I see a lot of bad stuff. I worry more, I get revenge downvotes, I get rude comments, I get into arguments with people.
If it was to be too much for me then I would log out and just use SO like I did before. Offline.
I think maybe in their situation downvotes could be, well, a bit harsh. Piling on downvotes is just something way too harsh. The OP gets the point when there are 2 downvotes, why downvote it to oblivion even further?
If someone is sensitive about them being OK, then a comment like "Why don't you search the internet? I could find that in 5 minutes" just doesn't help. It's not even considered really rude. I do consider it rude as one cannot know if they tried or not.
@Scratte When you get that comment it's usually because once you put the title in search engine you get thousands of solutions that will be used as duplicate target.
@Dharman Ah. Yes. They could have searched for weeks, and then finally decided to ask a Question and then spending 15 minutes to find a perfect title, and forgot to search the internet using their own title.
@10Repsaysgetvaccinated That's not very kind though. Tell them what to search for.. if not, you're just basically telling them you don't think they bothered.
When I asked my first question I was told my title was really dumb and that I should use the internet...though I was on the verge of tears when I saw that comment.
@solid.py In general, avoid it for questions (unless maybe it's gibberish (but not vandalized). To close a question, select "Needs improvement" and then the respective close reason.
@10Repsaysgetvaccinated that alone wasn't the proposal. It was pointing out that synonymising image-mask and mask wouldn't fix any of the ambiguity in the tag, and if you want to fix it, the only way would be to force people not to use mask in isolation
@Nick But there is no usage of mask in isolation. It's being used for data and image-masking. Synonymizing mask and image-masking should fix most of the problem.
Then simply retagging all the data questions to data-masking
@Makyen - am I hallucinating or am I missing some functionality the cv-pls script had in violentmonkey in tampermonkey? I could have sworn it added a "tick-box" to the "close" dialog when run in violentmonkey; now I have to "close" first and then separately send the the cv-pls and manually enter the reason?
@Makyen I picked the same I was using in violentmonkey, I thought (opened the script URL in violentmonkey, uninstalled that, added tampermonkey, then loaded it) ... let me double-check
@10Repsaysgetvaccinated I would have closed that as "Needs MCVE" rather than "not programming". An image of code is sufficient for me to close as lacking MCVE, but a camera-phone photo is really unclear.
(I think there is an ethos that we would rather have the right close reason on off-topic questions. However it is not worth re-opening in order to close it with the right reason, IMO).
@Scratte That would be silly. He posted it in an answer. It answers a surprisingly large number of SO questions. How I make program to pass school? Here you go
While discussing examples of incorrect uses of English or misunderstandings of SE policy regarding fluff in posts is entertaining, I feel we could do that without sharing links to actual posts. It might just be me, but I think too much of that could be construed as user shaming.
Heh. There are certain terrains where I second guess my choice occasionally - but on the whole I'm really happy with my fivefingers, thin-soled as they are. ;)
@IanCampbell Definitely ease into it; most people who try it I feel like they just go whole hog and swap all their running to minimalist shoes, and then they get injured
if you've got good form it's probably less of an issue though
What Tyler said: ween yourself into it slowly. Even if you have "good form" a change from e.g. 8mm heel-drop to none can have pretty devastating effects on your achilles if you overdo it.
Well, Lone Peaks are zero drop, but my typically running shoes have drop. Bad news, though, is I am sure I have terrible form. Since no one ever taught me what good form is.
@IanCampbell - after my 2nd DNF (and having recovered from the injury that had caused it) I went to see a sports physiologist who did a form/gait assessment on me; that was a pretty interesting exercise, in particular comparing my form in KSO Evos (one of the thinnest soles on fivefingers available) and the well-padded New Balance with 8mm drop. My reportedly "good form" in the fives immediately changed to a thumping heel-strike in the padded shoes =D
I can't upvote your comment, @TylerH (been busy upvoting those made by Natty) but it's good. Actually, what Ian edited out was worse than noise - it was abusive.