@DragandDrop I just saw a custom comment flag from you. I assume it's the same issue you were asking in here about the other day, users leaving a bunch of comments linking to their personal blog? That's not even a borderline appropriate case to me. It isn't a resource that is directly relevant to the question. I'm going to clean all of those up. Thanks for the notice!
@HovercraftFullOfEels oh my @HovercraftFullOfEels sorry, copy paste is my weakness. Here's the link: stackoverflow.com/questions/65725665/…. All 8 candidate dupes in the comments.
@cigien maybe you are correct, then the question is unclear because there was no input type described, but how do you know OP knows how to read int when there is no mention about that?
but according the use of the variable in timedelta, I assume they need it as integer, which they do not load from input
@Ruli I guess I don't know if the OP knows how to read an int. There might be lots of things the OP doesn't know. Nonetheless, the question seems very clear to me. It's probably a dupe. The current suggested target is definitely not it though.
Well I'll leave it here because in my view it is definitely a correct target, they read it as string and submit it to datetime function to a parameter that expects int (number of hours), so converting input to int will solve it
@Siguza What would you want a mod to do? Strange that these are technically 2 accounts. Are these even answers or did they just post some random project (I also spot Java code there)?
@Siguza yeah, custom mod-flag that and explain they add many low quality answers. spread over possible two accounts. Posting lq stuff is a suspension reason IIRC.
down voting all those answers will get reversed due to serial voting ...
Funny. I seem to remember hearing about a daily limit of 8 Qs or As at some point in the dim and distant past (and that would make sense in this case).
There was a case we watched live, in here (just over a year ago?) where a user went potty and started posting loads of questions. Stopped at 8 and a certain Cherished Moderator said something along the lines of, "Thank goodness for the cap!" (along with other expressions, like "Aaaarrgggh!")
@desertnaut I've seen others handle such situations by leaving a comment (with a link to the original) and then voting to close as a dupe. But that may be tricky, if you don't have the link to the deleted post. (Or with the same close reason as the original.)
@πάνταῥεῖ I think your duplicate closure here is wrong. Even without using namespace std; there is still a problem with name conflicts for the count function. Perhaps a moot point, though - OP has self-deleted.
@AdrianMole Well, the dupe should make the OP aware, that there are things like naming conflicts, and what can cause them, no? A bit moot anyways, yes.
@πάνταῥεῖ Sure, a link to that canonical would be good. But that isn't the cause of the problem in that question. The only difference in the 'fixes' would be calling ::count() in one (OP's) and std::count() in the other (better). There were also other issues in that code.
So I asked after all about the edits on deleted posts on meta SE, an aparently it seems that such edits should be treated such as regular, if are helpful approve, else reject. Just if somebody was curious :)
Is it plausible to imagine an answer that flagged results in an NAA flag being marked helpful but a VLQ flag declined? Is that a plausible scenario (not counting misclicks or something)? What would be the characteristics of such an answer?
@JeanneDark That would probably depend very heavily on the mod who handles the flag, one mod might consider a question posted as an answer to be NAA while not VLQ, while another mod might consider it to be both
Even such a question posted as an answer would fit the VLQ description:"This answer has severe formatting or content problems. This answer is unlikely to be salvageable through editing, and might need to be removed."
I get what you're saying and this is the only scenario I can think of, but the answer would have to be removed anyway and at least the flagger didn't bother mods with a custom flag. So declining a VLQ flag and deleting the post anyway feels strange. I wonder what could be the reasoning for such an action.
@Vickel More generous to close as a duplicate than to try to knock back an unattempted question with Needs More Focus / Seeking Off-site Resource. Certainly downvote-worthy though.
This won't be the last time that someone finds my "straight talk" to be "not nice".
I am not putting the answerer down. I am explaining my actions and asking the answerer to think more deeply about when answering is appropriate. There is no name calling, nor any written abuse. I even tell the answerer that the answer is complete and correct.
@Nick And what do you think about this one, urging OP to remove their question. Not not nice, but not nice either. I don't like that tone and those stupid emojis
And I think that suggesting the removal of a post when he's happy with the fact that my "duplicate" resolved his issue is totally appropriate. His suggestion of self-answering or me making my dupe link an answer are imho both not in the spirit of Stack Overflow. And yes - what @mickmackusa says. Being friendly in telling him to get rid of the acknowledged dupe.
I don't use emojis and have a stoic avatar, so my comments are often misconstrued as "not nice".
Well, the alternative to explaining my actions is to post no comments. I absolutely hate no-comment-downvotes, so I endeavor not to use them on others. Again, my goal is to get the answerer to think more deeply about their volunteerism and to improve their answering philosophy.
The page (where tink closed) qualified for the roomba, yes. But the new asker there did not know the best way to resolve the page. Tink provided information. There is no abuse happening here.
I disagree in this case. He asked whether he should self-answer. That, uncommented, would have extended the exposure. Telling him not to do that was the right thing to do. And giving him the option to do it himself rather than having it spontaneously combust along with his (possibly accepted) self-answer would be a far more unpleasant experience.
Duplicates with accepted answers aren't deleted automatically, 3 users, or one mod, should vote to delete. And if a question doesn't cause any harm, why delete it?
In that case, not responding at all would be the best
@oguzismail I do not threat that I will delete the page. I am stating the inevitable. The redundant page adds no new value to Stack Overflow and will be sensibly deleted. I am stating facts, not threats.
@oguzismail then you are manufacturing something more than what is written in my words.
@oguzismail I think the point that we disagree on is "does a question/page cause harm". You may be completely tolerant of Stack Overflow amassing loads of redundant pages. I do not want this for Stack Overflow. My goal is for Stack Overflow to be a "researcher's paradise". When I am researching I want to know all my options so that I can select the best one. When my options are on 1 or 2 pages, I can collate that info pretty easily.
When my options are spread out over 15 pages, this is extremely tedious. I want more "good eggs" in "fewer baskets".
When new redundant questions are answered instead of closed, we risk not honoring older and better vetted insights. We need to be better leverage our older pages.
When old pages are revisited with new eyes, Stack Overflow enjoys content that is more likely to be true, good, and up-to-date.
All this while, I am not telling you @oguz that your philosophy is wrong. You are absolutely free to have your own philosophies. I am just justifying mine (and hoping to color yours). I participate in this room because other people's philosophies color mine.