@Braiam I'm going to try and explain why I find answering a contact from an acquaintance with "when/if I will" is rude. Think about it, you could answer between 99% to 100% of interactions with that sentence, but it would nearly always be rude and unwarrented.
With the rare exception of being a proportionate answer to an abusive request/contact, in almost every instance it's inconsiderate and off-puting. Besides, I may not will something but courtesy and justice demand I acquiesce.
That said I hadn't asked about the The Price of Sugar (2007 film) - finally watched it after our latest exchange- but since it's about "the will" what could be more appropriate? (Do I myself commit "faux pas" in wording and phrasing? Yes, frequently.)
@PetterFriberg I'm not that worried about declined flags... I'd rather flag too many posts and have some declined than missing some that should have been flagged.
> Are you struggling with poor internet accessibility at your home or workplace? Are you looking forward to having an ultimate solution to this issue? If your answer to all these questions is YES, then you surely need to consider repeaters. These can be a permanent solution to all your Wi-Fi related issues. You don’t need to worry about losing signal strength while traveling from one room to another.
@AdrianMole imgbb is a pretty 'standard' image hoster, same as imgur. Just has unfortunate ads attached to it sometimes. Best course of action is to edit it to a better provider, but I wouldn't consider a link as spam
@JeanneDark I've seen quite a lot of answers in review that have been flagged as link-only, where the poster has changed that default text to something like, "You can do it like this." In those cases, I just copy/paste the text, add a ":" and pling the link. I also leave a comment to the flagger, if they have identified themselves with a comment.
If a question that gets asked in, say opencv, that didn't specify a language (opencv is on python, java, c, etc.), does it count as "needs more focus"?
Many times when an opencv question is tagged with one language, it gets answered and accepted in another language, without the OP even mentioning that other languages are okay. Should the tag of the other language be added to the post?
I ran into a question today tagged with complete which (at the time of writing this) has no wiki description, no approved synonyms, 31 watchers, and 256 questions.
Does it describe the contents of the questions to which it is applied? and is it unambiguous?
No - it might mean finishing a task? or a
@RyanM you're right it is on-topic. I'm somewhat biased towards 1 rep questions that could be solved with a pinpoint comment (the OP may never return to accept an answer). This raises a 2nd issue, that of finding a duplicate that may include the info. (It's nice having a dupe that gives a direct google hit but nevertheless.)
@RyanM But I'm also sympathetic towards these questions, official Python documentation is a pain to navigate.
@bad_coder @rene please move to dev/null RyanM pointed out the question is in fact on-topic.
I am trying a new thing today. I want to automatically generate filters for my NAA bot. It looks promising, but unfortunately, it is not very accurate. Though it has already given me ideas for some new filters I can add.