@oguzismail complete speculation, based on the sibling tag uitapgesturerecognizer which has a description ... an Apple UI interface class for a specific type of IOS gestures, apparently truncated because the tag became too long (I'm guessing Stack Overflow imposes a length limit?)
Synonym requests are easy; they're not like burnination requests. A mod can handle them in a couple of minutes.
The only challenge is marshalling enough evidence to prove that the synonym is correct/appropriate.
Trivial if the mod you encounter happens to know the subject matter. Harder if they are completely alien to it. Then, you need to find at least one other user who is also an expert (judged by rep, because what better proxy?) who agrees with you. Then, we'll probably just take your word for it.
@tripleee Interesting. A known downvote whiner was complaining about the immediate reception on Meta being 2 downvotes. I dismissed this because, as I may have mentioned, it was a known downvote whiner, and I tend to be very dismissive of downvote whining.
But I thought both of your questions yesterday were on-face good ideas, even if the edit exemption one turns out to be more complicated after giving it some thought.
but then I guess this is not easily a very controversial topic either; my interpretation was that the downvotes might mean "no, let's not spend time on developing things (or things other than thisonereally <blink>important</blink> thing", whatever then that might be)
@oguzismail Couldn't that equally be a reason to hold grudges against everyone?
My primary issue with it is that I just don't have the short-term memory capacity to remember everyone and whether they're on the "good" list or the "bad" list.
Heh. I wonder if they've also discovered the === operator within the last 5 years.
Ah, they discovered it shortly after asking the question, apparently by reading the documentation.
@rene merriam-webster.com/dictionary/gig the word does have an "entertainment industry" connotation in isolation, but "gig economy" refers to basically any work where you jump between employers
I would have thought it was related to "engagement" but Webster says origin unknown
Guys, I know it is not by the rules, but a user is acting - IMHO - not fair. I am talking about Regex, find a scientific number in a line. Tim posted an unhelpful answer, I closed the question as a duplicate of two posts that fully address the issue
(this and this, see my comment), and Tim reopened the question. Could you please advise what to do?
@Dharman The problem (for me) is that it is not the first, second and even third time that user reopens such questions after providing a "non-working" answer. Ok, if the user goes on like this, I will just let moderators know.
Don't be a goon! A downvote each afternoon is not something to lampoon; we all commune in our saloon at a time most opportune to impugn, not merely once in a blue moon.
@AdrianMole It's a judgement call. IMO, if the offensive language expresses frustration over the problem the OP is facing, it's fine. If the offensive language is directed at other people (users, creators of the product, etc), then it's not.
An exception is an otherwise okay post that contains insults directed at a specific user and which should be custom flagged.
@cigien It's not really a judgement call. A R/A post contains nothing of value whatsoever. It's something like gibberish or just abuse directed at SO or something. Not a post with some expletives in between.
@JeanneDark Well, I've come across posts that lie somewhere in between, i.e. there's a fair amount of profanity, but there's also a valid question in there. On some of those posts I can definitely see people reasonably disagreeing over whether it should be edited, or deleted, and that's what I meant by it being a judgement call.
@AdrianMole My rule of thumb is that rudeness directed at nobody in particular that can be removed to leave a passable question is not a good candidate for deletion
@JeanneDark Sorry, just saw this. I'm not sure I understand the question. I don't think I've had flags on offensive content declined, if that's what you're asking (maybe I have on a non-English post, before I knew not to do that).
@cigien I mean when you come across a post in which "there's a fair amount of profanity, but there's also a valid question in there" as you wrote and flag it as R/A, your flags are marked helpful?
@JeanneDark Ah, I see. Personally, I tend to favor editing, so no, I haven't had that happen (the R/A flags I raise tend to be obviously not repairable). But I wouldn't be surprised if the other way around has, i.e. I've edited a post that a mod has later decided is R/A.
I only flag posts as R/A that are really unsalvageable, with no attempt at or intention to post something suitable for SO. If it contained rudeness directed at someone specific, I would custom flag. Else, if it's editable, I leave it to 2k+ users.
@oguzismail I treat nsregularexpression tag the same as qregularexpression. As for regular-language, I prefer not to touch it as it usually appears with tags like automata, finite-automata, computation-theory, dfa, formal-languages that I also prefer to shy away from.
I remember a case of bounty-selling raised here (by Dharman, IIRC) some time ago. I think Cody was hanging about and said he'd handle it. I was going to suggest that I went to the website to purchase some of that bounty using the Stack Overflow VISA voucher I had recently 'earned' by taking the interview for the new Review UI. That could have been interesting...
@TylerH It's covered in the tag wiki: "Note: This class is new in Qt 5. Qt also offers an older, slightly less capable regex implementation though the QRegExp class."
@TylerH qregularexpression and qregexp are different as QRegExp is about the Qt4 and older. Its regex syntax is limited. QRegularExpression is about Qt5+, it supports PCRE regex syntax.
@WiktorStribiżew would you mind updating the wiki excerpts for one or both to mention they are version specific?
vast majority of readers/potential users probably wouldn't get past the excerpt, is the reason I think it's a good idea
even though we would hope those asking about them would know to use the right thing, there's plenty of evidence in all tags that that's... not the case :-)
Not sure Wiki excerpts even enter the universe of the vast majority of users. Look at how many recent Qs there are with the [api] tag, even though the excerpt says DO NOT USE THIS TAG.
... agreed. A decent Wiki excerpt can't do any harm and will potentially be useful. I use them a lot when reviewing suggested edits that have changed tags.
Consider a rule: "The password must be 3 characters long and contain 1 digit, 1 uppercase and 1 special character" vs "The password must be 3 characters long and can contain any character imaginable"
sites like that just tend to compare entropy, it doesn't factor in what's in common dictionary attacks and rainbow tables
some of the top 100 passwords which are sure to be tested within seconds are technically "secure" in that they don't contain dictionary words or common patterns; but just the fact that they have been used hundreds of thousands of times makes them insecure
I see several SO results for the most efficient way to check but none of the answers, somewhat frustratingly, give an estimate of how long it would actually take in real time
no I mean if you find a site which reports that three years ago they would estimate this many hours on this type of CPU the numbers are no longer relevant because modern cracking rigs use a different architecture
@Nick This post is really good and explains it thoroughly, (cc @TylerH) unless "costumer service-related" is a thing by itself I'd also opt for removing the adjective by rephrasing.
Depending on the industry I think it might be better to just alert the user (and security team that the account is using a compromised password) so that the team can follow up with them in a couple days
Let's say I have 100 million leaked passwords and 1000 users. I need to generate a new hash each time. This means I do bcrypt or argon2i or some other secure hash, 100,000,000,000 times
You have a magic function called checkPassword(), which returns a bool. It only accepts the password and a user id. This function reads the stored password for the given userid, takes the salt there, and hashes the password for that. If the resulting salt+hash matches the one stored, returns true, else false.
Instead of feeding said function with the password that the user have, you feed it the list you have.
It takes forever to do it the first time, but afterwards, you only need to do it for every password change.
@oguzismail I get that, but you need to be aware that issue is super sensitive in some corners right now. We don't need to poke the bear. I'm not saying you can't talk about it anywhere, just not in here please
@Dharman But they are feasible. Wikipedia says the private key is kept on a user’s device and can only be accessed when a biometric signature, hardware token or other passwordless factor is introduced. Sounds expensive
Me neither, I login through Google, for which I have a password set up. My phone has a fingerprint scanner on its back but I stopped using it because it fails to recognize my finger 4 out of 5 times.
@Dharman I'm not a fan of exclusively password-less access either
if I'm asleep, someone could open my eyelid or press my finger against a reader, hold the phone up to my face, etc.
someone could lift my fingerprint too, or record my voice
It's probably a good idea to use in concert with "something you know" but until we invent mind reading technology, MFA should always include "something you know"
@rene I think now I understand why you asked @Glorfindel about 5-3-2...
@WiktorStribiżew why does the question lack details and clarity? Seems like a clear input/ouput example. (I don't understand much about RegEx, so even if there is a reason to close I not able to vote on this specific post).
Would this answer qualify as NAA? Technically it's an answer, as it's saying "Call the function", but that should be a comment. What's the correct thing to do here? stackoverflow.com/review/low-quality-posts/29217681