@RyanM yeah, it may be, but it is also very unclear (to be honest, I'd choose this reason): there so many ways one could drown in choice :) do they want a CSS-based solution (if so - flexbox, grid, or like the good old days)? JS? What's the markup?
You repeated yourself in saying it's a "typo". I got that. What's the typo? We only close questions as "typo" if they are unlikely to be useful to anyone else. Considering that looks like a fairly reasonable mistake, I don't think it's the kind of question that we would normally close as a typo.
It does, however, look like a duplicate. Which... suggests that it's a pretty common typo and probably shouldn't be closed on that basis.
@RyanM i have been thinking on it all night, Its really to broad but we dont have that option any more. Its a loaded question it would take a week to teach this person how to get a token, and they dont even say what language they want to do it in. I cant teach them to build an authorization server in a SO anwser. So thought i would send it here see what you guys think if you think leave it i can remove my vote.
@DaImTo Some people say "needs details or clarity" is the new "too broad", others say that "more focus" is the same as "too broad" and can be used as the earlier one
yeah, I imagined a high-level answer to it ("you need to generate it via an authorization server that..."), but SMEs seem to think I'm wrong, so I'm not going to argue.
Thoughts on questions like this that ask what the best way to do something is, then link to a question asking generally the same thing, stating that they're looking for newer solutions, if any?
@RyanM They really need to have a better motivation than just "years passed". I think that's generally acceptable if you can say, "With the release of new standard XYZ and the introduction of blah blah, the old advice given here seems to have become obsolete."
remove has 531 questions, 43 followers, and no tag wiki. An arbitrary tag that seems too broad to add value to any given post. Most of the posts tagged with remove seem to be used by low-rep users.
The first five questions are about:
Removing DOM elements in Javascript
An arbitrary error message...
Just curious. This question just came to me in the Reopen review queue but it has no edit and no reopen vote on it, and was closed just 1 minute before appearing in the review. Is that normal?
How much worse could it get? We haven't been completely overwhelmed despite edits triggering review, so I don't think an explicit indicator triggering review would be a problem, especially if they fixed or killed the edits triggering reopen review.
It's also worked pretty well for closure: the main problem isn't that 15-rep users are submitting too many bad close flags, it's that there are too many posts that need closing.
Incidentally, I tried to decline a "recommend closure" flag today, saying that a question should be closed for lacking debugging information when it was not actually a debugging question, and I found that I could not decline such a flag. That was interesting. I thought mods could decline those manually, just that we didn't normally look at them, so it almost never happened that way.
@CodyGray You might be able to decline it by pulling the review item (which I think you can see as a moderator) and casting a binding review vote on that.
This was even with a userscript in play, so if a decline was at all possible, it should have worked. (I wasn't trying to work around anything with a userscript. I just normally use one to show flags inline on posts, instead of elsewhere, and to add some canned decline reasons.)
@JeanneDark So true. Neither do around 1/4 of custom flaggers, who use custom mod flags to type in [things nearly equivalent to] various standard close reasons.
I previously worked on a userscript that would allow me to include hyperlinks in my canned custom decline reasons, but it never worked properly due to that "StackOverflow.StackHtmlContent" reason.
It also explains why I have 2 zillion declined flags on MSO.
That feeling when you always tell users to search... and they probably did. :-)
Depends on the context, but it certainly could be. Especially if it constitutes a large proportion of the user's posts.
If, say, you've only posted 5 answers total, across 4 days, and they all promote your project, and they're all off-topic because your project is a command-line tool and you're posting them on answers to questions on a programming site...
That would certainly constitute excessive self-promotion.
I'm guessing that's a rebranding of Teams because you can't really have the same product name as Microsoft (unless you want confusion and the horrible reputation)
I'm trying not to be overly cynical, but I have a hard time as seeing this as anything but the company taking money from project "owners" to influence the perceived value of questions and answers that until yesterday were completely controlled by the community.
@Braiam the sudden downvotes are unfortunate bc your answer is right. My gut reaction is "why didn't they just develop tag grouping and parent tags instead?"
@JeanneDark That's the first thing I thought of when I read it (I'm outing myself as a Star Trek fan). I was thinking to myself, "resistance to the GCP collective's answer is futile."
@TylerH I can't help but feel that this is their solution to that problem. No need to unpin the accepted answer if everyone just learns to scan down the list of answers to find the recommended one.
Especially when it's a case of "this user hasn't earned any badges yet except maybe the edit-your-profile one". OK great why are you putting this information above their posts and tags then if the section is basically blank anyway?
@IanCampbell You can choose how they are ordered, but I can't remember if that setting is for how others view your tags or how you view everyone's tags
A sanity check: Is this really seeking a recommendation? It is more like: I have Go and Emacs, how do I make these work nicely together? Most of the answers point out where to find the bits in your local install folder and then configure your 'editor'.
@Braiam In my opinion, if you're going to extend that argument, any question about an IDE functionality that isn't implemented by the authors would be off topic.
Cynical TL;DR: SO creates expensive product to give companies direct influence over how questions and answers are perceived by the community. They provide tools to the company to award users, questions and answers special flair.
@KevinB PS I use ol.nav-links li > ol.nav-links li:nth-last-child(3), ol.nav-links li > ol.nav-links li:nth-last-child(2), ol.nav-links li > ol.nav-links li:nth-last-child(1) { display: none; } for sites starting with stackoverflow.com to hide the Collectives sidebar links
I have some other styles too removing other side menu links so that code right there might not work smoothly on its own... haven't tested that