@AdrianMole Hey! I'll have you know that I bring plenty of action!
@JeanneDark It's exceptionally rare that I, personally, will decline a VLQ flag. If it needs to be closed or deleted, then it's VLQ. I take the name of the flag literally. That I think it is not a good flag, that it doesn't scale, that it should be eliminated... that's not the flagger's fault. They're using what the system gives them to use.
What does get me, of course, is when people raise custom flags and type in "very low quality". That's a big head-scratcher. Sometimes they do it because the post is too old and the system won't let them raise an actual VLQ flag anymore. Other times, they do it because... well, for unknown reasons. I guess typing is easier than clicking the little circle.
@Braiam No, Jaydles (Jay Hanlon) left SE years ago. Although he does still have an account, and does still log in to MSE to contribute sometimes (virtually never on SO, but he never did).
@AdrianMole We don't allow bots to get moderator privileges. That was hashed out a long time ago. And nobody likes old hash.
@RyanM This. This is exactly what I thought. Also, I thought that one was pretty obvious. It took me less than a couple of seconds to realize it was a NAA, and I think I'm a bit more conservative than most of the LQP reviewers.
@IanCampbell Checking the "other answers" tab shouldn't be required. NAA flags are not for "this answer is a duplicate of an existing answer". In this case, the post clearly identified which other answer it was a "thanks" to.
Totally agree that this case should be easy, but previous experiences of "this worked for me" with a copy and paste from another answer may give one pause.
Obviously leaving a comment with a link to the thanked answer is a good way to avoid that.
@oguzismail As is evident from the later discussion, the exact type of thanks answer linked is likely to be reviewed properly, so I guess I intended "those kinds" to convey other related types of thanks answers which might be more ambiguous and less likely to be deleted.
I didn't realize my comment would be so controversial.
@IanCampbell My question was about the use of language, I didn'tread the surrounding discussion. I keep hearing these/those kinds of <plural noun> and that just doesn't make sense to me
@oguzismail If I understand you correctly, I think you're asking why I chose "those kinds" over "these kinds," "that kind" or "this kind". It's nuance and maybe writer dependent. Also, I could just be wrong. I'm no authority on English.
@oguzismail It's relatively straightforward. "That kind" means that the author/speaker thinks there is only a single kind, that they're all identical and interchangeable, so they can be referred to collectively as a single kind.
"Those kinds" means that the author/speaker is lumping them all together for the purposes of discussion, although they recognize that there are some non-salient differences between them (i.e., that they're not all exactly the same kind, but they can be treated as if they were the same for the purposes of this particular discussion/point).
@CodyGray I know your stance on VLQ flags but it seems that other mods handle them differently, judging by the not so infrequent MSO posts about declined ones. I don't remember ever flagging a question as VLQ.
That cannot be the reason; for, if it were the reason, it would mean that I, who has the apparently opposite opinion, would be welcoming by definition.
Having users translate random sentences sounds like a bad idea. Translation depends a lot on context, without it the end result will be terribly inconsistent and/or non-sensical. A wiki-like approach should provide much better results. — deceze ♦Jun 13 '10 at 6:10
Ah, how naive we used to be!
Crowd-sourcing is now a thing. It's still terribly inconsistent and/or nonsensical, but we now think it's a good idea.
I don't think it's impossible to get useful translations from crowdsourcing, but you have to be careful what your criteria are
a lot of open source sites rely on volunteer translators, with often rather dismaying results
just because you are a native speaker doesn't guarantee that you can write useful copy (or user interface text, or technical documentation, or whatever) in your language
I have installed so-close-vote-request-generator and Hide-Roomba-Bound-Posts user scripts. Those were working fine. But all of sudden last week the hide-roomba stopped working. The GUI of check boxes on 10K+ moderation tools page was not appearing at all. I today, tried many things including reinstalling script, disable/enable script, disable/enable tampermonkey, uninstall/install tampermonkey (and install scripts). Nothing works. Both the scripts are now not working.
Their respective GUI is not loading. Can anyone suggest what might be the problem?
@IanCampbell Having reviewers do the sensible stuff and check out context is challenging? Haven't you heard that you should review without context at all?
@CodyGray No. The question is about some software that uses some regex. It should be resolved via contacting the software developers, maybe they "coded" word boundaries in their own way.
@WiktorStribiżew But they seem to be asking for help in writing a regex. Why would the context (whether they're writing it for Perl code, or in some specific software package) matter when determining the on-topicness of the question? What am I missing there?
@HovercraftFullOfEels I wanted to close that as a dupe of some sort of "how to write to console in Java" canonical, but shockingly, I can't seem to find one...
This question isn't even a good example for others to learn from. It's basically, "I found some code, I want it to do something else,... write it for me", nothing more, nothing less. Not a great example of what you're trying to do
Lots of questions about printing to a file and the console simultaneously in Java. Someone with a gold hammer and some time to kill should really take a look at those...
I'd be happy to dupe-vote that other one, but it'd close as not-a-dupe due to the majority rule...so if Cody wants to hammer it, I'll hold off. Otherwise I'll vote in a few minutes.
I'd much rather the site have easy questions than it be a "debug my code" site.
6
I wasn't talking about your hatred, @Braiam, but rather Jeff Atwood's well-known irrational hatred of that question, driven primarily by Joel Spolsky's professed love of it.
It's the sort of thing I have to do regularly when I'm using a language I don't use much, because apparently it's a rule of language design that languages can't be consistent about how you write to the console.
@CodyGray Jeff didn't hate the question, Jeff hated the fact that quality wouldn't be assured on the site. Jeff was pretty openminded to the idea that answerers should select the kind of answers they want to answer via closevotes.
In other words: if something doesn't interest experts to answers, they should be able to close them.
> If this means aggressively closing unworthy or uninteresting questions, so be it. Without a community of people willing to answer questions, it really doesn't matter if there are questions at all, does it?
Well, for this particular question, it did interest the answerer to write an answer for it...it just so happened that the asker and answerer are the same person here.
There's no need for anyone else to find it interesting for it to be answered, since it already is. Though if someone else does find it interesting, they could always try to write a better answer.
Also personally I'd rather click a Stack Overflow link when I've forgotten how to print to the console in whatever language I'm doing a one-off task in, rather than some ad-laden tutorial where I'm gonna have to scroll through pages of stuff I don't need just to find the magic incantation.
And, ironically, answering this single question solves the core problem of answerers not being able to find questions which they are interested in answering, because this can be used as a quick-and-easy way to dispatch such questions, with only a single vote, instead of requiring 3.
No idea why they are rounding differently. Obviously it's a different code-base.
I theorized it was cribbed from the old Documentation project, because it looks nearly identical, visually, from what I can recall, but I was told by a dev that they didn't reuse any code.
This is precisely what I suggested, yes. Apparently not.
@AdrianMole I see. I am not aware of this "room script". I must not use it. It would be supremely annoying to have a script that would change my words into something else.
I didn't see it that time since I wasn't looking before Adrian edited it, but I'm aware that it does things like that in general. 99 percent of the time, it's useful, but occasionally the heuristics make the wrong call
There is a company that sells the most popular IDE for R. I wonder, between them and the open source project, which has more money to buy a collective...
If a Collective buys R, then we would no longe be able to use that lette in ou posts (without pemission), which would be a poblem. If somebody then bought C, that would be wose - atastophi, even.
@Wolf ╳ You are not a privileged user. Please see the privileges wiki page for information on what privileges are and what is expected of privileged users.
@IanCampbell I did not. I didn't mention it was the same user, on purpose. I guess maybe I should have not used the word "another" either? English is not my first language, sorry about any awkwardness, the idea was not to target anyone.
But I understand what you say and will pay attention.
I'm sure a room owner can provide more guidance, but I agree that it's easy to come across the same user's posts organically when someone else flags their answers into LQP.
@WiktorStribiżew You've previously voted to delete that, and the action was completed. You're not allowed to vote to delete it again, and nor are you allowed to make a request for others to do so in this room.
@WiktorStribiżew Please see FAQ #15. Requests are not permitted for actions where you have voted in a successful action to change the state of that post to the same state for which you are posting a request.
kubeadm is a command line tool for installing Kubernetes clusters. These questions are almost always off-topic for Stack Overflow.
Let's us review the last 12 questions with tag kubeadm:
Choosing Public IP or VPC IP for creating Kubernetes cluster - belongs to Server Fault.
kubernetes master nod...
@Makyen Don't want to start a fight ... but maybe a new (explicit) "Room Rule" to avoid folks coming here with attempts to get round the new "one-(un)delete-vote-per-person" policy may be in order?
@AdrianMole I'm not sure how more explicit you want us to make it. It already says "If you've delete-voted the post and the post was deleted after your vote, then you may not post a del-pls."
Of course. But I'm (mostly) waffling but have a concern that Meta regulars will see this room as a place to use to get past the new rule. And we don't want that...
@AdrianMole I'm not too concerned about it. The rule is abundantly clear (there's always scope to clarify it further, of course), so Meta regulars can only complain if the room actually allows invalid requests like that to be acted upon. I think we're doing all right with catching mistakes like that before it's too late.
@IanCampbell Well, I've been thinking of adding links to each of those bullet points, so that's a possibility too. That particular issue is fairly buried in the rules, so I'm not sure if we're going to be all that more successful at making it more obvious. I expect that we'll need to point a few more people at it, but I don't expect it to be all that big of a issue.
My problem with sub-bullet points was that if we go that route, it would feel like we would need to enumerate every possibility, rather than just have a general rule with a couple of examples.
@Vickel There are (apparently) certain staff members (and mods) who are uncomfortable with this room's existence. We don't want to add strength to their arsenal.
... even some of our "blessed few" have reservations.
@AdrianMole well, that's a strong bullet you are throwing, and I've read through some of the meta content concerning that, but lately, I think the opinion is quite positive...
"loose" versus "lose" is a very common spelling error, even among native English speakers. No shame. In "loose" (meaning not tight), the "S" is pronounced like the opening consonant of "circumspect;" in "lose" (meaning don't win) it is pronounced as the opening consonant of "xenophobia". But, on reflection, I wouldn't expect a foreigner to understand that. xD