answerer understood the question, clarified the question via answering, but admitted that they were not interested in giving a complete answer to a homework assignment. I don't like how this page has turned out. What do other curators think about this php page: stackoverflow.com/a/68199183/2943403 ?
^ should the answer be converted to a comment under the question? or should the question be edited to receive the clarification in that answer and the accepted answer deleted because it doesn't actually attempt to resolve? It is generous and kind, but I don't think it meets the expectations of SO page design.
@oguzismail I guess I am revealing some nerdiness, but I think it might be a fun thought experiment. I might be tempted to answer if it was clearer and the OP showed some semblance of effort to self-solve. A pity. I guess I am leaning toward removing the page too. :(
@DaImTo Depends on the question. If the question has MCVE then it does not matter whether it is API bug or not and such question are useful to others. Also sometimes there are workarounds that can be posted as answers.
@JeanneDark A recently published study showed a correlation between deficits in beneficial gut bacteria and deficits in social interaction skills in mice. Maybe just make the account on Biology.SE?
Should this be closed as "no repro" (the 'assertion' in the question is just plain wrong) or should the most recent edit be rolled back (there was a sort of answer about the loop variable going out of scope)?
But, with that loop in the code, one could post a sort of answer. It's not the resize that invalidates the pointer but the fact that the pointee has gone.
Also, if anyone can relate to this it's probably you, @AdrianMole, but... I keep reading that diagram as saying "DNA" instead of "DATA" and seeing it as depicting a sort of double-helix.
Other people could run into similar problems caused by such typos... of course it's unlikely they would find this question or even understand from it how to solve the typo. The question can definitely be deleted.
That was the last one remaining I didn't know what to do with, so now that topic is cleaned up. I wrote an answer and made one of the questions a canonical.
Somewhere I read the statement "We close questions because they aren't answerable or are off topic (or already have an answer in the case of duplicates)" Is this correct?
There are close reasons for questions that are answerable, like "needs more focus" or "typo"
"needs more focus" means "not answerable in our [restrictive Q&A] format"
"typo" is a bit of an exception, I suppose.
"typo or not reproducible" is basically supposed to mean "not answerable in a useful way". It is meant primarily for cases where someone is, e.g., trying to use a public API but the service is temporarily down. They don't have a bug in their code; they just experienced a transient failure. There's no real answer to that, at least not one that is useful.
It's true that a typo like a misspelling of "void" as "viod" would prevent your code from compiling, and that that could be trivially answered, but... that answer isn't useful to anyone else. For plenty of other questions that arise from typos, those actually are useful to others, because others might make the same obscure mistake.
@JeanneDark Yes. "Needs more focus" is (or should be) trying to capture two things: there are too many questions asked here, or this is such a broad question that an attempt to exhaustively answer it would need to approach the length of a book.
@JeanneDark Honestly, I miss the prior incarnation of it as "Too Broad". Yes, it became a catch-all, but it better described a question that didn't have a narrow scope for Q&A
There is actually a very recent Meta question about precisely that... In that specific case, I'd say that would definitely be too broad. If the languages were swizzled around, then it would be more debatable. So, ultimately, that's the call of people who have subject-matter expertise.
@Dharman Uh... good question. I don't know. I have a very hard time understanding what is being asked in either of those questions, despite being quite familiar with C and Linux programming.
They appear to be asking about something different, at least.
Ok, I am done with that search. If anyone wants to continue my work please feel free stackoverflow.com/… I don't have enough close votes to go through them all
Migration doesn't work well. Too many problems with it, both conceptually and in the implementation.
The exception would be migration to Meta, I guess.
In place of migration, the user is given a list of other sites and reminded that they can delete their question and ask it anywhere they choose. After they first verify it is on-topic there.
stackoverflow.com/a/68230477/4657412 - this is a bit bizarre. It's obviously "not an answer" but they're replying to their self-answer on their own question asking for clarification
(Not asking anyone to do anything about it - it's just odd)
Yeah I did put a NAA flag on it. Like I say - I wasn't really asking for any action, I was just puzzled and asking for thoughts. Maybe they're just forgetful and just haven't noticed it's their past self they're talking to