@cigien @RyanM Yes, there's a high likelihood that the issue is with the Request Generator in the review queues. There was an issue similar to that prior to the recent changes. It's quite possible that it's gotten worse with the most recent changes. I haven't checked, yet.
@AlexandreElshobokshy it is easier for RO's if you link to the message you want to have moved to /dev/null so it is unambiguous which request you talk about.
@jps I'm just waiting for the Meta post from an unhappy new user: The moderator, "Community", left a comment on my post saying it was unclear. Why did he do that?
I'm sad that the top answer about the rework of the queues is about badges... a tool designed for curators, and the most important topic is that people lose a potential sprite...
I'm actually rather surprised at the 'restraint' shown in many of the answers and comments. Although there are some improvements in this latest/last UI update, it seems to me that most of the changes are having negative impact.
@JeanneDark Hmm. It would be interesting to see some review statistics over the coming few weeks: overall numbers of review(er)s and (maybe even more interesting) how the rate of review suspensions has changed (both audit-triggered and mod-given).
@Braiam Yesterday, I was going to die. I have 987 review in the First Posts. I was planning tomorrow to get Steward (Exact day of the Meta Announcement) when I read the post I was going to die. Hopefully, I have completed 13 review and got the gold badge finally. :)
@AdrianMole Not sure it would show. There are always enough new reviewers who want badges. I know, because I see many comments by the community user asking for an answer to explain the solution a bit better although that "answer" is obviously no attempt at answering the (or any) question.
I submitted a bunch of edits to posts with erratic orthography (like spaces before punctuation , like this : ugh ! ) and the OP reverted several of them; should I flag for mod attention?
@tripleee I would say downvote and move on. I don't think it needs a moderator attention, It is just a space. Voting is for rating content. Editing is to improve the content but if the author don't want to improve the post or don't agree with the edit, so I would that's their post not yours, so just downvote and move on.
To be very clear and kind, you may add a comment explaining that's wrong in English and your edit was improving that but that's optional and your opinion. :)
@JeanneDark No, it is theirs, They are the original author. It is just licensed under Creative Common License (CC BY-SA 4.0). This license is to add attribution for them (And some nice permissions for Stack Exchange to control it) but they still the original author. I am not a license expert, so correct me if I am wrong.
@KevinM.Mansour They relinquish their rights under the license, what they don't relinquish is their authorship. The only right they have is that their name is attached to the post (and even that they could relinquish too).
I don't believe authors release all of their rights. Heck, there is even tooling to allow an OP to reject after the fact a suggested edit that was approved on their post. They also get an uber-vote and can by themselves reject or accept any suggested edit. Post authors still retain a lot IMHO, until a mod steps in a makes it a CW ;)
@NathanOliver That's to prevent too drastic edits that change the intent of the post, eg. the OP asks about C++ but another user changes it to ask about PHP.
@tripleee It's probably best to write a comment explaining it to them and see if they understand. The ToS can also come in handy.
Looking at some MSO posts suggests that flagging for moderator attention is not so likely to lead to success. You could start a small rollback war to trigger an automatic flag, though ;)
triage blocks questions from getting to close review (for about a day average). I posted about this on meta but reception was kinda meh - maybe people consider this unimportant or maybe I failed to properly express my concern. Most of my cv-pls here are questions that are stuck in triage and because of that can't get to other reviews. I'd prefer them to be handled in close queue. Using SOCVR only because naturally fit review is blocked by dumb system makes me quite unhappy [/rant]
@gnat I agree that Triage is a huge problem and seems to have become an even bigger one. I think that if they want to keep it, they should turn it into what it's supposed to be: Just a queue redirecting posts into the appropriate other queues. No necessity to flag/vote to close or do anything else (in my experience, the other reviewers usually didn't know what's off-topic) and no effect on anything outside the queue. But without HI I'm now not sure it still serves enough purpose to remain.
@JeanneDark in my meta post I pondered about getting rid of triage. The only reason I could figure for keeping it is, it provides a great teaching value for users under 3K rep (those who can't see close votes). Though quality of triage algorithms makes it quite a strong reason, if you think of it
Well, now that Triage is potentially available across the network, let's see how many other sites ask for it to be activated for them. Any predictions ... ?
@oguzismail I think they are the same. The terms "capture" and "capture group" are commonly used in the documents I have seen. I do not recall ever seeing the term "regex group". I would support making "capture group" the real tag and having "regex group" refer to it. But, the number of questions on each term need considering.
@oguzismail Well, they started as just a way to "group" things, so they were called "groups". :) But, then there were capturing groups, non-capturing groups, lookaheads, lookbehinds, atomic groups, etc., etc. There are lots of different types of groups, some are categories of groups.