It's unfortunate that such a comment like this https://stackoverflow.com/questions/5055042/whats-the-best-practice-using-a-settings-file-in-python?noredirect=1&lq=1#comment114290524_5055042 (or more unfriendly comment towards the curators...) is posted on many such "useful and closed" questions. (of course they can be flagged but they will pop up again)
Perhaps it will be a good idea to show a "even though this question is useful we close it because <...> if you disagree then <...>" in the close banner instead of
@sta Doesn't look like it to me. It looks like they're asking how to solve a specific practical problem: testing the API without making a real payment. That the answer might include a recommendation for a resource is irrelevant/not a problem.
@desertnaut @eyllanesc @miken32 The deletion of this question (after its deletion was requested in here) has been contested on Meta. Please review, and either defend your decision to delete the question on the Meta question or consider undeleting.
(OK, now I've had to lock the Meta question because the asker wasn't really interested in a constructive discussion. Therefore, you won't be able to post answers for a while. Sorry about the ping in this case. But, still worth a review. Thanks!)
That'd be a curse - imagine being able to understand someone with an inverse relationship to how much they have told you. If something is kept a secret you can read their mind, and if they tell you what something is, it makes no sense at all.
A question: Imagine I write an innocent comment, eg. "Please translate your answer into English", that gets flagged as harassment or unfriendly & unkind. I delete it myself once the problem with the post is corrected. The flag is marked helpful. Could that become a problem for me?
@JeanneDark Heh, no. If we had some kind of auto-suspension for "rude" comments, than that is definitely something that could be an issue (albeit still a very obscure/uncommon one). But that's precisely why we don't have such a thing.
@JeanneDark It's a sensible question - mods are not idiots, but how has the system been built? It's easy to accidentally find that one has built mod tools that penalise harmless comments in unexpected ways.
@SurajRao It looked to me like they had mixed spam for some product into an otherwise legitimate-looking programming question. Otherwise, what is "Nitrox Booster" doing in there a dozen times?
@JeanneDark Cody could just be AI, of course. And that prompts us to reflect on an interesting question - if moderations were AI routines, would they know?
That post requests an iterator for a sliding window, hence the semi-complicated answers, whereas the many linked duplicates simply want to slide through an array, which can easily be done with slicing.
I am not a Python expert, so my advice should be taken with a grain of salt. However, it looks like the answers to that canonical are offering both solutions, so I would just edit the canonical to make it not specific to an iterator. That way, it would be a more appropriate canonical for both ways of iterating through an array.
@AnnZen The problem with slicing is that it's not so efficient. On the other hand, most of the answers on that main dupe target you gave don't assume the input is an iterator. In fact, they cast the input to one (it = iter(seq)) so I think you don't need to worry too much
If you want, you could actually add an answer to that mega-dupe-target casting the input to a list and offering the slicing solution, noting the relevant caveats (if the sequence is an infinite generator for example)
@Tomerikoo Sounds like then that my suggestion of "canonicalizing" that main dupe target (to remove the insistence upon an iterator-based solution) would be most appropriate.
@CodyGray None of the answers provided the slicing method, AFAIK. Of course, that's because the OP requested that the sliding window function to work with generators too, and not a simple sequence.
@Tomerikoo Do think long and hard about whether it needs a new answer, or whether you can just edit the mention of the caveats/advantages into an existing answer.
@CodyGray "Nitrox booster" is just something that makes a car go fast, or something to that effect. It fits the problem description, and based on the linked image, the text is copied directly from what looks like a homework assignment. That's definitely not spam.
Guys. I have some thoughts. If i see, that new question is a duplicate, but an author is a newbie and he can't reuse answers from this post - should i flag or make an answer (by?) myself?
@JeanneDark True. I did consider that, but the phrasing of the question, the linked image, and the lack of a spam link makes me doubt it. If I see something like that pop up again, I'll reevaluate.
@CodyGray Yeah, I did. It's images of the question. BTW, I just realized there isn't a link to it in the transcript, sorry about that. This is the MS report for what we're talking about.
@manro If they run into new issues while trying to apply the solution to their original problem, they should post a new question with an MCVE to get that sorted out.
Users aren't banned for asking questions that are duplicates. Often times, multiple phrasings that all point back to the same central Q&A are useful contributions.
But like Tree said, you don't want to answer the duplicates, as that scatters out the information. We want to keep it consolidated in one place.
Any python gold-holder that can fix the dupe-list on this question? Replace the current dupe with the one from my comment. Your help is much appreciated thanks in advance!
For what it's worth, both of their other two answers are in the First Answers queue, too. So... maybe it keeps enqueueing their answers until at least one passes with a positive review?
One of the earlier answers was already fully reviewed in First Answers (with "Looks OK") but their actual first answer looks like it was "invalidated" twice in FA.
Like I said, I had some time on my hands and some knowledge to share. I do have almost twice as many answers as you do, but no where near the amount of moderation efforts. Perhaps we're just doing things in opposite order.
@HenryEcker truth be said, pandas tag is generally considered a "dumpster fire" I'm guessing you can answer every single combination of a table/query there is (which means little variation on the same principle).
@AdrianMole So I've noticed in my recent review efforts. Honestly, it's also odd competing with a resource in some ways. Like do I stop reviewing to save some close votes to be able to close some duplicates or finish out the queue.
@HenryEcker I gave up on some of the more interesting tags because any question would require at least 1 or 2 hours to figure out and write up, and in all likelihood you wouldn't get more than 1 or 2 up votes in a year...
@HenryEcker Yeah these days I tend to close more questions then answering them... Of course it's not a race, but I'm still jealous. I just encounter so many dupes and it's irritating to have to hope someone else will come to help the closure...
@bad_coder I'm not quite sure what you mean by this: "I'm guessing you can answer every single combination of a table/query there is (which means little variation on the same principle)." Apologies in advance if I've misunderstood, but it feels like you're devaluing the effort that went into creating those answers or are in some way insinuating that all pandas questions and answers are variations on the same concepts. (Which is arguably what all of programming is)
@Tomerikoo What's the Python chat-room like, in terms of seeking opinions about dupes? (I guess there are restrictions on asking for close votes in most rooms, so doing that will probably invoke mod/CM wrath.)
@Tomerikoo I also tend to close more questions than I answer. The issue with pandas though is there are very few gold badge holders and answerers in general so it's often difficult to get people on board with closing.
@AdrianMole I do also tend to send some requests there (using the cv-pls generator) but the room is not dedicated for that so I don't want to flood them as well. Anyway, you might notice that I do still post duplicate requests here - it would just be a lot more fun and easy to close them alone! :)
@AdrianMole pandas questions usually end up with a python tag for sure. However, if the primary question is data reshaping or manipulation they'll just have pandas/dataframe sometimes something like data-cleaning and so adding python after the fact does not always help. Also just because it's technically python doesn't mean enough users are confident enough to support a duplicate vote.
@CodyGray What I meant is that if I'm typing "pandas" for example. I've typed all of pandas I know I want to use pandas as a tag by the time the selector comes up I'm just looking for the word pandas and not really reading the other things on the screen.
That's because you already know it's the tag you want. I do that, too. I don't even bother to pick from the drop-down most of the time; I just type the name of the tag because I know it exists and I know what it's for.
Ah, and this feature request would probably be what @HenryEcker was talking/thinking about. Amusingly, that is marked as "deferred" by someone who no longer works at the company, so not likely to ever be thought about again.
But even if you know you want the pandas tag, it would be nice if that tag's excerpt had usage guidance. Something like: "...When using this tag, you should also include (one of) the python tag(s)."
Oh, actually... it also links to a feature request on the global Meta, which was marked as "status-review" very recently by someone who is still on the staff. So... this could happen, if we all hold our mouths just right.
Same thing as "if we all hold our breath". Basically just that it has to be the perfect constellation of circumstances for it to happen, so you shouldn't count on it.
Not sure where the idiom originates from. I had a grandfather who used to say it. If something complex or inscrutable didn't go right (say, an intermittent failure), he'd say it was because "you weren't holding your mouth right". Basically some silly non-reason that is obviously irrelevant.
@HenryEcker for reference I've seen several users saying the SQL tag has become impossible to organize and curate, my guess is pandas will be going down the same road.
@CodyGray I'm not an SME on pandas (walked away from SQL by choice) but considering pandas will sit on top of SQL in the stack my guess is it'll become a problem multiplier.
@CodyGray I feel that pandas struggles with the interconnectivity. It ships with matplotlibscipynumpyJinja2bs4. There are also many libraries who have built on or extended the library. So sometimes the question is given this data how do I plot it like this, this is my attempt. Which is often hard to categorize in that the question may require normalization of the dataframe before being able to plot it in that format. Which can make questions hard to focus.
The other issue is that pandas has very few features that need to be combined in specific ways. The developers work very hard to remove redundancies which means that a single keyword operation in SQL might be 5 or 6 known transformations in combination. Which can also make questions hard to form.
@CodyGray Is Texas known for their obscure idioms?
Interesting. The timeline no longer shows the reviewers who deleted a post, but just links to the review. It wasn't like that before, was it? I remember seeing the usernames of the reviewers before.
@HenryEcker Generally, the southern US is known for very folksy idioms that are quite obscure anywhere else. Texas is as good as the rest of the southern states on that note, if not better.
@JeanneDark I think it might have always been like that when the post was deleted through review, only showing the names of the delete-voters when they cast delete votes outside of the review queue. But I can't remember for sure, either. The timeline should still have the full information.
@HenryEcker but lets avoid the value/devalue debate for a minute... And lets say pushing a row/column has the same complexity an inverse Laplace transform or a differential equation have... ok. I've seen a few gold badge holders (who get the +1000 almost overnight) and the few times I check their posting history for a given couple of days, 50% are duplicates, with another 25% being one-liners on top of that..
So... Fast rep isn't what it might seem, not necessarily.
Dunno if this is exactly on-topic for this room, but there's a bunch of new users each posting (usually) two plagiarised answers on the hadoop/mapreduce tags. I assume it's a college assignment to submit some answers on the subject. I've flagged a bunch of them but there's clearly some most investigating to be done for anyone inclined.
@DavidW Flagging is the best thing to do. This room does handle user-level moderation tasks, but investigating plagiarism isn't something that "normal" users can do. That has to be left to diamond moderators. And the way you reach a diamond moderator is by raising a flag. If you've custom-flagged the post(s) and provided a thorough explanation of the problems you see, along with all supporting evidence, it'll get handled eventually.
I say "eventually" because mods get a lot of flags, so there's a pretty long backlog right now. Lack of action doesn't mean we're ignoring it.
@SurajRao I've largely done that - so I'm sure the posts I've found will be dealt with eventually. I was mainly it was mainly a comment that I'm pretty sure there's a pattern and plenty that I've missed and haven't flagged
@DavidW Ideally, a mod will look through the history of the account(s) mentioned in your flag and catch other cases. But sometimes this step gets overlooked. If you suspect there's more, and you're able to take the time, I would encourage you to find it in the profiles and flag each instance. If not, at least mention in the flag that you think there are many instances so a mod will be sure to look more thoroughly.
I don't mind custom mod flags in such cases, but our handling time is not great, so it's probably just fine to deal with it yourself precisely as you've done.
@AdrianMole Every upvote is suspicious ;) But on a more serious note, they don't gain important privileges through it. More suspicious are 2 upvotes so they can upvote.
@HenryEcker There are users who upvote as review action but then it shows as reviewed. "Looks ok" means no action was taken (because none was necessary).
Right. I was just responding to "There are users who upvote as review action but then it shows as reviewed." that Looks Okay does not preclude upvoting
Ahh gotcha. I would like if there was more information about "Reviewed" especially in first questions I'll edit, comment, and close and it's all just blanket "Reviewed" when that could've just meant upvoting an existing comment.
@HenryEcker Yes, it's a pain in the rear to have to track down what actions a user performed for each "reviewed" result. It would be quite helpful if the review interface listed which actions were taken by the reviewer. However, that would be a larger leak of information about a user's up/down voting habits, even though it's already possible to correlate up/down voting and a review with high probability.
@Makyen That may be the reason why actions like "close" aren't shown. If some actions were shown, then seeing none of those, one could readily surmise that the action was a vote (up or down).
@AdrianMole Yes. deletes a bunch of text saying about the same thing It's like they didn't figure the process of elimination existed. Admittedly, for non-moderators you can't check to see if the user performed some actions which can be erased from public view (e.g. posted and deleted a comment). OTOH, they could always up/down-vote and then reverse it after the review was done, which would leave no indications.
@HenryEcker Yes, even moderators can't see individual up/down-votes. We can see patterns.
@Makyen Interesting. So in some ways less public information about the review process protects this at the expense of transparency of the review process (in some ways)
@HenryEcker Yes, in some ways. However, the information is determinable with a good degree of accuracy. I'm unsure if the lack of information as to what the user did for the "reviewed" is more harmful than a more explicit indication that the user up/down-voted (or that they did something other than up/down-voting).