@tink You know that lots of people are aware of "Stack Overflow" right? They could easily just go directly to it, or, perhaps, search for "stackoverflow", which isn't the same thing as searching for an actual answer to their question.
@sideshowbarker Seems no code was needed, as it was a configuration problem.
@RyanM Although the UI has, for unknown reasons, dropped it, the word primarily is very important. All good answers on SO (read: anything but a code-dump) involve some expression of opinions. The thing we are supposed to ascertain is whether the question is primarily seeking opinions, and thus cannot be answered in a way that is based on facts. That doesn't apply here; that question is not a problem. @Vega
@RyanM You and others have assumed a programming context which doesn't appear to exist in the original question. My evaluation of that question was that you could ask a question like that from a programming point of view, but that user was not asking it that way.
To me, based on the user's original question wording and other questions which the user has asked (none of which have anything to do with programming on Windows), they appear to be asking how do I make some random program that I've placed in the startup folder start on a 2nd desktop.
While an answer can be given from a generic Windows API POV, one of the things that's quite telling to me regarding the issue is that the user didn't specify a programming language. There are multiple things there that appear to point towards the user asking this from the POV of using Windows, rather than the POV of programming for Windows.
Why does the original intention of the asker matter? Why should we strain so hard to read their mind? If it is or can be made into a useful Windows API programming question, isn't it useful on that basis alone?
@CodyGray In general, the typical solution is that if the answer is really good, which it doesn't look like it to me as it just lists the APIs to use, not shows how to use them, then put it either A) on one of the duplicates, or B) create a question that actually asks the question from a programming point of view, rather than shoehorn it into a question which isn't that.
Wow, that's nice; you found two duplicate answers that should have been removed. :-\
Anyway... clearly the asker of this other question wasn't able to find those, presumably because they didn't know the keywords, so that still seems to argue for leaving that question as a pointer to the duplicate (which I didn't find, either...).
Why did you merge the older, higher scored question into the newer, lower scored, lower views question? While I'm not thrilled with the quality of either question, I would have expected the merge to be the other way around.
@RyanM That could be the case, but the overall impression I get from the question and user is that they are looking for a solution for how to use Windows, not how to program in Windows.
Meh. As someone who deals with a lot of Win API stuff, it is not unusual to omit mention of a programming language. The specific language doesn't much matter.
And well..."using powershell start a process and move any windows created by that process to a particular virtual desktop" could well be from an end-user perspective, too.
@RyanM Yes, but it also made it clear that it was looking for an API, rather than some way to make a program placed in the start folder run on a 2nd screen.
Very old question with new link-only answer made me aware of two other, old answers: Is this link-only or answers the "Is it possible...?" part of the question? While this is just NAA, isn't it?
@RyanM Thanks, Iโm not sure why I approved that, looking back.
user12867493
Although @CodyGrayโs rejection reason is too extreme, I think.
user12867493
@RyanM Actually, I see why I did that. I didnโt realise that they added ?> at the end of the code block as I didnโt look at the markdown. If they did actually remove it (as I thought they did), I would have approved that edit again.
It was probably because of the character limit for suggested edits. The solution is to either find something other to actually improve or just not suggest the edit, not to make some random changes.
I see many more than 6 characters worth of edits that could have been made there. But yeah, even if you didn't, trading one incorrectly formatted block for another is... not an improvement.
@CodyGray I agree. My guess was just that the main goal of their edit was ?> and then they looked for something else to meet the character limit. But the other changes were no improvement.
Maybe thatโs enough conversation for one review now. If I flagged every incorrect review I saw in suggested edits, it would take me 10 times longer to review.
You don't have to flag all of them; rejecting them will do just fine. It's not worth flagging except where there's a pattern of incorrect suggestions and/or reviews.
You are also over 2k reputation, so you have full edit privileges. That means you can "Improve Edit" (which approves the suggestion and allows you to fix additional issues), or you can "Reject and Edit" (which rejects an edit that did something like abuse inline code formatting, but still allows you to edit to fix incorrect formatting of a code block).
It probably takes slightly longer if you are willing to edit when reviewing suggested edits, but it makes the experience and the site much better.
Most things that are worth doing take time, after all.
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@CodyGray You have gotten me very confused, but as I said: โMaybe thatโs enough conversation for one review now.โ.
@JonClements \o/ Jon all good, vaccinated.. rebuilding house and tons of work (covid has been good business for sw developers). And you how are you holding up outside of EU?
@blackgreen the joke in that case is the "ão" suffix in Portuguese makes a word mean big.
So saying: "blackgreenão" would mean "big blackgreen". So the suffix itself is frequently humorous. And saying MSE is the big meta is the humorous side of the name.
@CodyGray Jon Skeet is a near-mythological figure on Stack Overflow, so the "thank Skeet" comment was a joke about him being the god of programmers here, e.g. "thank god" -> "thank Skeet"
@Machavity I had stopped for several years, picked it back up a few years ago. I kept seeing your avatar over the years and always wanted to ask, could never find Machavity on steam though
Any pythonista that can change the dupe list on this one? While the names make it look like it, the current dupe target is not correct. I put one in the comments
Yeah, I think so, especially if there were several comments, or other answers. User could mean something like "Sorry for the trouble/effort y'all had to put in, but I managed to solve my problem".
@Machavity current hypothesis is that it's not there anymore, actually. When trying to vote to delete it yesterday, after I had already voted, I actually retracted it, despite the modals telling me the wrong thing.
And because delete-vote retractions don't currently show up in the timeline, it looked like it should still have been there
but Felippe as a staff member could see more info, including that I had apparently retracted my del vote.
While I find both the problem & solution very interesting I'm not sure that Stack Overflow is the right place for this, but then: where would one send the guy?
It basically came down to a misconfigured hardware appliance ...
@TylerH Normally that date is populated once the vote is successful and the public record about deletion is added. I forgot about retraction when I looked at it
@tink I'm not convinced it isn't on-topic here, but if anywhere might be better, it would probably be ServerFault, which covers "networking-related infrastructure administration". NICs and MAC addresses are clearly networking matters.
@TylerH - well ... the hardware issue manifests itself while trying a software backend ... so still not really a problem with the program, though ... shrug
@Braiam - what would you expect the kernel to do? :) It recognises the IP but not the MAC, which is why wireshark can see the packets and why the app on the interface doesn't ...
@tink If the device was set to promiscuous (which wireshark does and is why is capable of seeing it), the asker would be able to see any packet that hit the wire.
@TylerH I saw a similar behavior yesterday in Chinese.SE โ I have trusted user privileges there. I clicked to cast a delete vote on an answer even though I forgot I had already cast one and instead it retracted the vote. The text of the alert was reading as if that was my first delete vote
Not sure if it's the same issue you were talking about earlier
anyway in Chinese.SE there's basically only 3 trusted users who do user level moderation. Even if I forget having cast votes, on any given post there's a 1 in 3 chance that the delete vote is mine
Usually, greetings are unnecessary noise. Dozens of us come and go all day: if we all greeted each other, the chatroom would be full of almost nothing else. Of course, there are exceptions.
@manro The issue was you pinged moderators about doing things that could be handled with flags. No moderator hangs out in chat to get pings for stuff about posts
@tink Yes, that's on-topic here for SO. They're solving a problem in a programming context. Even if it ultimately turns out to be caused by a hardware problem, it's still on-topic.
@RyanM It would be easier if we had a canonical about atomicity, which operations are canonoical and which aren't. But the post would be pretty broad, and answer probably quite lenghty. At least if they are not language-specific...