@RyanM it looks like the edit suggestion does fix a problem that the OP themselves introduced in their most recent edit. It certainly does not look like what they intended as default submit handling only sends named elements. That might've been an accident since they did not even mention it in an otherwise accurate summary. I am inclined to ask in comments first
@RyanM Yes. I agree with @OlegValter though this edit does fix the problem. The follow up examples use name over id and other answers elaborate why name is necessary over id.
@RyanM I went ahead and made both the approval and a comment to get the OP's attention if necessary. The edit does not seem to miss grave issues with the post, and definitely attempts to fix a mistake that might propagate if anyone copies without reading the step 23 of the form submission algorithm
@Turing85 It's fine, so long as both answers provide useful information that's not in the other answer. Merging would be nice, but it would require both users to agree; leave a comment if you think they might.
@mickmackusa Wow, that tool that runs the code in multiple versions of PHP and shows that the output is identical on all of them seems amazingly useful.
@Makyen For reference, from the canonical I would say that you are right and in my case there was a coincidence: that I was manually suspended precisely on the minute I checked back to the review queues. Meaning the timestamps suggested the suspension started when the user returned to the review queues. (You can see the history it was my last suspension for VLQ queue.) (cc @cigien)
Is this old question salvageable? It received a ranty NATO and looks like recommendation (or more focus) at first, but maybe something can be made of the second question.
Yes, it could probably be turned into a valid question by focusing on "how to configure Ecplise or Netbeans to PIC development", but that would invalidate nearly all of the existing answers, which makes it not a great idea.
For some reason, ffpmeg is commonly thought to be on-topic for SO. Does it somehow fall into the category of software tools commonly/primarily used by programmers?
"…you're left with an easy decision: do you want answers from folks who are more likely to treat your question as a programming problem, or would you be ok with answers from resourceful (but not necessarily code-focused) experts as well?" Seems like dangerous advice absent further context. I'd like to get answers on how to load my dishwasher from folks who treat it as a programming problem, too.
If the question is "how to convert a directory full of mp4s to h264 using ffmpeg in a bash script?" or something, that seems reasonably on-topic on SO even if the answer is in fact a single command line invocation.
Which ...I don't know if it is, I usually use Google search to find out how to invoke ffmpeg.
Probably mostly about ffmpeg: I suspect there are more people who know how to write a loop over files in bash than know how to invoke ffmpeg to convert to h264.
...I have to look up both every time, personally. I don't write many bash scripts.
@Adriaan Heh. It's not actually new, it's been here for over a year, at least. It's just a rename of "too broad", which a description that frustratingly omits one of the two major use-cases for "too broad"... namely that the question was actually too broad.
@Dharman Right. You're supposed to read all of the questions as they come in and memorize them, so you don't ever need to refer back to them. Only the lazy, forgetful mods need to be able to search the old deleted posts.
Oh, of course. But remember, you only want to do that if it's not homework and it shows a sufficient amount of effort. The asker needs to clearly demonstrate that they've suffered.
Agreed with Cody. And I'm slow to read today. The requirement to provide a reproducible example is only if somebody is asking stuff like "I have this plot but it's wrong, how do I fix it?" but conceivably you can also ask "which plot type do I use for X" or "how to plot Y type of data" which are not debugging questions.
If you need an additional reason to reject the edit, then it's using American spelling.
@VLAZ Sure, I just meant that this rule does not only apply to this tag specifically, but all other tags as well, so mentioning this specifically in the excerpt does not make much sense :)
And yeah, they didn't even distinguish between debugging/non-debugging questions there...
@RyanM so it's election time on writing.se, I was checking out one of the candidates I vaguely knew by name and he wrote this interesting post mapping some modern pronoun polemics back to 17th century religious polemics. I must admit the historical connection is brilliant and I had never thought about it.
is this on topic? I don't see it much programming related but I don't know the technology so I am not sure. Tags seem to be incorrect imo but I don't know.
Has anyone seen any meta posts about the change to review queues in the last 24 hours? Vote up/down on a review audit used to immediately trigger an audit response, but now it doesn't.
@JeanneDark That'll do. Thanks. I just failed a First Answers audit by voting down and submitting. Previously the downvote alone was sufficient and, as I knew it was an audit (as I'd looked at the question outside the queue and the answer wasn't there) I was surprised by failing.
Well, if it's a voter or flagger, then the system should recognize the comment for what it is and delete it. If it was added manually, then I'm not sure the system can spot it.
what to do with a question where the code is full of trivial errors, like code outside function, variables not defined, typos...? stackoverflow.com/questions/69898621/…
That specific question maybe needs more details or debugging details? It's unclear how it is supposed to work, what exactly does not work and, especially with countless typos, the code probably doesn't count as an MCVE.
@HenryEcker The OP commented on another answer telling them they posted an answer with more info. That self-answer was discussed in here. The comment confirms that it's not an answer and was not intended as an answer by the OP. I don't think it's confusing. They just abused the answer box to provide further info.
Ah the comment is clarifying to others that this is an incorrect use of the answer box. I didn't realize the dates from 2019 I thought this was for the OP (which made less sense)
I am judgemental at all right now and still find it incongruous when the OP is able to understand the complexity of that "crossover whatever" there, but do not see that they are posting in the answer post while they could do an edit to the question post
I meant "I am NOT judgemental". I am tired of my typos, sorry
I don't think that would help. You can simply scroll down. What I meant is rather that the lack of an Informed badge is often a sign that they also do not try to get informed about what SO is. So they likely don't care, especially not as long as other people still answer their questions (in comments or answers).
@Calculuswhiz I'll have someone who's been around during the last year (I wasn't) weigh in. There used to be an exception raised by Shog9 (former CM) about where to find official download locations of programs/libraries
@SurajRao sounds like another SE site. In any way not very useful or according to the burnination criteria
I have a weird problem with a question - somebody just asked about code that doesn't work. It's not code they have written, it is code given to them (I suspect from interview but doesn't matter). The code has many flaws that are intentionally there. Seems the goal is to get a discussion about what is wrong and how to improve it. My problem is there are too many problems. There are at least 3-4 things that would straight up stop the thing from working. There are also conceptual problems.
Would that qualify as too broad?
By rough estimation, there are at least 10-15 things I can definitely say are wrong with the code.
@VLAZ it may also be debugging details if the code (A) does not work and (B) did not explain what it is supposed to do. Or typo if there are many trivial errors.
Hard to say w/o context. Which close reason text would most help the OP fix the question may be a better question if almost all the close reasons apply.
@HenryEcker Syntax errors, code that is straight up doing the wrong thing, code that would work if it was used correctly, etc. The first problem would be that it's calling a constructor without new. Then it tries to call a static method on an instance. And the static method tries to access instance variables. But reading one of the variables would also throw an error (there is a throw in the getter). That's just the beginning.
I actually VTC'd it a moment before @MarcoBonelli advised me to (thanks, by the way). I re-read it and it's just not possible to answer usefully in the current state.
@MarcoBonelli OP said that the code was given to them as an example of bad code. But OP didn't know which specific parts were problematic. I suspect an interview question but as I said, I don't think it matters.
All I'm saying is: if OP didn't even manage to explain what is going on with a little bit more detail, then it doesn't even matter what the code does. It needs more clarity.
@MarcoBonelli The point of the question was "explain what's wrong in this code". That much was clear. There were just too many problems. It's not even hard to figure out what the code should be doing, it's just that almost every line of code is in some way incorrect. Either a code error or a conceptual one. I joked in a comment that the only line I didn't see a problem in was the one that just read } else { but...it might genuinely be the only line that is correct. But it might even be true.
There are 45 lines in total (including blank ones).
@HenryEcker you mean attribution before the initial quote in the answer? That doesn't need attribution IMHO, it's very common for answers to briefly quote the question they are answering, the intention is pretty clear.
@HenryEcker I'm aware that's the case when referring to other answers and when mentioning other resources. I just am not sure if this is required for quoting the question. If so, I'd have to go and update some of my old answers which have quoted different parts of the question to tackle.
Don't get me wrong, I'd be happy to if that's what's needed. I just didn't think it was. It gets...noisy, especially when quoting multiple times.
I could be incorrect. I would be happy to know if I am. I just don't see how, if the question and answer both have the same the exact same license, there could be one requirement for questions and a different requirement for answers.
@HenryEcker I beg to differ. That would make half the answers I see and write on a daily basis miss appropriate attribution. If the source is obvious then there is no need for attribution IMO. It just adds noise.
"You should be aware that all Public Content you contribute is available for public copy and redistribution, and all such Public Content must have appropriate attribution." from licensing
@Braiam That's not an extreme interpretation that's what every Stack Exchange referencing and licensing document says: "All Public Content must have appropriate attribution"
@HenryEcker Yeah, but that doesn't mention attributing comments, which is also required. You're technically right I think, and I can't find anything on MSO about this. FWIW, I've never seen an answer attribute direct quotes from a question. Which doesn't mean that it's not required, of course.
@HenryEcker That is still extreme. Appropriate attribution doesn't mean that it should include link, name, etc. The license was vague like that so that copyright holders can figure out what is appropriate or don't
So the only time attribution is required on site is to another answer? This does not apply to questions? Only does not apply to questions on the same page?
Sounds good. Even if the answer is that it's required legally, the consensus is likely to be that it's not worth bothering about. There's way too many answers that don't attribute like that. Still, worth knowing the right answer.
The only legally correct answer is: If you're copying the content, then it requires the attribution which is explicitly required in the CC BY-SA licenses. My interpretation of what's required is in my answer to: "Removing Documentation: Reputation, Archive, and Links". So, yes, legally it's required in an answer when quoting the question which is being answered (e.g. what happens to the implicit attribution when only that answer is copied elsewhere?).
However, the general convention on SE is that answers usually don't provide full attribution for such quotes. That doesn't make not having the attribution for such quotes legally correct, but it is expedient. That's not necessarily a good thing, but I expect there would be quite a bit of resistance to requiring full attribution for answers quoting the question (note that you'd need attribution for code too, even if changed).
Well, this guy quotes part of the question and doesn't give explicit attribution. But, despite the large number of upvotes, I can't really say if that guy knows anything about anything, any more. xD
@AdrianMole That you can find millions of examples by any number of people, almost certainly including myself, where there isn't such attribution doesn't make any of them legally correct. There are, of course, arguments that small quotes can be legally copied under various different exceptions to copyright laws (e.g. "fair use" in the US, under which a lot of such copying could reasonably be considered legitimate). That doesn't, necessarily, make it legitimate in all jurisdictions.
@AdrianMole Unless you're using something that directly addresses the issue, bringing up examples such as that is fallacious. All you're doing is providing an example where they didn't provide attribution. You're not demonstrating that they even thought about the issue in that case.
@JeanneDark That was the first one of his answers I found with a partial question quote in it. There are probably many others. But it is also typical of the format used by most answerers, when they do that.
I normally italicize (and block quote) such excerpts.
@AdrianMole Ah, I see. BTW, I agree that linking to something Shog9 said, or did, is a good way to sway public opinion one way or the other. Fallacious though it is to bring up such examples, it does appear to have a lot of effect on how users perceive whether an action is appropriate, or not.
Well, he wants to use JSON without using... a fundamental aspect of JSON
the JSONObject is the... well.. the data of a JSON "file" or dataset
it sounds like he wants to return something in the same format as JSON without using JSON itself... for some reason?
Maybe it's more clear to a Java SME (I haven't written Java in... 14 years?) but to me it's not clear what OP is really wanting to do and what the issue with JSON itself is
reminds me of the guy who wrote his own language on top of Java or C or something and then wrote the whole company's systems on that language abstraction for job security
then a new hire figures it out and starts trolling him
@Turing85 No, I don't think it does. It's a clear question, with a description of the problem, and it's reproducible. The first comment on the question is, in fact, an answer. Of course, as Henry points out, that's definitely a duplicate.
@Makyen For that example, such minimal quoting for the purpose of commenting on it (by responding) almost certainly would fall under fair use in the United States. I can't speak to how other countries handle that, though.
this is a duplicate of that. More interestingly, OP self-answered. In my opinion, the first question is even broader than the second. What's yours? Just leave it be?