Certain comments are automatically deleted with a single flag if they meet certain requirements (i.e., match certain regexes). Otherwise, it takes 3 flags to delete a comment, and that scales up with the vote count (one additional flag is required for every 3 votes, rounded up).
Assuming a comment flag doesn't insta-delete, all comment flags are reviewed by moderators, who can delete a comment with a single click, if they deem it has no value whatsoever.
It only checks if a variable exists but the value is undefined. Trying to read a variable that does not exist, would throw an error, and reading a variable is required if you have a function call like fn(myVar) - the poster tries to claim that once the call is made the value would be undefined, however in reality the call never happens.
@HenryEcker Oh! Yes, that does help. "'Brr' is often used to indicate the sound of a machine working." That is the piece I was missing. Because... that is very wrong.
@VLAZ "The meme is about taking a shortcut that is ultimately damaging." Maybe that's the whole point, and one cannot simply leave aside the memes?
I haven't been editing too much over the past wee while, and just noticed I've got an old version that's a bit buggy with all the changes to SO's editor
I can sort of work around it, I have to click the magic wand twice for it to automatically apply the changes, then fix whatever inappropriate magic edits it made, and then click "show preview" to refresh SO's MD renderer
@Joundill I think it needs debugging details. What exact kind of input is the code being used on? To speed it up, one probably needs to know that. I'm not sure enough to vote close it.
@IanCampbell Yeah, that's sort of where I'm at too. I don't have enough knowledge of what's going on to give it a cv, but the question certainly looks like it'll end up getting a bad answer
I'm not quite sure what the final disposition was. Here's a screenshot. Seems like it should have had a more negative score if it was deleted by spam flags.
It seems possible that there are other now-deleted answers that gave the hint back then, but I couldn't find them using Metasmoke. Without that context, on it's own, the post seems OK, unless I'm missing something.
I finally figured that out thanks to some google cache results. But I don't see how an ordinary reviewer should be expected to be as good of a detective.
Someone has to fail or pass the audit before it shows up in the timeline, I think. I skipped it.
@cigien Moderators have no direct way of removing a post as an audit candidate. For spam-deleted posts, the only real way we have is to undelete, unlock, and re-delete using an R/A flag.
@VLAZ the rule is slightly inexact, it was originally set up to catch the Unicode emoji category based on anecdotal evicence but it quickly turned out that many of the symbols used by the phone scam spammer are not technically emoji
Hi. Is there any way to see who downvoted on my question?
Just received a uncommented downvote on my question from 2014: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/26975093/correct-use-of-icons-when-displaying-like-comment-count-on-my-webpage
@FabianS. All downvotes are uncommented. No one is expected to leave comments when they vote, whether up or down. And, as Jeanne said, voting is anonymous; no one can see this information. That is by design. By reading the tooltip for the downvote button, you can see common reasons for downvoting.
@Zano You would not ask a different question. Users are not allowed to repost the same question multiple times. Editing (improving the title and/or adding more information to the body) would be a good idea. Also check that you've tagged it correctly.
@rene all good, im soaking information like spongebob himself. I always try to improve so i ask a lot. Totally not too much input, understanding why things go specific ways is important to understand how SO works and keep it working (which is what im trying to help with) so im thankful for every piece of input!
What about this new answer that was quickly upvoted (django)? The same command is mentioned in the following older answers: 1, 2, 3 (late, rel. high score, code-only), 4 (accepted and highest scoring answer).
@TylerH I can see that. I wasn't sure which parts of that were problem statements and which parts were answers. It being an answer for a different problem makes a lot of sense. Thanks for the assist