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00:42
@AdrianMole Question authors aren't shown the close voters from the question page. The question author needs to go to either the timeline or revision history page in order to see who the close voters were.
What I meant was that's the first time I've had a question closed since they brought in the timeline and hid the close voters from the OP. I think. Maybe on SO, but that would have been after I got the CV privilege myself.
01:11
@AdrianMole Authors, regardless of privileges (i.e. even moderators/CMs), are not shown the usernames of the close voters on the question page.
OK - I didn't realize that. Presumably, though, authors' sock-puppets can. :-)
 
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02:21
Regarding my cv-pls above, I forgot to add to it that it has been flagged by the SmokeDetector
 
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08:07
stackoverflow.com/a/70627174/4826457 this is NAA right? looks like a comment on another answer to me...
08:30
@SurajRao I posted a comment to the effect that his "answer" was a comment posted as an answer by a new user who did not have enough reputation to post a comment.
 
3 hours later…
You are getting this email because you have a Developer Story on Stack Overflow Only I don't.
@AdrianMole me too, though I think I responded to some job ad once
Or maybe do ... I added some tags about what I work with, once upon a time.
 
1 hour later…
@NathanOliver good morning
Hey guys, small question: Is it acceptable if I gold-hammer a question as a duplicate of a post where I have written the/an answer?
@Lino: It's probably legal, but I don't think that it is ethical
@HovercraftFullOfEels that's what I thought, sounds a bit like self-promotion
@Lino But to be honest, I have done this, but when I have, I made the answer a community wiki from the start so that I would not receive any benefit from up-votes. I have no idea if this is what one is supposed to do, but it seems more ethical to me.
13:18
@LucaKiebel Maybe have a look at this Meta.SO post regarding this review.
@HovercraftFullOfEels Oh, I'm not sure if we're actually talking about the same. Let's say I want to close question A as a duplicate of question B. But I have written the accepted answer of question B
@AdrianMole thanks!
@HovercraftFullOfEels I understood what you said as the other way round, write an answer to A, but then close A as a dupe of B
14:12
@Lino Closing a question as a duplicate of a question you've asked or answered is normal and expected (and we explicitly permit such as a request here in SOCVR, even if you don't have a gold tag-badge). If you have a gold tag-badge, it's highly likely that you have answers on multiple questions which are appropriate duplicate targets and that you are more aware of those questions as potential duplicate targets than other possibilities.
However, it can become an issue if you do it excessively. What's excessive here is a judgement call, but the most common examples of being excessive is that you go through already duplicate-closed questions and change the duplicate target to the question you asked or answered when the already existing duplicate target was reasonable and/or where it's not very clear the one you asked or answered is substantially superior and/or there's agreement by others wrt. establishing a canonical.
cc @HovercraftFullOfEels ^
@Makyen: thank you, and @Lino, of course you're right, I had things backwards, sorry
14:24
Thanks for the clarification @Makyen, it would have been the first closure for a new question.
15:31
Is this trolling? Or just a really misinformed new user?
@AdrianMole That is totally inappropriate. My own take: flag as rude/abusive
@AdrianMole If we didn't have a port tag, I wonder which tag it would use
@AdrianMole It's not rude. It's just one of these cat questions.
"cat questions"?
@HovercraftFullOfEels How is that R/A? You're very likely to get a declined flag on that.
As in, the tag is there, so it looks like the right place to ask it
@Dharman luckily we have a pets.SE site
It looks like trolling to me
It felt like trolling, to me also.
15:34
@AdrianMole I would say misinformed. It might actually be on-topic on the Automobiles SE site; mechanics.stackexchange.com
Well, if it was, it was a poor attempt at it. It didn't include c, python and java tags.
But: New user, posted 12 days ago, and nothing else since. A real troll would have likely posted more, by now.
Though I am curious, what the answer to the cat question is.
We took 12 days to find it...
@HovercraftFullOfEels It's feline undefined behaviour.
15:35
@AdrianMole: well I'll be danged
@Braiam That's because you're not doing your fair share of FQ reviews! ;-P
... which is where I found it.
16:16
@AdrianMole Leaving a comment pointing out that the answer is dangerous might be a good idea.
@cigien Well, I just found out that MEMZ is malware...
Does that make the post red-flaggable?
Seems like a deliberate attempt to damage users' OSes.
If it's malware, then yeah, it's flaggable I think (custom, not red-flag though).
User was destroyed so it's all good new
16:34
I want to post a del-pls for reasons that the OP is being a complete jerk,.... but I won't
I tried to be polite, ... but no
Ugh
so I gave into the dark side
Meh. The Queen effect is bound to happen.
Still, better restrain from those comments, even if they are true.
@E_net4thecurator: yes, true, but
Hey, he did improve the question some...
What but? We don't have a "CoC does not apply to trolls" clause in the CoC. :[
16:43
Seems similar to posting a wiki answer when something's resolved in the comments. But the information 100% could have been reduced into a coherent answer.
Is the question itself okay?
@HovercraftFullOfEels I wouldn't call it an improvement... It's changed, that's for sure. But dumping all the code without any actionable error isn't better.
@Dharman The question is super bad anyway. It's about collecting ideas for a whole application. But the answer is itself awful - just posting some chat transcript.
@VLAZ: that is why I said "some", but yeah, not much. So I did remove my admittedly rude comment
flagged stackoverflow.com/questions/70976297/… for mod attention, bounty blocks close votes for general computing
18:04
A rollback war on a nine year old post? smh
I need to type quicker if I want to raise a custom mod flag before a mod shows up ...
18:17
Just summarise your flags: "Is bad"
Okay, will do.
I just handled a post where someone literally took the time to curse at comment posters in custom mod flags. One for each comment...
LOL
@Machavity sorry, it's Monday and I'm ornery
@Machavity People will post anything in any textbox they can type on
18:29
@Machavity I will bet you that I was involved in that little tiff, and I do apologize for one of my own comments (which I deleted myself)
@HovercraftFullOfEels checks comment list Ah, I see what you mean. Yeah, it's good you deleted it. The UU bot would have nailed that for sure.
Oh, brother, it's one of these comments. Do I need to say anything, or what's the best flag?
nln is generally fine. You could reach for unfriendly in this case, but i wouldn't go so far as rude/abusive
@GeneralGrievance Can Unfriendly flag those. That's an insult
OK. Thanks.
jps
jps
@Machavity was it the "thank you" comment? Why was it unfriendly?
19:05
@jps No, it was a comment response to an LQA review comment.
@jps The deleted comment was "Thank you Karen". There's a pejorative meaning there
jps
jps
@Machavity ok, thanks. I was just curious, didn't know about "Karen".
@GeneralGrievance yes, I was refering to exactly that comment. I just did not understand why it was considered unfriendly, but now got the explanation. Thanks.
Oh, yes, I see now.
21:04
@jps You know it's a bad insult when we Americans invent a term for the worst Americans among us...
Karen is even worse than "Florida Man"
21:16
@TylerH The worst part is when I start hearing children use those words.
21:57
florida man isn't an insult, it's a way of life
Florida man is inmortal
23:07
@Braiam In Inglish, it's immortal.
23:38
Is it OK to criticize (in comments) a "so-called" MRCE from a 17k+ user? Or should we just stick to the rule: "Judge a post by its content, not by the poster"?
... when a very small amount of effort would make their posted code a reasonable MRCE.
How would your criticism be informed by the reputation of the poster?
Because an experienced user should know what is required of an MRCE.
I can "bend the rules" for new (or low-rep) users, and (maybe) even add the required headers. But why should I be expected to make the effort of finding out what they are, if the OP hasn't told me?
I guess I'm not sure how your actions would be different? Like would a: "please include a MRE to help us solve the problem" comment and/or VTC be the appropriate response always? Maybe remove the "Welcome to Stack Overflow" from an auto comment, but that'd be it?
Hmm. I'm trying to balance the "be nice to new users" policy with addressing laziness of old hats. But no longer (specifically) relevant: OP has deleted their post after some DVs. (Who knows whence they came?).
Again: don't we just have a "be nice" policy? Reputation can be earned in lots of different ways as well. Do they have 1 very old very simple answer from 10 years ago with 1k upvotes? Would that translate to being able to ask a good question.
I don't really think that reputation would impact how I would evaluate a question or answer.
23:53
Anyway - done deal.
But something I'm gonna think about, for future behaviour on my part. I didn't like that they deleted their Q (though maybe my reason wasn't the crunch). I would have (quickly) retracted my own DV had they added a few (3) simple lines of code, but they chose a different path.
This is an area where the skills of asking and answering cross swords. If one has earned rep. from answering, then one should know what a good question looks like.
How many times have you had to add the "implied" extra code into an OP's posted code in order to test your hypothesis? For new users, I'll walk that extra mile; for those on 10k+, why should I?

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