the mod-deletion can't be undone by regular users, and that makes sense
even if this is possible only with review deletions, it seems contrary to the user-level moderation system. Let's assume the reviewers are right. Four of them have agreed that an answer should be deleted, how can that be single-handedly invalidated by the OP?
It defies the whole point of offloading review work to user-level moderators
@blackgreen I agree with @Braiam's point that a user can edit an answer from NAA to an actual answer. The point here though is that this answer wasn't edited at all and in that circumstance, I agree that it makes no sense that the OP can undelete.
I agree with Braiam's point. I just find it surprising that the deletion can be undone single-handedly. As with mod-deletion, the OP would just raise a flag after editing, so that only OPs who do bother fixing their post would create more work for the moderators/curators
@Braiam good to know, still strange logic though. As a mod you are now dealing with: "let's see how this user is abusing the system" instead of "let's see how well they fixed the post"
@tripleee I've edited this question to improve the grammar/readability and I agree it isn't asking for the 'best' way, just 'how to do it', so I removed that language from the title, and am binning this request. Feel free to re-request for a different reason if you feel one applies.
Is gcloud cli considered a "programming tool" in the context of this question? Feels off-topic to me, just like I'd consider the same for aws-cli, but wanted to get feedback before VTC'ing.
@Machavity @Dharman some not-insignificant Photoshop saving/converting later, I've improved the existing answer so that it's accessible now rather than just a screenshot.
Actually checking it out in light mode makes it obvious I don't need to include the images with transparent backgrounds... the ones with white backgrounds for dark mode will work just fine
RIP 20 minutes
I'll leave them in there for now
Probably the most work I've put into an old Q&A that only has 500 views
@GeneralGrievance Not always, I think. A mod can confirm, but flags of that form are still marked as helpful when they're escalated to CMs to figure out if there really is a problem.
@GeneralGrievance In most cases, no. Obviously a normal user cannot investigate voting fraud in detail (enough to be certain at any rate). Even if we can't sustain your allegations of fraud, we tend to mark them helpful
@Machavity they're not, the light mode ones have a transparent background. It wasn't clear but I was referring to light/dark mode in SO, not in VS Code
@EJoshuaS-StandwithUkraine How is this too broad? It's asking how to configure something in the emulator (although if CommonsWare says you can't, he's probably correct)
@Vega As tripleee noted, this seems to be about a tool mostly used by programmers (the question even notes that it's "part of setting up the code environment"), so I'm going to bin this request
@Braiam As Robert Columbia's answer notes, "installation, configuration, upgrading, and troubleshooting of programming tools" is on-topic here. Glorfindel's answer addresses software that is "not specifically related to programming," such as the given example of "installing Linux on a Mac"
Make is unquestionably software "specifically related to programming," as it's a build tool that software developers will need to install to write their build files.
I had to install make to install games, I wasn't programming, I was trying to game. I didn't feel like programming while installing make or doing configure && make && make install
Note that Glo even goes to say "unique to software development". ^ that isn't unique to software development.
I think installing Make specifically on Windows is far more likely to be for software development, as it's quite unusual for Windows software to be distributed as source + Makefile.
@Braiam This issue has been raised (and discussed at length) on Meta, often. Hans Passant is one of the chief proponents of the "installation problems aren't really programming-related" argument, IIRC.