@TylerH IMHO it would be somewhat easier to read with more white padding around the images, since the icons sort of bleed into the dark background, but...it's still better than the whole thing being an image :-(
@RyanM it's just ironic, too. "think of how people use this answer". More like "think of how they won't be able to use it now if they rely on assistive tech"
@TylerH I don't know if VS Code IntelliSense icons have actual dark mode versions, but if there are ones, it would be good to use them. I'd agree with the OP there that many of the current icon images have very poor contrast in dark mode. That poor contrast tends to indicate that they are not the actual icons which would be used by IntelliSense in a supported dark mode.
Converting the table to Markdown was quite a bit a work and that it's a definite improvement, IMO, over just the large image. Thanks for doing that, as it certainly improves the answer, IMO.
@Makyen Yes, it's my fault for not being clear on it, but you are falling prey to the same confusion that Machavity (and perhaps OP) did. The different sets of icons are not to reflect a difference in VS, but rather a difference in whether the reader is using dark mode or light mode on Stack Overflow
I had resolved to go remove the transparent pngs since they aren't needed for light mode (given that SO light mode uses a white background you just end up seeing the icon and not the background on the icon png for the ones with white backgrounds), but before I had time to get into that, OP had already reverted to a single static image
I agree with Ryan M's point that some more white background "padding" would make the icons easier to see, and I'm willing to work on that, but that would be significantly more work, given that I just used the exact/actual pngs that the Microsoft Docs page uses.
It will entail opening each image in Photoshop (or some equivalent editor) and expanding the canvas size by 5px or so and then re-uploading them all
@TylerH If you're going to go to that level of manipulation, I'd either: get the real dark mode icons from IntelliSense, which appear to exist, or convert the color on the ones which are primarily B/W. Those appear to be using the current text color for their drawing (probably just an SVG in IntelliSense).
That's fair. Another thought I had was make a marquee of a given size in photoshop (etc) of a given dimension and then copy them out of one screenshot one at a time. I think it's a very nice table even though I experience SO in the dark.
@Makyen Hmm, the CV-request-generator is warning me on every single question as of a few mins ago. It might have something to do with the "Active" field at the top of the page changing to "Modified". I have no idea when that change happened.
I'm seeing other users post requests generated with that userscript, so it might just be me.
@cigien To clarify, I'm not seeing the warning on new posts, just old ones that have recent activity, so as Henry mentioned, it appears to be an issue with the code checking for recent activity only.
@Braiam I did a quick search before posting the request here, couldn't find a similar question on the other SE sites. Though I'm not familiar with the problem domain of the question, so maybe that's my search couldn't find them...
@Cristik This does not seem that valuable; in over 10.5 years it received less than 6,000 views. And, it's also not about programming. Why should it be undeleted?
@TylerH, @Braiam the answer provides useful insights about the problem, and has 11 upvotes - to me this says the answer is useful. yes, the topic is clearly off-topic, but so are other many questions on SO, that are kept either for historical reasons, or because they provide useful information
@Cristik the historical lock is used for questions of historical significance, of which both score and view count are factors (though not the only factors). That being said, the typical threshold for them is in the hundreds of thousands (or more) of views and triple digits, score-wise, typically. They also tend to be programming-related, just not in-scope for some other reason.
This question is inherently out-of-scope by its very topic, so could not ever hope to become on-topic. As such I don't think it belongs on Stack Overflow (remember, the site is for questions that are about a specific programming question/problem. That a question doesn't belong here doesn't mean it's not a good one, just that it doesn't fit that parameter).
I suspect it might be on-topic on either Linux.SE or Superuser.
Request Generator update: Version 2.0.1 (GitHub) (install); Adjust to a few recent changes by SE: Active-> Modified; /posts/ajax-load-realtime response
@TylerH my only reasoning was to not delete content that has helped and might help other people. But as you said, those 11 votes the answer has received in 8 years are not an enough indicator of the answer's usefulness...
@TylerH Yeah, off topic doesn't mean bad question, just not the right place. I wish we stopped using "off topic" when we actually mean "not a good question"
Nope, it's not semantics. Off topic here literally means not the topic you can ask about. That's why there's two sections on the help center about asking: ask and don't ask. Ask deals with the topicness, don't ask deals with the question quality
That programming questions that are unclear/too broad/opinion based are off topic. They are not, they are squarely on topic, we just don't do that kind of questions no matter what the topic is.
@TylerH Yeah, off topic doesn't mean bad question, just not the right place. I wish we stopped using "off topic" when we actually mean "not a good question"
Stop using off topic for unclear/too broad/opinion based.
So your concern is with users referring to close-worthy questions in conversation by the wrong term/close reason name. That seems like a hill not worth dying on, tbh. Like trying to get people to pronounce 'gif' correctly.