When in doubt, pick one of the non-migrate options. We don't want to saddle another site with an off-topic question, and the user can always re-ask on the correct site.
I'm hoping we will be moving towards having a generally off-topic non-migrating reason in the near future... assuming we can agree on the wording and such.
Thanks. Also, how is there a comment by me on the older post asking if it's a dupe? I could have sworn I voted to close as unclear. (Comment is gone now).
Why it didn't auto-delete your comment after I closed it with the same target is also a mystery...I don't quite understand the logic behind the auto-deletion of those comments. (I deleted it manually)
Related to this meta question - does anyone know 1) if editing currently fails a known-good audit? and 2) if this behavior was different a couple years ago?
I vaguely recall some meta post about that, but I can't find it.
Where's Jeanne Dark when you need a random meta post found...
Yeah, editing any post in the Close Votes queue is definitely an auto-pass based on my (extensive, if I do say so myself...) experience in that queue. I can't personally speak to any of the other queues (other than Suggested Edits, which doesn't have known-good audits).
this answer has a lot of images of code, but I'm unsure whether that's a problem, given it's a point-and-click software that might render that code by default.
@Adriaan It needs details to be able to answer the question. That detail would determine where it would be appropriate. If it is a regex problem, it could probably stay here. Otherwise it might be more appropriate for Webmasters or Server Fault depending on how specific the configuration is to the site itself or to the server in general.
@Adriaan not sure your edit here was justified; OP explicitly asks for a plugin in the title (have VTC'ed as "resource request"):stackoverflow.com/questions/42264671/…
so, either you'll have to edit the title, too, or revert the edit?
@desertnaut I missed the title, edited that as well, thanks. There's no need to VTC IMO, as the tool rec could simply be edited to an "how to" question
@Adriaan Reopened, since I was the only close voter and the reasoning I had for closing it is no longer present. Stephen's objection may be valid, of course, and it may be that it should be re-closed.
@desertnaut There's a meta post about this somewhere. Bare link posts are treated as any link-only answer, i.e. deleted. However, showing how you can use that plugin to accomplish the desired goal is allowed
Considering how full the SE queue is all the time, burning through it isn't a bad idea. Plus, as a mod, if you see people going a bit overboard, you can also suspend them from suggesting edits and give them some advice about how to edit more effectively.
@Machavity No, it isn't. Adding the explicit std:: namespace prefixes to code is something that can (and is often) done in answers. Also, the edit should have addressed the issues in the "Code runs very long." sentence.
@AdrianMole I don't follow. I personally add std:: to code in questions, unless the missing std:: is potentially relevant to the question. Adding std:: doesn't change the intent of the question in those cases.
@AdrianMole Sure, but that's not relevant to the OP's question. I see no harm in cleaning up OP's code, so long as it doesn't change the intent of the question. I'm not saying the suggested edit should have been approved, or not, I'm just referring to the adding of the std::, as it's something I do myself.
@AdrianMole I find that to be a little noisy, given how frequently OPs use using namespace std. I only add that link when it's relevant to the OP's question, in which case it's probably a duplicate.
@cigien But, then, where do you draw the line on adding 'improvements' to OP's code in the question? Would you change int len = strlen(str); to size_t len = strlen(len);?
... if it didn't otherwise matter in the specific context of the question.
@Machavity how happy are we with answers that decode proprietary encrypted data? Or is it one of those cases where the company in question has to formally request SE, the company, to take it down?
@AdrianMole I wouldn't bother in that example, but I wouldn't object to such an edit either. So long as the improvements to the code don't change the intent (which requires an SME to judge, of course), I''m fine with it.
@Adriaan Yeah, we don't handle requests about copyright, legal, etc. If it's proprietary, there's the legal page
To put it a different way, we're the referees on the field. We enforce the rules of the game. A referee doesn't decide if a player has broken the law and needs to go to jail, etc.
@AdrianMole I'm not sure what you mean by the "ignore improvements ... outside" bit. I'm assuming that other things are fixed as well. As to the code conventions, it's not about the convention, it's that the code simply won't compile without std::. If a question already has using namespace std;, I wouldn't remove it, but if it's missing that, then either I can add using namespace std;, or prefix std:: everywhere to make a MRE, and if there's a choice, I'm definitely going for the latter.
Also, to clarify, I'm talking about "edits", and not "suggested edits", since the guidance is quite different for those.
I guess it boils down to preference. But I just don't like the idea of improving code in questions (other than formatting/readability) - that's what answers are for, IMHO.
@AdrianMole Yeah, that's reasonable. I feel differently about it. Most code in questions has several issues with it, and usually, only one of them is relevant to the question. I dislike having to dig through answers that are giving (well intentioned) advice to the OP that has nothing to do with the issue I'm interested in resolving.
@Braiam Just FYI, this question, on which you were a close-voter, has been discussed on Meta. Just so that you know why Cody hits you with a heavy object.
This question is a research question. There's certainly an answer, of some level of satisfaction, wrt how to figure out what version of .net supports what version of zlib, but the only link that has to programming is that these are tools used for programming... which in some cases is enough for it to be on topic here
@cigien According to the tag's description, it's intended for more abstract questions (which would probably make them more appropriate for cs.se), not "any language goes". And "or process" is asking for a tool, which isn't on-topic. I remember being said that "how to" questions not being restricted to a language are too broad, but I can't find any definite meta post about it, so I might be wrong.
[language-agnostic] might not be appropriate. The question still seems useful, in that I might want to figure out how to resolve the URL, without it mattering what tool/language I use. Most "how-to" questions like "how do I sort an array?" don't make much sense without the context of a particular language.
Of course, even better would be if someone would split up that post into multiple different posts, each for a separate language, and move relevant answers there. Until someone does that (and I'm not holding my breath), the question seems worth keeping around.
@Braiam I'm not sure I understand the logic there. Sure, it can be solved on the command line, but that doesn't make it non-programming. e.g. I can sort numbers on the command line with unix sort, but sorting numbers is still programming.
@cigien Closed questions with that many votes and answers are kept around, but can't get additional answers. To me that looks like exactly the right treatment in this case.
@StephenOstermiller As I clarified later, I don't see any harm in allowing additional answers on that post. 4 deleted answers is not bad at all for a 10 year old question, in fact. But yeah, if you think it shouldn't receive any more answers, that's fine.
Oh, you were being sarcastic? I didn't realize that, sorry. I find that hard to read in text. My bad.
I'm not sure what you're being sarcastic about, though. The question not specifying a language is a valid argument, much more so than the non-programming one.
Hmm, I posted the reopen-pls because I thought it should be reopened, and now the discussion has escalated to whether it should be deleted :p I guess I shouldn't be too surprised.
I'm not sure why we have to go around and around on this one every few days. The answers provide a programmatic solution to a problem posted at the top of the page. It's been viewed by thousands of users and upvoted many times. It seems to be of lasting value to me.
closed questions are closed because they don't belong here in their current state. If there's a possibility it'll be edited to change that, sure, keep it around. I don't think that's the case for something that's been around since 2011. The only reason it hasn't been roomba'd is because it needs people to review it due to the votes it received.
deciding it should be reopened is a valid response to that, as is deciding it should be deleted
@Cristik Protected just means that it can't be answered by very low reputation users. It is typically applied when there are a few spam or VLQ answers.
I'm not a moderator, but just remember that, as long as the user doesn't have any positively viewed content, the question ban algorithm will take care of the problem automatically. The company doesn't give us the exact details, but a low integer number of those deletions will get them rate limited.
@RyanM that's what I mean — except for some edge cases (different account, original deleted), non-mods can deal with it just fine. Not sure if you want first-time offenders to be brought to your attention
@blackgreen Personally, I'll probably mark the flags helpful in either case, but if it's only one repost from the same account I probably won't do more than a comment warning.
My uninformed assumption is that it's to make life easier for ROs and moderators, so that people can't edit problematic content into older messages that would be harder to keep an eye on.