@JonClements absolutely - that's what OP should be doing. I went for a dupe for what is wrong with their actual code. If you hammer it, just add both...
@JonClements I don't think it's wrong as a gold badge holder. After all, to get that badge you had to have written some good answers somewhere along the line :)
@mickmackusa That message is certainly confusing, but the problem there is that you're trying to write a full tag wiki in an excerpt. I think it used to tell you explicitly that Markdown isn't supported in excerpts, so this is probably a regression (at least, I don't ever remember seeing this nonsense before).
@SunderamDubey Hello. Did you have a question to ask me?
@HovercraftFullOfEels That would not be "general computing". It's definitely about VBScript code, which is programming. The question could be too broad/unfocused, depending on one's judgment.
@JeanneDark They think Stack Overflow is Reddit? Or they saw a SO post linked on Reddit and had to come to SO to answer because they can't comment on Reddit?
@cocomac I believe that's the same issue that was already brought up on Meta. You'll find a definitive answer there. In this case, I see Adrian already solved the immediate problem.
@AdrianMole That's correct. I think I can safely speak for at least Ryan, in addition to myself, in requesting that such blatantly incorrect custom closure reasons be flagged for moderator attention. (No need to flag that one; I've seen it.)
@MarcoBonelli It definitely does/did. The user seems to have been annoyed by your comment, but... it's pretty clear that the answer lacks a summary of the information contained on the linked page, namely the instructions on how to actually set up GitLab Runner. If the link went down, that wouldn't make the answer completely useless, because there'd still be at least a pointer to where to look, but it definitely needs to be expanded.
As did the other answer that was posted there and even more obviously link-only.
@SunderamDubey It does not seem like a very useful edit. All you did was change the capitalization of one letter. Technically, it is correct that "Try" would be capitalized there, but it hardly seems worth it to take the time to make that change when there is nothing else to fix.
@CodyGray yes, I got confused while reviewing. I think I'd enjoy the tag edit review UI more if both sections were shown (for context) and the text not up-for-review were read only.
@mickmackusa Yeah, they normally are when you submit edits (as you surely know). They just get decoupled when they are submitted as suggested edits. Which still seems like a bug to me, because even the edits are submitted as a single unit... why should they need to be presented or approved separately?
@SurajRao don't think so. I expect their context is a script running in any of those shells. But maybe ask for a clarification if that is what they are looking for
@SurajRao still wondering how that might work in practice. But let's see what your comment triggers. Closing in the spirit oif NARQ or Too Localized are options still on the table, as is general computing.
@cigien if memory serves, unclear won by majority, and my own vote went for needs focus: there are many ways to answer and there is no indication of which one would better fit what asker (or whoever gave them this homework) wants
@gnat Sure, there are many ways to solve the problem, but that doesn't make the question unfocused. It's perfectly fine for questions to have multiple solutions. Also, I don't see that it matters which solution would fit the OP best, as questions are more for future readers than the OP specifically. It's also completely irrelevant whether the question was posed as homework.
As this could result in some close actions: Where is the canonical question for the very common unintentional assignment (for beginners and experts alike) in an C or C++ 'if' statement (where comparison was the intent)?
@PeterMortensen There's definitely older ones, but this is the best I'm aware of. At least I can't find another good one. Yeah, compilers will warn about this at even the lowest warning levels, but people often don't turn on warnings at all, so it's certainly been asked before the canonical.
@cigien disagree. I'm the kind of future reader you mentioned because I regularly search SO for answers to Java questions. And when I search I specify whether I need it in Java 8+ of Java 6 or 4 or even Java ME - all of these would have different answers. The question is useless exactly because of lacking necessary focus. You are wrong thinking that it will have multiple correct answers: depending on who searches, it will have incorrect answers, maybe mixed with some correct ones
@gnat That sounds about right to me. When I look at a C++ question, for example, there may well be answers that don't work for the language revision I'm using. It's still useful if there are answers that do work. I'm curious, do you feel it would be better for that question to exist as multiple different questions, one for each Java version?
@JeanneDark And there was me thinking it's silly to have answers go through two review queues. Obviously, we can catch more bad reviewers, if they do. :)
But, a bit related ... once a red flag is raised on an answer, is it then removed from any pending reviews?
(I don't see that many spam or R/A stuff in my reviews ... I've always assumed it's because Smokey gets them first and they get red-flagged. And I can't rememebr, off-hand, ever seeing a post that had already been flagged or reported to/by Smokey in a review.)
@AdrianMole Don't know but I'm sure once it's red-flagged it also goes into the mod queue, which might be another reason it rarely shows up in other queues