@IanCampbell If it's something that can't be handled by other users, then meta is inappropriate, unless you've exhausted the other possibilities (i.e. flagging).
@EJoshuaS-StandwithUkraine That was already automatically protected by the Community user, as a direct response to the fact that it had two spam answers deleted from it. This is why, not incidentally, manual protection is almost never necessary, because it happens automatically.
@RyanM The few Koa questions I saw seemed assignment-ish. But they didn't seem like the same assignment. Or maybe it is just a bigger one "build this system" kind of thing and different people hit different problems with it. Or might be few different courses from the same place that all had different Koa assignments. Who knows.
@RyanM I should have said that I formed my impression based only on the questions I came across naturally. Which weren't really clear, either (mostly code dumps) but the wider pattern seems to be worse on average.
It is interesting that there was also one blog-as-question about Koa I saw. Which I saw before seeing more of the weird unclear Koa questions. That one would have fit promotion more. But the "solve this. Also Koa" aren't really good advertising.
@tripleee That's...too accurate. Filter out closed questions and then look for ones by 1 rep users and seems a lot, if not most, if not all, can be closed.
@tripleee Also interesting on that page. Even with all the questions deleted, here is the count of questions per month: 2022-06: 17; 2022-05: 11; 2022-04: 5; 2022-03: 9; 2022-02: 8
May is still higher than previous months but not too far off 9, which was March. But 17 is way, way higher.
@RyanM Yep, as I said, that's even with all the recent deletions. This month (which still hasn't finished, technically) still has about twice the amount of questions other months have had.
I suppose this is a rather rough estimate - Roomba might have cleaned up some of the older questions, too.
Looking for a second opinion: Is Linux jitter on isolated cpus potentially on-topic? If not, can it be edited to be? A user in the comments believes it is, and that there's a programming solution to it.
@RyanM Yes, IMO, that question is off-topic, as written. I've added a couple of comments to the user who's complaining in the comments to try to explain in more detail that the issue is how the question is written and the context from which the question is presenting the problem and asking for a solution.
@RyanM well apparently a tag only edit marking it [status-completed] counts as a minor change and I did not get a notification…. That's something I actually would like to be notified about =(
If an answer was deleted from LQP review and is then undeleted by the author, I know that it causes an auto-flag, but I wonder: Would another NAA or VLQ flag cast after undeletion push it again into the LQP queue?
@Cristik What we were just talking about was that you don't get notified for edits to your own posts, unless the edit is considered "substantial", and that SE's definition of "substantial" might not match your own (it definitely doesn't match what I consider substantial for my own posts). You do get notifications of all suggested edits.
@Makyen hmm interesting, didn't know the part about substantial edits, I was under the impression I get notified for any kind of edits made on my posts
@Cristik Unfortunately, that's similar to what most of us assume, until we find out differently, which can be an unpleasant surprise, depending on what's happened.
The file extension of FreeMarker templates is ftl. I don't see the point of having an additional freemarker tag being its file extension (ftl). If it can't be burned, it should at least be a synonym IMO.
See for example: how shall I store date into a variable without changing type of the date in ...
@Makyen recently I edited a post to fix a typo, literally replacing one character with another, except that the author made that typo intentionally. Hadn't they reviewed their post by chance shortly after, that intention would've simply been lost. I wonder how many times that happens in general
@blackgreen The post in question was spam. Look at the authors name and the link they did post.
The question linked by you, on the other hand, describes (in several steps) an outcome of an test - and asks (the other spam "question" did not) if there is a terminology for that. Which is perfectly fine.
@blackgreen That's a good question. Unfortunately, there's no way to know. As another point of anecdotal evidence that there's a problem, I only became aware of the fact that notifications were sometimes not sent when I found that one of my posts had been edited in a way I would have, and did, immediately rollback. So, yeah, such issues definitely exist. Personally, I'd prefer to receive notifications for every edit to my posts. I'd much rather have to check and ignore an edit than to have an edit go unnoticed which changes my post in a way I find unacceptable.
@blackgreen Bad example. Testing is more programming related than general time concepts. I'd argue it's on-topic. But in any case, it's not spam. SmokeDetector detects spam, not off-topic stuff.
Should something be done about this? stackoverflow.com/q/47162200/4294399 - I wouldn't want to close it if people found it useful (+7), so would it be better to reframe it as a question and add a CW answer?
@GeneralGrievance if it's useful that would be the way to fix it, otherwise both of those "questions" fail to ask an actual question. I believe self-answers still need to follow the question quality guidelines
@GeneralGrievance this one, I think the OP is active enough to perhaps respond to a comment in the near-ish future. The other one...wouldn't count on it.
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10/10.
@Dharman Someone, naturally, upvoted that.
People who say no one wants explanations for upvotes obviously haven't seen questions like this.
some places don't get google street view... my former condo complex had all street views removed aside from the common buildings, and same for my current house, which is a private street
@JeanneDark results of the experiment: no it does not, even if a moderator marks the autoflag (but not the new NAA flag cast before marking it helpful) helpful.
Thoughts on whether calculate ext4 inode checksum is on-topic? It looks to me like a general computing question ("how does linux compute inode checksums) where the programming part is a red herring, but it was migrated from superuser so evidently the mods there thought differently
Is this considered link-only? stackoverflow.com/questions/70118161/… I also warned another answer that this may be running afoul of the self-promotion guidelines.
> This is not a question, but i have a query on Google assistant. I'm working on some shopping application,named as MyShopping. I would like to launch my application when user says launch MyShopping to Google assistant. Is it possible to do? Could any one please help me
@pppery seems too broad to me. It'd be another story if OP was asking "How can I calculate this CRC checksum in Python?" or "How does Linux calculate CRC checksums for ext4 inodes?"
Or better if it showed OP's attempt at solving the problem with clear information as to what is missing/wrong