@RyanM Something else to consider here would be reading flow. If we look at a language like Japanese (for example) there's minimal to no height variation between characters. So following the differentiation can feel unfamiliar just from a natural flow perspective. Japanese would be most similar in height to all caps. e.g. 上位の質問 is closer to TOP QUESTIONS than it is to Top Questions.
Beyond this we also have mixed input methods. If using a QWERTY keyboard to type in Japanese (which is extremely common), lowercase characters will try to map to Japanese kana when possible, where as upper case do not. Typing English words in all caps is often easier than changing between the various input modes.
@RyanM there's no accounting for taste. I like the sharp, distinct corners of katakana, but almost every Japanese learner I've encountered seems to have the opposite view
@HenryEcker doesn't that result in fullwidth/halfwidth characters rather than normal latin letters? Or have input methods fixed that in the decade since I last tried that?
Ah, I didn't notice that. Yeah, I did the same thing several times just after getting a hammer, before realizing I could just edit the duplicate list instead.
@RyanM Ah. I didn't even process that that was an answer. My brain didn't process the "when testing two strings for equality and they're not equal just change one to match the other" as a real answer to that question...
@HenryEcker Ah true. Er, I think I'll abandon trying to go through this list, then. It seems like cs95 initially dupe-hammered a ton of vaguely JSON-related debugging requests with what was presumably imagined to be an all-purpose "how do I manipulate JSON data" reference (which I don't think we can get away with making, and that question certainly doesn't qualify
@RyanM why can't we have nice things. Honestly, it's better that these questions all get deleted even if the process is abusive via the invalid hammering
@KarlKnechtel Yeah. I don't disagree with changing the duplicate targets there. I was just saying that if the post needs to be deleted then reopening and reclosing is going to slow down that process. If you can edit the the duplicates list directly that's preferable in most cases.
@KarlKnechtel that's correct, yeah. It also deletes them if a privileged user replies here with "fp" or other aliases for that, but that basically never happens.
Also sometimes I delete them myself if the deletion watcher doesn't catch them when I'm dumping posts in the chat :-p
remind me again what the process is for getting duplicate answers deleted from a question? custom flag? And then I have to rely on a moderator being a SME?
@KarlKnechtel Custom flag, yeah. Most duplicate answers are obvious to non-SMES (see, e.g., everything I deleted off this question) - are these particularly subtle duplicates?
You can also use the flag text to explain any subtleties - e.g., "npm i is just an alias for npm install, so this is the same as [link]"
CSS SMEs: some users in the comments on this question believe it's not a dupe, and one says they have an answer ready if it's reopened. Personally, I'm not sure due to lack of expertise. Thoughts?
@blackgreen there are certain characters that cause it to do that. I'm slowly working on figuring out how it works, with the goal of writing a meta post eventually
@bad_coder no because I get a sugar shock from cuteness. In addition to that I get hungry when watching cute cats and must eat -> raises my sugar level even more.
@JeanneDark yeah as said already, no connection to the question, no relation and as such fails to at least attempt the question. With the text and linking I would consider this advertising too.
is there a way to check who reviewed before me in a review queue? I had multiple reviews where an editor tried to include pictures directly instead of a link it was always declined as causing harm
thank you both. Then next question is, is it the right reject reason to reject an image containing code lines as "causing harm". IMHO it should be rejected only because it fails to improve the question but does not actively cause harm.
Something like "Images containing code should not be included directly" - Which I agree with but believe "causing harm" is the wrong option. Don't get me wrong I don't want to blackmail the reviewer just wondering if it is just me or actually the wrong reject reason to pick.
@tacoshy it is the only option a reviewer has to include more specific guidance for the editor. If a reviewer feels none of the stock reasons apply, they only can go for causing harm. Now: if the guidance isn't adding anything useful then I would say picking causing harm is the wrong option but if the reviewer really tries to educate the editor on improving, the option " causing harm " is fine.
@rene I see so the "causing harm" is used in this case to write a message/info to the editor not because it actually causes harm. Thank you for the explanation. Much appreciated!
@RyanM I was asking more or less in general. thanks for the confirmation, I mostly am just a little annoyed that it isn't something the community can do themselves. Although I can see reasons why