@Lino Not really. Generally if you search (on google etc.) for MySQL error 1064 (or whichever) you get the appropriate results anyway, without ever needing to search in a particular tag on SO.
@Nick I don't think the question should have received any answers. I can't see myself using that page to close anything else because the mcve is just too blurry/incomplete.
@mickmackusa yeah but it did... I'm not saying it should be a dupe target, just that there's enough detail in the answer that it might well appear on a google search
@Lino You can't synonymise them as they do refer to different things. You could certainly argue a case to burninate them all but there's a lot of questions to clean up
@StephenOstermiller but how do you know if the answer is actually correct when the question requirements are poorly defined? I think all of us here have seen bad content upvoted -- so let's not be swayed by upvotes either.
@mickmackusa "not enough focus" is a close reason, not a delete reason, you need to give us better reasoning if you want us to delete a page with valuable content
@user692942 IIRC there are userscripts that allow people to filter for (open) requests. In your case it may also take longer because duplicate closure may require some subject matter expertise, in contrast to, for example, a debugging question with code behind a link to some repo.
@StephenOstermiller my opinion is that the upvoted answer is "incorrect" because it does not satisfy the vague requirements dump in the question. Because of this, I utterly disregard the upvote tally as unearned/misleading.
@Cristik I meantioned "not enough focus" because the current close reason is no longer in use. I meant to fortify that the question definitely should not be reopened.
@Nick The view count may be largely a result of an attractive title -- not the actual content quality. For a page with >13000 views, I'd think a "good answer" would have a helluva lot more upvotes.
For example, this answer is 100% incorrect, but has received upvotes over the years. We enlightened few curators must differentiate between in/correct content for the betterment of the site instead of blindly following the collective ignorance of the crowd. Otherwise the snowball grows and researchers will mistakenly assume quality because of the ballooning score.
@mickmackusa wow, that's really an incorrect answer, especially since the OP clearly stated that array_count_values() didn't do the job for them. But for the question in discussion, the top-voted answer looks correct, and it helped a few people, so we might loose valuable content if we delete the question
Preface: this is not a request for moderation (I'm involved), it's mostly a curiosity. I don't understand how this answer to a 2 year old question got 3 downvotes less than 10 minutes after being posted.
It generated a review item (First Answers) but it was invalidated. So, I guess nobody looked at the review. It must have been people finding it based on activity.
[ Natty | Sentinel ] rLink to PostBodyLength: 143 Rep: 11 Ends with ?; Low Length; No Code Block; One Line only; Low Rep; Body Starts With: I noticed y-axis represent the number of student. However the data frame you provided do not give such value. How did you get the y-axis value? 5.0; @Shree @M--
Regardless of the question quality, am I right to be suspicious about a question with 30 views and 5 upvotes? Was about to mod flag it, but not sure if that's enough to warrant it.
@miken32 It must be the best question ever written. The views to upvotes ratio is, quite literally, unbelievable. That or there is indeed fish smell all over.
@IanCampbell 4 on the same day. 1 more almost a week later. The first four are also not in rapid succession - there is between 30 minutes and two hours between them. The question asker did have 1 rep, so it might just be votes out of sympathy.
@IanCampbell That's a good point – 4 upvotes on the day it was posted. I guess I should trust my instincts! That would likely be 4 upvotes on 10-20 views which is even more unbelievable than 5 on 30.
@Juraj That doesn't look like a debugging problem to me, so it doesn't necessarily need code. There may be other problems with it though. I'm not sure if it is a programming question at all.
It's highly unusual/unlikely that a question that only got ~45 views, especially on such a high-traffic tag, had such a significant number of those views come from users who have upvote privileges
The high reputation of the answerer might account for the upvotes (users recognized quality) but doesn't counter the surprising point above (that a significant number of the lower total amt of viewers were 125+ rep users)
it could just be an indication of a high rep user who has been committing fraud (note -- I'm not suggesting that's what this is, just that it's a possibility)
@IanCampbell in the timeline of the post you can select 'toggle vote summaries' and it will include date information for score changes of the post
Back in the day (e.g. pre ~2017/2018 or so) you could also see time information which was super useful but that was removed when they redid the UI
@IanCampbell Check the user's reputation history. It shows the +10 or -2 for each up-/downvote they've received with a timestamp of when they received it. Doesn't work for 1 rep users who received downvotes (no corresponding -2s) nor for deleted posts (though, maybe diamonds can get more info there) but it does cover all other situations, which should be the majority.
@mickmackusa it does seem like a lot, but in general people are far more likely to upvote an answer than a question and I'd be less inclined to question it.
Does a downvote on an answer count as self-interest/involvement when raising a question's validity in here? (Either as a formalcv-pls request or just as a general discussion.)