@bad_coder I mean, yes the code can be more minimal, but that doesn't change that the problem is trivial. Of course, beginners lack the perspective to ask a question that makes sense here; an artificial canonical is on my docket
@KarlKnechtel in such cases I'm inclined to leave an MRE comment saying "no more code than is necessary to reproduce"... But, 1º the OP got their answer, 2º after closure they'll get the banner anyway, and 3º it's a burnination and if I left a comment it would get deleted shortly.
There isn't much point spending more time searching for a duplicate target for that kind of question in these cirucmstances.
@Vickel lol, and tbh yeah, it's a burnination... I'll likely be over 500 closures by the end of it, so if I start spending too much time on every post I'll be in trouble.
@Vickel enumerating the reasons is good policy, as you well know a lot of experience goes into each split second decision.
Should this question and this one be merged? Or is one just a dupe of the other? Both have a large amounts of votes (and answers), and they both appear to be asking the exact same thing, hence why I'm wondering if a merge would be appropriate here
@Cristik Looks fine to me. Doesn't seem opinion-based. It asks for a way that is faster than any of those, which is an objective measurement. It gives the size of the file and the number of patterns being checked.
@RyanM thanks; I voted to reopen since the original cause was resolved. No clue about the subject, so whether it should be close otherwise I wouldn't know
The postal-code tag has 394 questions. Most of the questions are in relation to postal/zip/postcodes that are used in the physical addressing of post or mail.
The questions fall under some general headings:
Regex type questions. Asking to match/find certain characters within a string
Having dif...
@AdrianMole makes me want to instantly flag that users -.- We should simply delete all those users, since none of them seems to get the message that even they should adhere to SO's rules, rather than treat this as the microsoft help desk
But the mere suspicion of not being a true owner of a given username ID is not grounds for flagging, surely. Otherwise, you'd get loads of custom flags. I mean, how do I know that you are the real Code Gary?
@Nick Actually, the added examples appear to match exactly with what the user has described in text. I don't see any ambiguity in the description or the added examples. Is there some other interpretation of the original text that the added examples would break?
@CodyGray it sounds rather vague to me, plus some answers, including the new one, provide implementations in specific programming languages which don't even mention what language they use
Vague, unanswerable questions were never OK at any time, so that wouldn't be something that has changed, if the question is, in fact, too vague to answer. And questions have never been closable based on the answers that they've received, so that hasn't changed, either, and doesn't apply.
@Adriaan Also...I don't even see the relevance the code has to the question. The unexplained code-dumps usually at least try to answer something even if it's just the fantasy of what the question asked. The only word I see in the Q which might have any connection to the answer is in the last line: "I want to know about my faults and loopholes." And the answer shows a loop. Admittedly moon logic but the best I have.
@RyanM I think it's rather a problem of the OP not understanding how SO works. They have an answer on the plagiarism target as well + dump code-only answers in wrong languages to questions
@AmitJoshi This looks like it's had a stream of upvotes to its answers over time. Is this actually without any value? Is there a better post covering those answers?
@RyanM I am sure I seen this many times. I tried to [quick search]([nhibernate] [nhibernate-mapping] .hbm.xml embedded resource). The post I found is this. But I am sure there are many more those might not be fitting in that search criteria. Removing "embedded resource" from search gives 113 results; not all of them match though.
Apart from that, the naming syntax ".hbm.xml" is very common knowledge; clearly mentioned in all documentations. One can only miss it just by negligence (that is why typo).
Ohh.. that link formatting is completely destroyed in above chat; may be due to square brackets of tags in search. Search "[nhibernate] [nhibernate-mapping] .hbm.xml embedded resource"
@Adriaan It can, but only when they're trying to hide the link (i.e. linked punctuation) or when they use SEO keywords. That one just looks like an overzealous user
@GeneralGrievance I'd say yes. It doesn't have affiliation and all the contents are copied from behind that link, thus not writing any "own" content. Bit weird though, since you cannot plagiarise yourself
@GeneralGrievance If that's the only instance, I'd say no. Needs an edit to indicate affiliation. Now, if they do that a lot (which doesn't seem to be the case), whole different ball of wax
@GeneralGrievance trouble, yes. Self-plagiarism though isn't a thing as confirmed by a Dutch judge a few years ago. One of the prime ground for plagiarism is "copied without permission". You cannot give yourself no permission to copy your own content
@Machavity I've started a question about that. Feel free to edit it if I didn't phrase it clear enough
@Machavity does it make a difference that they wrote the blog and answer on the same date? That happens more often; people write a blog, then search for (old) questions on SO to link their blog on, or write a summarised answer and link to their blog for full details
@AmitJoshi This is a completely different error message, though; there's no discoverability there for people experiencing the second error. I think it would be much better served by reopening and closing as a duplicate instead if it is truly the same problem. It is clearly useful to searchers/readers, so deletion is the wrong move here
@Machavity they did do that in this case; blog shows the same creation date. It looks as if they wrote an extended answer, decided to post that as a blog and paraphrased the code-bits to SO
@Adriaan Good catch, but I still think it nets the same result. It's odd to have your blog post and a late answer at roughly the same time. But there could be an argument that the question inspired the blog post. The key, as always, is patterns.
@Machavity no pattern here though. It's not one of those "I've written a blog post and went to SO to link-dump it to 10 posts", it does seem pretty tailored
@Adriaan If possible, it would be nice to ask about whether block-quotes would be required. I see you edited that bit out to focus on the "new content" bit. Which is fine, of course, it's your question, but the block-quote bit was an interesting edge case that I can't find a previous meta discussion about.
@RyanM Agreed. I would say it follows equally from the logic here, but at least one user is not happy about that, as the comments on Adriaan's question show, so having something explicit is always nicer.
@TylerH Old versions of the language still exist, so it's reproducible; it could be edited to say "before version X", or one could address the addition in an answer.
@cigien Although, the focus in that discussion is more about the "new content", so maybe there being no requirements about block-quoting wouldn't be an issue.
@TylerH stackoverflow.com/help/referencing - generally, don't copy the entire contents of stuff you didn't write, even with attribution, and generally add some context. Generally. It's sort of case-by-case.
@Nick There's no guarantee, sure, but the edit doesn't appear to deviate from the OP's intent in any way. The added examples aren't guesses, they're based on the textual description the OP wrote. I wouldn't worry about conflicting with the OP's intent in this case.
@RyanM Wow! How did that happen? I mean, not even you moddy thingies can just vanish votes away with no record of there ever having been any. Must be some kind of superpower given to those who get paid for what they (can) do. :)
@TylerH debatable; the question is based on outdated premises, doesn’t prompt. Great answers that aren’t POB and surely it doesn’t need new ones that would inevitably contain little more than a link to some blog or announcement. I might as well hammer it with some other target that talks about generics in detail, but… in the end it’s a meh question that does little harm
IIRC there is one like that. A few months ago I extensively reviewed all old questions tagged [go][generics], but I can’t find it now. I’ll have a look again later
What is the deal with linked punctuation spam anyway? Are they trying to discretely hide a link to a spam site so it will be ranked higher in search engine results?
@bad_coder I complained about a comment exchange where I was trying to explain to someone not to offer a tool rec for a (closed, at -4) question where (apparently; I am not a SME) the only reasonable way to do it is with one specific tool, and he reopened the question. The question wasn't (AFAICT) even about writing code, but about organizing and managing it.
I'm pretty sure that, for example, "how can I <do the basic things a CVS does>?" doesn't become on topic just because OP is unaware that it's expected to use an actual CVS for that (as opposed to making manual backups, or scheduling one's own cron job to make backups, or programmatically writing code to copy the source files somewhere)
@KarlKnechtel you see, apparently Cody has a degree in arguments (yeah to everyone's surprise you can graduate at Uni in that field..!) So we're dealing with a pro, the professional ethos seems to come into play every so often, not only that but the man also has a strong personality...
What I've come to learn in dealing with Cody is that the arguments aren't to be taken too much to heart, he'll be a better person tomorrow and you're likely to grow in mutual respect.
@KarlKnechtel @bad_coder that is enough for now. I assume @CodyGray will invite the both of you to a new room to settle the dispute, if that is needed / warranted. We're not continuing the discussion without the subject present.
@RyanM How would there be an unhandled spam flag on a deleted post? You can't red-flag a post that was already deleted and they're automatically marked helpful upon deletion for any reason. Am I missing an edge case?
Any angularjs SMEs want to see if any part of this is answering the OP's question? Or is it all just critiquing the other answer? stackoverflow.com/a/29872588