@RedzMakesErrors Hello and welcome. I see that you're new here. Please take some time to look through the FAQ to understand the room rules. The section I'd like to draw your attention to specifically is How and why do I need to format my cv-pls (and other requests)?
@mickmackusa FWIW SmokeDetector already has some phone number detection logic, though it won't fire e.g. on posts from high-rep users, and is somewhat prone to false positives from dates, IP addresses, etc
I encountered it, because I asked a responsive OP why they thought SO allowed English as well, turned out, they searched for Stack Overflow on Chinese Google and thought they had ended up there (probably having automated browser translation)
@Adriaan Oh, there is plenty of these. In Chinese specifically, I've found several. And whether or not SE is aware is irrelevant. They don't care. Essentially, they threw their hands up and don't do anything with the reports. They changed the policy to more or less only report these if they are proxies or serve malware or are otherwise actually harmful.
I was more flabbergasted that this was apparently the reason the OP ended up asking in Chinese here. That might well be the same for PT/ES/RU users living through a machine translated browser and not knowing they can enter a URL by hand, rather than asking Google/Yandex
@Adriaan There was a somewhat famous case of some guy's blog ranked first in Google when searching for "facebook" just because he posted an article that talked about it. It led to a lot of people landing on the site, thinking it was facebook, "logging in" (the blog had Fb comments) and complaining about the new design of Facebook. Apparently many people just type in the name of the website in the search bar (which gives you web search) instead of the full URL or using a bookmark.
@VLAZ my thoughts exactly. My thought usually go as: unrelated link -> spam. Related link, first occurrence: comment + possible VLQ flag. 2. occurrence, no affiliation: spam, 2. with affiliation, more persistent comment. 3. occurrence: spam either way
@starball for machine learning: basically you need code or a question "how to", although the latter is often give me four years and a couple of PhD students. Anything related to parameter choices, threshold fiddling, terminology explanation etc is off-topic
Questions like the one you just linked, asking about some general pointers on methods/threshold settings etc, and "Here's my code, the results aren't good enough" are usually off-topic. The latter requires people to just fiddle around with all the rejection/acceptance ratios, which isn't programming
ok. I understand partly (50%?). some parts of what you're saying I don't get simply because I know so little (basically nothing) about the technical parts of the subject (writing this, I'm not even sure if there is anything other than the technical parts to the subject :P). sorry for my limitation on that other 50%. Someday I'll probably learn more and understand. thanks for explaining!
@sideshowbarker may I ask why you deleted this answer? I'm not disputing it, looks like borderline trolling, but I know that this user doesn't troll in the typical sense. Maybe it got a couple R/A flags?
in my case, part of my “work for my employer” includes trying to figure out what W3C/web-platform features are causing the most frustration for web devs
and the simple answer is, “lots of them”
I keep trying to convince others I work with about what we would gain if we had a few more people spending team looking at Stack Overflow Q&As daily, but… it’s hard to sell
So... I just heard of the ChatGPT stuff. Since I do not have an OpenAI account, and I am not willing to provide my phone number... what are indicators of a ChatGPT answer?
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I refreshed and it went away. I think they might have a bug in the load new question button as it showed up after doing that. Here is where it took me: stackoverflow.com/staging-ground/74731790
@TylerMcEntee I am here and then if new questions show up I click on the load new questions. Its been after doing that when I've gotten a Q that shows up that links to the staging ground
@NathanOliver Awesome. That's what I suspected. We'll take a look to address that. Our real-time question feed update is probably not excluding Staging Ground posts.
@mickmackusa Correct, you don't use the hash symbols literally, those were standins for numbers. Regex format would be [0-9]. If you want to get serious about writing it, you probably would want to start with just the phone number formats for the one or two countries whose phone formats you see the most. Probably US and India I would guess. Which is ###.###.#### or ###-###-#### for the US... so we'll start with that one.
You'd do SELECT a,b,c FROM x WHERE n LIKE %[0-9][0-9][0-9].[0-9][0-9][0-9].[0-9][0-9][0-9][0-9]% OR n LIKE %[0-9][0-9][0-9]-[0-9][0-9][0-9]-[0-9][0-9][0-9][0-9]% where a,b,c are the fields you want returned, x is the table, and n is the field that contains the text you want to search.
I'd be safer to select TOP (10) or something first just to test or add a where clause and filter by date, like where creationdate >= 2022-12-01 or something
Does anyone have a link to a question with a pending custom close reason on it? I need to see the UI for a question with an existing custom close reason (but the question has not yet been closed), but searching for that is... a bit difficult.
I will merge the two tags I mentioned above, but it looks like they need some cleanup first. Does anyone want to help me out? stackoverflow.com/… needs to be retagged to prepared-statement
I mean, it has the right idea. Well, two. Just fails to combine them together. Indexing items is the fastest. And there is hashing involved in indexing them.
@mickmackusa I think the most misleading part in all of these answers is that they are not using string checking. Strict comparison is magnitutes faster.
@Dharman key checking beats value every time though. the cost comes with the processing effort to prepare the array as a lookup map. (unless I am incorrect) I didn't know that strict comparisons are "magnitudes faster" -- I thought that was a microoptimisation at best.
Yeah, the bottleneck (in that one question) was likely to be elsewhere -- in_array() is probably not the problem; iterated calls of in_array() might be.
I find it more annoying people keep asking ES6 questions which...aren't ES6 questions. "How can I sort this array. But with ES6" or "How do I transform this array. But in ES6."
@miken32 Why is it important to delete that signpost? That's the critical decision point after finding a dupe (or closing it). Does it have 25K views because of an attractive title? Is the page not useful BECAUSE there is no mcve? Is the signpost causing harm to researchers? Is it an exact duplicate question with answers that are all offered on the dupe target and does not represent a valuable signpost?
@mickmackusa I was gonna say the same thing, it looks reasonable to me. If it's an nth-dupe, that's a problem, but this one has 1/4 the views of the canonical
@miken32 that's fair. I'll need to study the page a bit more before I cast a delvote. I'd like to request that you provide your rationale with your del-pls when the page othewise looks valuable on the surface.