@CodyGray They used document.querySelector("button") which doesn't select the button they need (because there is another one, the mobile menu one). If there is something else wrong, it also needs more debugging details.
@gre_gor Err... okay, that's an entirely different thing. Your previous response (and the comments) made it sound like the code did not work as shown. Now you're saying that it does?
I love that they didn't even vote to close after leaving that comment. They obviously think it's either unclear or too broad, but thought that the comment was the best way to express that...
@CodyGray should I withdraw my cv on this after your edit? It still seems somewhat broad, but closing as a resource request might not be helpful to the OP?
@CodyGray: debugging information such as what is in the problemsId array and how the array might change when the daoProblems.getCustomerProblems(...) is called.
@HovercraftFullOfEels Seems like it would be useful to tell them that along with closing their question, eh? A silent closure of a question that lacks an MCVE is reasonable when the question contains no code at all. When it contains what the asker probably thinks is an MCVE, the closure will just frustrate them because they will not understand why what they provided is not sufficient, and thus it will be very unlikely to have the desired effect (namely, the question getting edited with the required information and reopened).
Were I that person, I would have had absolutely no idea why my question was closed, or why y'all were asking for example code when I clearly provided such.
"What makes you think both if/else are running? This is in a for-loop so chances are, in one iteration the if block runs, in the other iteration the else block runs. You can easily confirm that by adding a log line to print in each if/else and include the i variable." -- no reply from the OP
No, I don't want to reopen it. I want people to actually provide useful information to the person whose question has been closed so that they can understand what is missing and what they need to do to get it reopened!
@tripleee Well, except if OP directly benefits from the sale. Which might be the case in the Smokey report. The author and the user share a family name. Not sure if they are the same person, though.
Lol RE: that book spam. Out of curiosity I checked the reviews on amazon. All reviews were from people from India - the first one even from a person with the exact same name as the author. And almost all were 5 stars. Only one review gives it one star. Not sure if it's thrown in for "authenticity" or does it happen to be genuine.
Depends how long the bounty has been running. If it's within a day or so, I'll refund the bounty. But beyond that, all you're doing is giving them free publicity
@Machavity Is the expiration of CVs put on hold during a bounty, then? If I cast a CV, then the question get bountied, does my CV expire in X+7 days (where X is the original expiration time)?
Who wants to donate 25 Unicorn Pointz to science: Pick a question in the CV queue and offer a bounty on it; then we can see if it's still in the review queue after a few minutes. :)
@AdrianMole Kind of asking the wrong question there. We're all reading tea leaves and throwing chicken bones to figure out how most systems on SE work. I mean, there is documentation but the tea leaves and chicken bones are more reliable than scouring Meta, maybe finding something that's outdated, or even if it isn't, it might be incomplete.
@KevinB I can find a review queue item and post a 'permalink' to it. But I don't have enough rep to start throwing it away on vaguely scientific experiments. :)
lol. Can't tell you how many times I tell someone to use backslash and they use forward instead. I try to educate them by pointing out a backslash leans back, while a forward slash leans forward
@NathanOliver Depends on perspective: / has the lower part back. And the "forward" and "back" directions only really make sense if you consider left-to-right text direction as "forward".
@VLAZ If you are standing and lean forward your top is in front of your bottom. And of course is consider left-to-right, I'm American, no other system exists (looks at you made up grams and meters) ;)
@Machavity Close-votes (and close-flags) are aged away between 3.5 to 4.5 days after being cast if the question has > 100 views, depending on when the vote was cast relative to when the job which performs the aging away task is run during the day. That timeframe is 13.5 to 14.5 days if the question is <= 100 views. Both timeframes may be extended by additional days, depending on if other people had cast close-votes on the question and when they cast them.
ehhhhhhh, there are enough bad CVs that I dunno about that. Making someone wait potentially 2 weeks for a bounty because some 3k user tossed an errant CV on it seems a bit much
without the bounty system, how else would people do extremely obvious sockpuppetry?
I think so. There's some potential for mischief there but unless there's a lot of such mischief, that's probably a reasonable compromise. And it could always be revisited.
Yeah. If someone puts a bounty on an unanswered question because they really need the answer, and then some kind soul comes along and points that that it has already been answered (in a duplicate question), then that second user should be able to VTC or hammer it closed. In the latter case, the bounty would obviously be awarded to the hammer-swinger. :)
@AdrianMole How about refund an amount proportional to the time the bounty was active vs the full time for the bounty? Bounties are paying for advertising not for answers. They got a portion of the advertising they were paying for. Shouldn't they actually pay for it?
This does already happen sometimes, in the form of downvotes.
at any rate yes this will definitely annoy people and maybe mods should have a revert button, but most of the people who would be annoyed by it are those asking and answering off-topic questions
@AdrianMole Of course they won't. All most of them want is their problem solved without doing much, if any, work. It's rare for someone in that situation to have put any thought into what's good for the site, other than to oppose the good of the site in favor of obtaining what they desire.
@Jonas you participate on Server Fault a bit; think this one's suitable for that?
@Cristik I don't think this is opinion-based. It's answerable objectively, and the top answer does so (it's not, for example, about which type of quotes are better in a given situation, which would be opinion-based)
Maybe "debug my code for me"? That question is... in need of significant improvement to meet standards. I didn't realize the formatting was that broken (side note: is it possible to see the markdown source when the edit queue is full for under 2k-users?)
I could imagine scenarios in which it would not be (e.g, some framework that generates method names based off pluralizing things), but I'm gonna say "usually"
@RyanM Well, of course! Removing spam takes six flags, whereas deleting a question only requires 3. It would stand to reason that it would, therefore, take about half as much time to get questions deleted as it would to get spam removed. I wonder how our priorities got so mixed up.
@KevinB You know what's great about being a moderator? Our opinions matter. :-D