@JeanneDark the question asks for a regex in php. The "answer" doesn't offer one. It fully relies on the linked answer. It is basically a dupe close vote disguised as an answer. You do not receive any meaningful advice without visiting the link.
How to handle these two {[1](https://stackoverflow.com/a/75363826/5779732), [2](https://stackoverflow.com/a/75363676/5779732)} new answers to two old questions? 1) Both are added by same user at close time; may be immediately after one another. 2) Both provide a link to same website outside SO. Not sure how author is related to that website. I do not see their name on website though. 3) The link contains the contents of mixed English + PORTUGUESE. 4) The answers are not really "Not An Answer", but they are not much helpful considering other answers available on respective thread.
At what point, when a user keeps posting the same question, again and again (3rd time, now), do we mod-flag? Exact same question: 1st closed as a dupe of another post; 2nd closed as dupe of 1st, 3rd closed as dupe of 2nd.
There's a template message we can send them about re-asking the same question. It's not that hard to do, and sending an official warning is actually useful because (A) it gives them a warning before they end up question-banned, (B) it hopefully gets them to stop doing it, and (C) in case it doesn't, it sets us up to suspend them.
Anyone know anything about "Matter". This type of Matter. Looks like OP is trying to create a tag in the title, as there's no existing tag. Could that be edited into shape? (Seems like a clear question, but maybe needs a bit more info.)
@AdrianMole Makyen already answered this, I guess. It is definitely too much to ask to ask for moderators to read all of the comments on a post when handling a flag on it. It's not just about time (although that is a legitimate and important consideration). It's also about scope. Handling a flag on a post requires reading that post. It should not entail reading all the comments on that post. That's out of scope.
Reading the comments is equivalent to going and looking at the user's previous history. Mods are willing to do that if requested/advised to do so, but we're not going to do it every time we handle a standard flag. That's why a "rude/abusive" flag is not suitable for bringing a pattern of abusive behavior to our attention, nor is a "spam" flag suitable for someone who has posted 10 answers all recommending the same library (when a single one of those answers would be reasonable).
@AdrianMole It's all about what you're paying attention to. Reviewers aren't expected to pay attention to comments, either.
@tripleee If they're inappropriate (i.e., contain inappropriate language), then you can and should flag the post, making it clear that the issue is the edit summary for revision N. Moderators can edit these. Of course, don't flag them simply because the edit summary is stupid/wrong/unhelpful. We aren't going to fix all the edit summaries on the site any more than we're going to edit all the posts.
@cocomac That really shouldn't be migrated, as it's not off-topic for Stack Overflow. (I really don't understand voting to close it as "not about programming or software development".)
In Burnination HQ, there are multiple feeds active, covering a large variety of tags, which everyone can see here. Of course, the "Burnination-Feed" feed only feeds posts tagged [burninate-request], even in Burnination HQ.
@CodyGray Nah. Answer is also very old (and scores +16). I skipped the LQA review but think the Q is unclear, so I close-voted it. I guess it's not in the scope of SOCVR.
@VLAZ To be fair he didn't really tell people his last name that much outside of the Skywalkers, and we don't know how common a name that is
But also I imagine in a galaxy with tens of thousands of inhabited planets, you probably don't have to be super worried about being too conspicuous to the ruling government
especially a world outside of their direct sphere of influence
@Machavity I think it's too small for Meta, tbh. Literally all I have in mind is adjusting the expedited burnination process from <50 questions to <100 questions
@miken32 One rep per existing answer. For every 15 answers, the requirement is +1 rep per existing answer. So, if there were 25 answers for 2 rep per answer = minimum is 50. If there are 50 answers, that's 150 minimum.
@VLAZ Ideally, I think I'd like to see questions automatically get "super protected" after a certain number of answers (say 15-20) with a minimum rep to answer of 1000 for those questions. How many questions really need more than a dozen different answers?
I can see maybe 3: 1. Chop of capitalise first char, concatenate the rest 2. regex to sort of do the same. 3. can't really think of anything but maybe.
Oh and if there is a JS question and an answer with "benchmarks" you can be absolutely certain that 1. it's completely garbage (the benchmarks are NEVER relevant) 2. It's highly upvoted because people think that 0.0001ms vs 0.00009ms really super matters for something they may call once a minute.
OMG, I didn't look at the benchmark results when I complained about them. I pulled some numbers that are actually not too far off? The slowest benchmark shows 1.9 million operations per second. So, the slowest approach still takes 0.000505 milliseconds.
Thanks answerer from 2020 on page 2 - I didn't know I could use CSS to capitalise a string. The three answers on page 1 that all said this weren't convincing enough. I needed a fourth one to show me it's actually possible.
@VLAZ Your numbers are a bit off when looking at orders of magnitude difference between approaches. The numbers you used show a 10% difference, whereas, in the numbers shown in the answer, there's about an order of magnitude difference.
While I agree that such performance numbers have little or no usefulness under most conditions, they can be indicative and helpful in some situations. Although, admittedly, the vast majority of time for the vast majority of readers, it's really not all that useful, unless there's a very significant difference in performance (as in multiple orders of magnitude).
My stance is that all JS benchmarks are wrong. A good number of them don't even measure things correctly. Pretty much all others are irrelevant. Something from 2015 would very likely have seen changes in what is faster the same year. Or even at literally the same moment, when measured with different environments. V8/Chrome and Firefox most prominently. But each browser update can also change which operations are more optimised.
For me, it's never appropriate to answer with benchmarking other answers. Because the accuracy of these measurements can go out the window tomorrow. If they were ever accurate to begin with. And no, I don't think 0.000505ms runtime is worth benchmarking.
^ Exactly. Perhaps the only legitimate use of benchmarks is on a question explicitly asking about such. Otherwise they are misleading information, if not outright lies.
Want to post vacuous content that serves no purpose and you don't want to use ChatGPT? Post some benchmark, kids!
@halt9k One is asking for an algorithm recommendation (without putting forth any effort or code of their own) and the other is asking if there are errors in their own implementation of an algorithm that solves the same task
Those are... clearly different questions
Or at least, it should be clear that they are different. Even if the ultimate goal they both attempt to achieve is "detect sphere collision"
@TylerH this is 10 years old questions nobody ever answered or even upvoted, they should be closed even if anything similar exists. I sometimes can find 10 questions on same Python subject nowadays which actually spread cumulative efforts and decrease quality of best answer under best formulated question of all of these 10.
Just to decrease struggling of Google to pick up result
@TylerH it's not just old, but there are two more duplicates on SO (in total 3), all voted below 3 and 1 more duplicate on SG: in total, that's 5 duplicates, 4 of which incomparably less useful than last one
Also, if you find that a question has a duplicate on SO that is older or has better answers, then... vote to close it as a duplicate. That's a different matter entirely from "this question is about the same end goal as another one on a different network site"
It's about circles, not spheres which by my opinion in current situation must be redirected to that well done 30 voted GameDev question anyway. But I got that many people will object looking on usability.
Regarding 'must be redirected to the GameDev question', as I mentioned before there is no way to do that, so you need to request the feature be added if you want it to happen
In the meantime, I did post a link to the GameDev question under the Stack Overflow question. In the future, you can just do that yourself if you run into that scenario.
Even if they were posted on the same site, they're not duplicates in the slightest
@TylerH I tried to post reasonable answer redirects, but surely they were immidiately closed. Just comment below question is much less noticeable than it should normally be in this situation. And google is still garbaged and peoiple still will lose time. And someone will try to copy answer from gamedev to SO.
@halt9k Your opinion is wrong; this is a settled matter of site policy. Not only are answers for posts that address the question's problem/provide an answer, but your suggested solution isn't even visible anymore because a moderator deleted it
Looks like you pretend to argue... It's obvious that from practical point of view best available option is answer. From practical point of view your comment is barely noticeable. Site policy is again obviously imperfect in this case.
@halt9k I agree that site policy is imperfect, but being argumentative or in disbelief about it is not going to help you. I recommend that you don't keep posting "this is a duplicate of another question" as an answer, or the moderators might suspend your account for failure to adhere to site rules. If you think we're wrong, you may visit meta.stackoverflow.com and ask the community and moderators what they think. Otherwise, let's end this discussion here as it isn't going anywhere.
@miken32 but as I explained to Ms. Dark here, the preg_match() is irrelevant. The question seeks a regex. The answer is effectively a close vote because you have to read the other page to get the answer.
@KevinB I do if they: 1. are answering a different question or 2. are close votes disguised as an answer or 3. are not written in the language tagged in the question or 4. (probably some other reasons that I can't think of)
@KevinB the highly upvoted "bad" answers that irk me are the ones from group #1. People upvote them as informative/educational/helpful despite the fact that they do not work for the asked question.
votes generally aren't an important part of my measure of usefulness on old questions with a lot of views
case in point, this received 8 upvotes and 0 downvotes: "Just add this classname to your div, that'll capitalize the first letter. No javascript needed!"
I feel like we need a way to sort/categorize answers, like standard approaches, approaches using/not using specific tools, approaches that are deliberately esoteric
(the latter can be important because, you know, frame challenge)