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2 hours later…
03:53
@Zoe do you know if there's a canonical for "android apps can't access the internet without the INTERNET permission"? I can't find one after looking, but surely this must be a dupe.
although it's from 2012 so...at least it's an early one? only 95 views though...
 
2 hours later…
05:39
@C++ SME's, do we have a canonical post for questions like this?
@Cristik Yeah, I've closed it.
@cigien thanks, another one for you: is this a duplicate of this? My intuition says yes, however I haven't executed the program
05:54
Hmm, it is one of the issues, so I've closed it as a dupe. There are other issues with the code though - the input is not being read correctly given the format of the text file, and the couts should be inside the loop.
Yeah, there are multiple issues with the code, however the primary question was "why no output", and the duplicate helps exactly with that.
I've added a target for reading formatted data as well. Also, maybe the couts shouldn't be in a loop because there's only one set of data in the input file, but then there's no need for a loop at all.
 
2 hours later…
09:06
@M-- Not sure how this isn't about programming. It's asking how to do something in an Android app. The answers are not very good (I just deleted one that said basically "yes") but it's about programming.
I also edited it to clearly ask how to do it, though I sort of think that was implied.
found a dupe, actually
09:30
In an unfortunate typo: Let's play our C harp
M--
M--
@RyanM you're right. I should not be reviewing anymore. it's close to dawn and apparently I need sleep :)
09:58
@M-- thanks for the follow-up, sleep well :-)
@Kal by the way, you can flag it as a duplicate to suggest the duplicate to the asker and place the question in the close vote review queue
user19414420
@RyanM Ok, will do that then, it slipped my mind.
No worries, just an FYI :-)
10:30
@RyanM I don't have one in my list, but I can look around
You could alternatively just close the question as no MCVE
10:53
@MrUpsidown Yes, that's what I mean. I see no reason why that question should not be answered. It's definitely not seeking recommendations, so I've reopened it, because that close reason was utterly invalid. What you left as a comment is actually an attempt to answer the question, so you already did answer it, you just put it into the wrong box.
It's a useful contribution to our knowledge base so long as it's about programming (appears to be, as it's about usage of an API), it's sufficiently reasonably scoped as to be answerable in our Q&A format (appears to be, as you've managed to fit an answer into a comment), and it's not already asked and answered (i.e., a duplicate). I assume if it were a duplicate, you'd have closed it as such, so we can assume it's not. That means it is a useful addition to our knowledge base.
@MrUpsidown What do you mean "this is totally useless"? What makes it useless? Because you already know the answer? It wouldn't be useless to someone who didn't know the answer and wanted to know. Virtually all questions about Python are totally useless to me because I don't use Python. Virtually all questions about Win32 API programming are totally useless to me because I already know the answer. But what's useful to me personally is not the standard for what questions we allow on SO.
@JeanneDark I see. Fair enough; I did not look at the specific context, as it had already been moved out. Thanks for clarifying.
@TylerH You're looking in the wrong place. You should be looking in a dictionary of the English language.
@EJoshuaS-StandwithUkraine Right, but... Something must have brought that up or made it relevant to post here. That's what I was inquiring after.
@TylerH No, this is not possible. We can convert an answer to a comment on any post in that Q&A (so, either the question itself, or one of the other answers), and we have an option when converting an answer to a comment to also move all of the comments on that answer, so there are several creative things that can be done using that functionality, but we have no way to move comments on the question anywhere else.
11:27
I was under the impression that posts deleted/flagged as R/A aren't used as audits. So what happened here? Presumably, it was deleted by a R/A flag.
@AdrianMole No, was nuked as spam. Dunno why. Will fix.
OK - I had a vague idea that might have been the reason.
I have modified a userscript that I use heavily to now make this fix as easy as a single click. Some day, I'm going to submit a PR...
But that day won't be today, because I've squandered the entire evening and night catching up on chat transcripts.
@AdrianMole Actually... :-) You can tell definitively, because the moderator who gave feedback on the MS report gave it via FDSC, which is only triggered when casting a flag. And if a mod casts a red flag, then the post is immediately nuked. So you know that the moderator who gave MS feedback was the same moderator who nuked the post.
Hmm. Would that be the same moderator who now refers to himself in the third person? :)
That moderator must be an illeist.
11:39
Nomination for screenshot of the day ... along with Comment of the Day: Wash your screen please
6
@AdrianMole As a bonus, it's yet another person who has spelled it "scrapping".
@blackgreen No, because it's not a typo. They're asking if the code shown in the question has any observable effects. That's a valid, on-topic question.
@cigien Why should that be deleted?
@AdrianMole Ugh, that's gross. Screensnot.
12:40
@CodyGray I'm not sure what you mean. The questions is asking for off-site resources, and all the answers link to off-site resources.
@cigien And it's already closed, that's a close reason, not a delete reason afaik.
It isn't? There isn't a separate list of delete reasons, is there? If the original close reason has not been resolved, why do we want to not delete the question, apart from historical value?
And duplicates, of course.
Yes, close reasons and delete reasons are distinct. Delete reasons are things like "causes harm" or "adds no value whatsoever".
Nope, check When should I delete questions? section and gauging the upvotes on the answers there is some usefulness to several people.
@cigien We would not want to delete the question if, for example, either the questions or the answers contain information that someone in the future might find valuable. Which appears to be the case in this case.
12:48
@AdrianMole I also vote "Unclear".
@CodyGray That's not really how del-pls have generally been made in here chat.stackoverflow.com/search?q=del-pls&room=undefined (almost all of the reasons on the first page are standard close reasons). Of course, you may feel all those reasons are wrong.
That aside, I don't feel the question under discussion has any value on the site. Yes, it has a high vote count, so a flag can be raised for a historical lock (or if you're a mod, you can lock it yourself if you're so inclined). I'm comfortable with my delete vote, and would like to also leave the del-pls request in here.
By that argument we shoud return to accepting non-programming computer related questions as well because after all that's how we did it in the past.
I doubt that's a good comparison. I imagine we stopped accepting non-programming computer related questions after a community discussion about whether that should happen. If we want to disallow close reasons being used for del-pls requests, a discussion should be held about that. Currently, to my reading, the relevant part of the FAQ doesn't indicate that. I could be misreading it, of course.
13:05
So how did you "Indicate why the post should be deleted and not just remain closed"? And how is this question requiring an "exceptional act"?
All you produced so far are close reasons and anectodes neither of which are sufficient. Opposing that there are upvotes which are evidence the posts have been useful to several people, a reason not to delete the question.
Like I said, I'm going off of established practice of close reasons being enough for a del-pls (I've always assumed that "not useful" was implied in most, if not all, cases). If that's not sufficient, I'd be quite happy to include some additional reason in my del-pls reasons. I would prefer an RO to weigh in before I start doing that though.
As to the upvotes, like I said, feel free to raise a flag for a historical lock. Alternatively, you can make an undel-pls if it does end up being deleted. I imagine "has lots of upvotes" would count as a sufficient undelete reason.
That's never been correct, nor do I agree that it is "established practice". The FAQ that you yourself link to says: "Indicate why the post should be deleted and not just remain closed or wait until the Roomba gets it; deletion is an exceptional act and should be treated as such."
This makes it very clear that you need to provide a specific reason for deletion above and beyond whatever reason would suffice for closure, and, furthermore, that you need to justify why deletion should be expedited through this room.
The fact that you can find cases where others don't follow the FAQ doesn't really prove anything.
I don't think a historical lock is appropriate because a historical lock locks the post. Why should the choice be between closure+deletion or a historical lock? Why does deletion necessarily follow from closure?
13:21
@CodyGray It's not just that I can find cases, it's the majority of cases. Doesn't that prove "established practice"?
13:38
@cigien Maybe? In the same way that this room proves it's "established practice" to ask off-topic questions on Stack Overflow.
Uh, no, not in the same way at all. Members in this room are not in the habit of asking off-topic questions (I hope). This room does prove it's established practice to close off-topic questions on SO :)
@cigien If you really think this question should be deleted surely you can come up with an argument other than "we have done something similar in the past".
2
@SunderamDubey Another case where someone trying to elaborate/clarify their question and show that they've done prior research ends up getting their question nominated for closure. :-(
@cafce25 I already did: it's not a useful question for the site. I'm not sure what additional arguments are needed.
An argument for why it should be deleted.
13:47
But, that's the argument. Questions that are not useful for the site should be deleted. Am I missing something here?
@cigien questions that have been marked by users as helpful don't satisfy "are not useful".
So an argument that can't be disproven by looking at the question please.
The delete criterion is specifically "is not useful" not "is not useful for the site".
So you're claiming this question is useful because it has lots of upvotes? I'm not thrilled by that argument, people upvote unsuitable questions all the time. Also, that question has 13 upvotes, and the highest scoring answer has 40, which is not a lot over 6 years anyway.
Maybe it's not useful to you or to me or the intended purpose of the site but it very clearly is useful to someone.
I don't think 50 out of the 25k people who saw that page finding it useful is sufficient reason not to delete it.
@CodyGray It was an (admittedly slightly weak) joke attempt.
14:11
I don't think 50 is equal to "no value whatsoever" (from the guidlines on when to delete a question)
14:40
Can this be edited to be on-topic? I was going to just remove the first sentence, and the part that asks for addons, but I'm not sure if that's enough.
@cigien I guess this also refers to my requests. While I often write not much more than the close reason: The questions are very old (I sometimes add "ancient" when they're more than 10 years old), have very low scores (highest scores are 0 and -1), answers have low scores or are obviously bad and generally almost as old as the question (as the questions usually have been closed years ago).
The question from your request has relatively high scores and somewhat up-to-date answers (top answer link updated by edit, upvoted answer from last year). I'm not saying it's worth preserving, just guessing why your request is met with more criticism than mine.
15:13
@JeanneDark Yeah, that's probably the reason. I linked to the search because I interpreted the criticism as being for not adding additional reasoning in the del-pls itself, which may not have been the intent. They probably just wanted to know the reasoning for deletion.
I didn't link to the search to imply that my request was equally delete worthy as the ones in the search, but only to show that it followed the usual format.
No, that was the intent. I did some very cursory research, and I found some prior art from a room owner. A similar, earlier discussion starts here, with a reply from a RO.
Oh yeah, and this guy cigien once requested a proper reason for a del-pls request (which he obviously wouldn't do if the reason could be discerned just by looking at the text in the big blue banner).
@CodyGray That example was for a request that simply said "No Roomba", which is definitely not a sufficient del-pls reason.
The message from Tyler is interesting, I hadn't seen that before (or don't remember it). But thanks for clarifying your intent. I'll ask for clarification on the rules.
Well, yeah, "no roomba" is not a sufficient reason because it merely begs the question. But I don't see how a begging-the-question fallacy is any different from a category-error fallacy (i.e., providing a closure reason in a place where a deletion reason is required).
And the point still stands: why would you request a valid reason when the reason could be trivially discerned by simply looking at the reason why the question was closed? If that were sufficient, then "no roomba" would arguably be sufficient, because the deletion is already justified by the closure. The only issue becomes whether we have to take specific action to delete it, and "no roomba" explains why we must.
However, this is fallacious, because closure does not inexorably beget deletion.
15:40
@CodyGray Actually, scratch that, I'm not going to bother asking for clarification. It'll be easier and simpler to just tack on "not useful" at the end of every del-pls request I make. If you have any specific deletion reasons you'd rather I use, let me know, it doesn't make any difference as far as I'm concerned.
Well, I'd prefer you use either "causes harm" or "contains nothing of value whatsoever".
If neither of those fit, then I'd prefer that deletion not be requested or initiated.
That's tricky. "Causes harm" is a bit subjective, what sorts of questions would qualify for that? And "contains nothing of value whatsoever" is worse, because clearly quite a few users would consider a Q&A with a dozen or so upvotes to have value.
Well, "quite a few" might be a stretch, but of the 3 people having this discussion, one of them did think the upvotes mattered.
@cigien What reason could you give for anything that is not subjective? Certainly it's no more subjective than "not useful", so I don't understand this objection.
If your reaction is "wow, that implies that things which do not cause harm and may contain some value should probably not be deleted", well... .
But that means no question should ever be deleted. After all, what actual "harm" can a closed question really cause? And pretty much every question could have some value, to someone, even things like "What programming languages should I learn in 2023?"
Of course, "not useful" isn't all that much better, but that's why I don't want to add any of those reasons at all. At least close reasons have a good rationale behind them.
16:02
@cigien It doesn't mean that. There are certainly cases where a post can be causing harm, and there are many cases where a Q&A contains no value whatsoever. And, to answer the objection, upvotes alone are not an uncontestable signal that a post contains value. They are merely one of many heuristics. But absent any evidence to the contrary (i.e., some argument why the post lacks value), they're a pretty damning one.
Yes, the bar should be much higher for deleting posts than closing them. That's also by design.
Hmm, I kind of see what you're getting at. That does put any recommendation question that's several years old with several upvotes out of reach of deletion, unfortunately. Would you consider such questions as causing harm because they indicate to users that such questions are acceptable on the site, resulting in them asking similar questions?
It puts most (all?) questions that have a lot of votes out of reach, in fact. I'm not sure how one would show evidence of harm exactly.
If you can plausibly make that argument. Also if you can argue that the answers themselves contain little to nothing of value, e.g., because the links are dead, they're obsolete, the content is widely available elsewhere, etc.
We already have a system that makes highly-upvoted questions more difficult to delete (by increasing the number of delete votes required). Why isn't that reasonable? To me, it seems obvious that content which is marked as highly useful/valued should be difficult (as in, a high bar) to remove.
We're really not breaking new ground here; this has been policy on the site and in SOCVR for at least 5 years, so it really feels like you're being obtuse here.
Yes, there's some subjectivity; that's why we expect users who make a request for deletion to give a compelling reason, and why we expect them to be open for discussing it and potentially even changing their mind.
To be completely honest, it utterly boggles my mind why we should ever even contemplate deleting anything which doesn't obviously cause harm and doesn't obviously contain no value whatsoever. But I understand that there are exceptions, and I think it's reasonable to let people make arguments based on their own subjective assessments.
Showing evidence of harm could be "this code is malicious", "this has nothing to do with the question (and thus leads researchers astray)", that kind of thing. It all goes back to understanding the purpose/goal of the site, and then applying it to specific cases.
16:18
Is this NAA/VLQ? Or should it be edited to contain the content of the comment and then made into a CW?
Normally, I'd say edit it to make it into a proper answer. However, that question might be a typo, which would make that exercise rather unfruitful.
Hmm. The relevance of the question notwithstanding, I would hesitate to make such an edit without the abilty to also convert to a CW.
Why does it need to be CW?
That's my understanding (I know we've had discussion, in here about this). But, if an answer is merely repeating/collecting comments, then I would generally make my own such a CW.
That's not actually what a CW is for. :-) A CW is something you expect to be collaboratively edited.
It's not inappropriate in such cases, of course, but it's not essential, either.
Salvaging an answer doesn't hinge upon you being able to make it a CW.
16:27
It may not, according to the letter-of-the-law, but it discourages me from making such an edit.
@CodyGray Ok. I really don't understand how keeping stackoverflow.com/questions/41768215 around serves the purpose of the site (by my subjective judgement), but I may well be misunderstanding the purpose of the site. Sorry if I'm being obtuse, I'm just trying to figure it out.
@cigien Does it contain any information that future viewers to the site might find useful?
@AdrianMole That's unfortunate. I cannot understand why it would discourage you from making such an edit. It seems like a very arbitrary rule that you've created for yourself, and one that runs counter to the ethos of improving the site.
(Why do I feel like a broken record?)
I think it dates back some time, when I posted a comment about making an answer from the content of several comments. At that time, when I was still a fairly new user, a more seasoned, high-rep user suggested that it was OK but that I should make the answer a CW, so as not to be seen as "stealing rep" from other users' efforts.
@CodyGray CDs and DVDs have been around some time, now. They're rather more robust than vinyl discs.
They're still quite easy to scratch.
@CodyGray Yes, of course it might. But many questions I've voted to delete might have some value. Some less likely than others obviously, but I don't have a crystal ball, so how can I be sure.
16:33
@cigien Well, you cannot be sure, of course. But you can look at the information on the page and assess whether it's crap or not. If it's crap, then we can be pretty sure it won't be useful to anyone. If it's quality, then even if the question is unsuitable for SO, we can't reasonably assume that it won't be useful for anyone, so we should not delete it, because that might be shooting ourselves in the foot.
A list of off-site English dictionaries is pretty much crap IMO, even if they're formatted in JSON.
@cigien "serves the purpose of the site" - maybe that's the difference between closing and deleting content: Closing means it's not suitable for SO and so doesn't serve its purpose (e. g. because the answers are just links to outside resources etc.), while deletion is for posts that serve no purpose at all. A question may not serve SO's purpose and warrant closure but (still) contain some useful content for users.
Yeah, that's fair, but I'm not sure where/how to draw the line when it comes to "useful content". It's very hard to say a question is not useful when it has even one upvote, because clearly it's been useful to at least one person, and so it may well be useful to others in the future.
17:07
I really feel like that's an absurd, nearly disingenuous, false-equivalence argument, to put a single upvote on the same level as a large number of upvotes (> 50).
Besides ignoring the fact that upvotes are not the only criteria, and that you've yet to make a single argument for why you think there are any quality problems with that content that would justify its deletion (i.e., the upvotes are wrong; this sucks because x).
17:22
@CodyGray I wasn't making a comparison here, I meant in general. But if the number matters, what's that number? Somewhere between 1 and 50? 10, 20, 30?
It's not the specific number that matters. Score is a heuristic, at best. It all factors into the assessment. Again, you've yet to make a single argument why you think none of the content there is useful to anyone. If that argument was strong, it would outweigh a larger number of upvotes.
And I really don't have any additional justification for deleting that question, other than what I've already mentioned. A list of English dictionaries is not something that's suitable on the site, I would have thought. Since there's so much disagreement about deleting that, I hope to see an undel-pls for it at some point.
But dig into that. Why is it not suitable for the site? Because recommendation questions tend to attract spam and low-quality answers. Well, that's why we close them, right? Is that a concern once they're closed? No, it cannot possibly be. So how is that a deletion reason?
Spend a few seconds thinking about it.
That seems like a reasonable argument. Then why delete stackoverflow.com/questions/270012? Doesn't the same argument apply here?
Anectodes still make for very bad arguments.
17:37
I'm not making an argument. I'm trying to work through the reasoning Cody mentioned, and figuring out when it applies, and when it doesn't.
Then why bring up old posts that got deleted, they are irrelevant.
To understand the logic. I'm more interested in the general case than the specific one. For the specific question Cody can trivially undelete it or clear out the delete votes if they want.
17:51
I admit that was a difficult one for me. I wrestled with whether there was anything of value there. I didn't click the delete button lightly. But, ultimately, I concluded that the content was either not that great to begin with, out of date, and/or available elsewhere without much effort.
I would certainly be open to arguments there that I deleted something of value and should reverse that decision.
Would the fact that at least 8 users found the content useful be an argument? I'm not claiming that's a good argument at all, but that's the primary one I was presented with.
The only argument, in fact, unless I missed some other one.
Eh, it's an argument. I would counter it with observations about the substance of the content itself, which you did not even attempt to do. Recall that the original objection (not even an objection, just an inquiry) was to provide a motivating reason/justification for deleting the content.
I never claimed this was a clear-cut decision rule, that there was some kind of rubric you could apply that would move the decision outside the realm of subjectivity. I merely asked for a justification/rationale/motivation/argument.
Ah, I see. The same thing applied there. The content is certainly not great, the answers are pretty old (not including the recent ChatGPT answer), and the content is certainly available elsewhere (I hadn't looked explicitly before, but I just did a quick search and github.com/matthewreagan/WebstersEnglishDictionary was the first hit).
Is this the kind of thing you were looking for?
@AdrianMole My fault. I did it. I assume it was a misclick, but I don't remember recognizing that I'd misclicked it.
18:11
You'll need to go handle 100 plagiarism flags, as penance. :)
18:21
@AdrianMole The harshest of punishments.
@AdrianMole Ouch! That's harsh.
19:49
@CodyGray Ah makes sense, sorry for not replying you .
 
2 hours later…
23:01
@ZoestandswithUkraine Hmmmm. Yeah, that seems reasonable. Done, thanks!
@AdrianMole I confess to occasionally nuking nonsense content as spam specifically so that it will show up as an audit, though I probably wouldn't do so for something genuinely offensive (as that arguably is).

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