a confused OP updated their deleted question, I'm divided between rolling back, mod flagging, or just ignoring. stackoverflow.com/posts/78106597/revisions (10k rep required, I assume)
silently rolling back would probably come off as confusing; I obviously cannot comment on a deleted question to explain what I did, so perhaps this should be delegated to a mod
just leaving it would risk confusion if somebody reviews it without understanding that it was edited after deletion, though in concrete terms the new version is no less confused than the original, just a lot more verbose
@tripleee doing nothing would be the best course of action. OP can repost if they see their question is still deleted, or they can go to meta, either way there's no action needed from us
@Cristik Reposting would be the worst option for the OP. What they should do is flag it for (possible) undeletion by a moderator. But that looks like the all-too-common case of over-zealous delete voters. Once closed, it would have been eaten by Roomba, in time, if OP had not edited it.
If it hadn't been deleted, the OP could have submitted it for reopen review ... but that would likely have left it closed.
@AdrianMole also the score is -7, with questions like this best to restart from scratch, even if it would've get reopened, having a score lower than -5 would've prevent the question from appearing on some of the feeds
meaning the chances to get an answer from someone qualified are pretty low
what's more concerning is that the OP seems to still have absolutely no idea how to ask a well-defined question; that's where I'm thinking it might be useful for a mod to get in touch with a more detailed response
@Cristik Mods are primarily teachers. Although we call them "exception handlers," their common chat-room is, after all, known as the "Teachers' Lounge!"
Like, they teach spammers how to get their accounts nuked, and persistent rude commentators how to get site-wide vacations. :)
I can just disregard this classic case of bullying, right? I mean, this is the same bullying that I got back in 2017 when I first started answering. stackoverflow.com/questions/1519872/…
I think it is just their way. If they were capable of change, they would have changed several suspensions ago. It's not a very helpful/insightful comment. I guess I'll just flags noise.
@Vega And if the question was in shape to reopen, I shouldn't have to ask this, but in the code in the answer or in the screenshot? And do those typos appear to be causing the error?
@TylerH Would you remove my reopen-pls for now? If warranted, I'll toss it back in later.
well, yes and no, prior to the vote, I didn't have much stakes in that question (not that I care about reps in general), but to make it kosher, I made it CW
I know that if you try to self-delete a question with an answer with least 1 upvote (regardless the answers net score), you will see a message like: This question cannot be deleted because others invested time and effort into answering it.
@M-- which is fair, there is a rule about that. I should have noticed before voting. To be above board, I believe the answer would have had to be converted to Community Wiki before the reopen-pls request was posted.
as Vega said, @M--, rule 15 prevents requests on posts where you have an undeleted, non-community-wiki answer. So please don't make such requests in the future, unless your posts are CW. Consider your wrist slapped
@CPlus also, I recommend you not upvote posts solely to prevent a user from self-deleting. Self-deletion is allowed by the system, so it's not necessarily a violation of the licensing of the content by doing so. Otherwise any deletion of content by any user is a violation.
Instead, vote on content based on its quality or usefulness
If I come across a user who is rewriting old answers with new info (to the extent that I would say it clearly conflicts with the author's intent if I saw it in the review queue) or just adding completely new solutions via edits, is that worth flagging for mods? Didn't do an exhaustive check, but found 5-6 particularly bad examples from 2020-2023 so there is a pattern but they haven't done it lately.
@miken32 yes, if it is happening more than once or twice. The edits should be rolled back if they are significant or if they conflict with the author's intent. You could opt to roll them back and wait to see if the user re-applies them before flagging, if you want to be cautious
@TylerH ok I rolled back a few where the OP hadn't made subsequent edits; seems unlikely the editor would notice edits to other users' posts so I'll gather my examples and flag it.