Why on Earth are merging and synonymising separate steps? That doesn't make sense. At all. Now you've got 2 (or more) tags on a question all leading to the same landing page, that of the mother-tag
Ah, the answer makes a good point. A merger is irreversible. Thus not something just any odd 2.5k user should be able to do. That makes sense. Although having a mod later on check whether the synonym is indeed valid (or have a countdown, say, a year and if the synonym isn't reversed in the mean time, do an automerge) and merge afterwards would be good.
There are technically some things where a synonym is more useful than a merge. But I'd argue that's not a good reason to keep them separate. What should happen is that the system handles synonyms correctly. I'd argue it doesn't right now. Because a synonym preserves the synonymised tags (OK) but doesn't "update" old usages of it. Merging does that but also destroys the tag (also not OK).
Synonymising should work as if the tags were merged. But also not destroy the synonymised tag.
@Adriaan There is a slim chance it's a VERY misguided user but it's not really my problem they managed to produce something indistinguishable from spam.
@Adriaan Don't see how. It's about some dataset. Might be on-topic for OpenData.SE I suppose but I can't see how it'd be programming-related
@VLAZ Nah, there I've learned to copy the job advert itself and put it in pt 1 size white-on-white as a footer so that all the automated search bots find the relevant keywords
they consistently fail to apply the standards for question closure, consistently fail to demonstrate understanding of those standards or their purpose, and consistently propose ideas about how the site is supposed to work that are not in alignment with established policy. And when they do try to close a question, they use that "how to use a debugger" question inappropriately as a dupe, and don't establish a proper set of canonicals.
Well, you may see the C & C++ communities from a different perspective than I do. Some might even argue the you 'consistently fail to apply the standards for question closure' (as you did in the example under discussion).
But, the issue in that code is very clearly reproducible and it is also clearly not a typo. The asker just doesn't know the correct format string for the call to scanf.
Like I said already, maybe it's not a good question, but it has everything required for an answer ... if it's not a dupe (and I'm still not sure that it is a dupe - if I was, then I would have closed it as such, already).
like I said, the output shown doesn't match the code. Also, the problem was described as "I can only make it work with one operator and not the others", but actually the problem was the input, which had to be inferred from a sample output that doesn't match the code.
The described behaviour is clearly not reproducible.
@KarlKnechtel What do you mean by, "the prose from printf"? I know that non-native English speakers sometimes use 'prose' in a way that natives would not but I really don't get what you mean.
@AdrianMole I meant, text described literally as opposed to via any variable interpolation. (This is probably not a standard use of "prose", even as jargon, but it's the word that comes to my mind for this concept)
@KarlKnechtel My 'light-touch' edit may have addressed that issue. I could easily have made a lot more edits to the Q but felt that a minimal touch was best in the current circumstances.