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00:08
Could a 10k+ check the status of this question please? stackoverflow.com/questions/244445 Closed or not, if so why, score, deletion reason, etc.
Fixed that for you. Unfortunately, when the only tool the community has is a delete button, stuff ends up getting deleted.
Thanks.
 
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13:23
Maybe it's nothing, but has had 2 new questions within a short window today, both off-topic. It's had a history of bad-faith usage, so it may warrant some extra vigilance.
Mo_
Mo_
Hi,
we have 3 people voting on each of their (not high quality) questions:
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/79290852/how-to-concatenate-two-vectors-in-matlab/79290960#79290960

I'd be inclined to first send them a link, explaining why it isn't okay, but didn't find one.
Or should I just flag for mod attention?
Just flag. The mods will take care of it.
Also, we don't really moderate users in this room.
Mo_
Mo_
Sorry. Thanks for both infoormations. Where to ask those questions instead?
Well, one thing you can do is be general about it. "Hey, I see evidence of xyz happening. What should I do?"
There are also sometimes answers, on the meta site, but admittedly sometimes those are hard to find.
But for stuff like voting rings, when you flag, make sure you are specific about what's going on.
14:09
@CodyGray Simple solution: Any registered user with 250+ reputation has full access to all moderator tools and powers. ;-P
@Cow this doesn't look like spam to me, just someone sharing their personal contact info
@CodyGray If only this were a wiki lock instead; a lot of the answers are in poor shape/need of improving, if it's gonna be kept around (I certainly don't think it qualifies as a 'historical significant' post, at least).
 
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15:59
@TylerH agree; it's only had 18k views in > 16 years and lacks any of the high quality novella-length answers that usually qualify a historic lock
 
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Cow
Cow
17:57
@TylerH all right thanks 😊
M--
M--
18:33
I got 3-4 votes on one of my older self-Q&A's in a matter of minutes. Does that qualify as serial voting (I don't think so, but it felt strange)?
@M-- Will likely be reversed. If the user continues, they'll show up in mod tooling eventually
@M-- if 3-4, and a single Q&A pair, that indicates either multiple people or multiple accounts of the same user, only the latter of which is problematic. It could be that someone shared your Q&A somewhere, on-site or off-site
as Machavity said, if the system detects fraud, it will likely roll it back, especially that many in such a short span
@TylerH Eh, I don't really think it qualifies as a wiki, except for the fact that you might want to edit the answers before they get locked. Historical locks don't have anything to do with novella-length answers. This seems to be a rather well-linked and "popular" post to me, even though the quality isn't anything special.
@AdrianMole It's even simpler than that. Just let new users vote.
@CodyGray funny, we were just talking about the horrible pitfalls that would ensue if we allowed that, over in the meta room :-)
Indeed; I noticed after I wrote that message.
18:45
@CodyGray It would be good if historical locks allowed answer editing, or if there were some kind of lock that prevented new answers or deletion/status changing, but allowed edits. AFAIK wiki lock is the only such one but maybe I'm forgetting one
@TylerH That I agree with, yeah. I'd prefer if locks were more granular.
content dispute lock, I guess, but I don't know if that blocks status changes, and it's post-specific rather than thread-specific (can it even be applied to questions? I forget) and is meant to be temporary anyway
Content dispute lock pretty much blocks everything. But yeah, it's post-specific. Can be applied to questions or answers.
M--
M--
19:01
thank you @Machavity @TylerH
 
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20:37
@TylerH Couple more eligible non-answers there as well
@miken32 yeah, just didn't want to flood with too many requests in one block
Can a Python SME explain how this is unclear? stackoverflow.com/questions/79195579/… OP has a clear desired output, code they're trying and shares their incorrect output.
(note, I don't think it's a particularly good question, but I don't see how it's closeable as unclear in its current state
I think it probably was unclear at first and just the last close vote or two was made in bad faith, as it wasn't closed until after OP significantly clarified it
Based on the comments there (and now deleted), I'm guessing it was because the question was tagged [random], yet they're not asking for anything random.
Yeah, as I thought... unfortunately I can't know for sure how the last person voted since they removed normal users' ability to see each close reason chosen. But it seems like it's pretty clear in its current form
All voted for "unclear".
20:52
Another poor audit, another day that ends in Y!
Yeah, I was just noticing that was an audit...
it's probably a duplicate of something, mind
given how many Python questions get asked here
Entirely possible, but I'm definitely not going to be able to make that call.
Wherefore art thou, our numerous Python mods
I'm still marveling at how cryptic that code looks, in contrast to everyone having been telling me for years that Python is so readable, looks like pseudocode, etc.
20:53
slash users
@CodyGray I figure it's due to being NumPy code, which is for statistics
Oh, possibly. Jared's solution looks a bit MATLAB-esque, which is another language that I think has awfully cryptic syntax given it's targeted at non-programmers.
not being a mathematician or scientist by trade I only guess that n and p refer to things someone in one of those fields might intuitively know; I know p means significance and n probably means sample size or set size, but that's about it
Yes, n and p would be standard abbreviations/variables for a binomial distribution. I don't so much mean the variable naming but just the syntax itself.
Come to think of it, I don't think I could define the word binomial very easily. A number with two parts?
Heard it a million times, never had to use it myself
Mmmm, not a number so much as a distribution with two parts. Basically, where there are two choices, like a yes/no answer.
Caveat: I'm not a statistician or a mathematician.
20:58
So if this were question on qubits, we'd be talking trinomial, instead?
I mean, yeah, I guess? Trinomial distributions are a thing, and that is indeed where there are three options.
That makes me think about what a mess we'll be in when quantum computing moves beyond bits into the next level of math and logic: ternary, and we start labeling the quantum versions as quternary. No one will be able to tell if you mean quaternary or if it's intentional
You mean when quantum systems can handle True, False, and FileNotFound?
I think it wouldn't be File Not Found but "File is both here and there" since we're talking about quantum systems
maybe they'll call it Shrodingerbit
But in a quantum system, aren't all files both here and there?
21:05
No, they could be neither
The only way to know for sure is to take a peek, except then you know it's not what it used to be
@CodyGray re: the remaining comment by jared on that Python question. It looks like they posted an answer as a comment, both under the question and under an existing answer. I flagged one of them, but it looks like it was declined. Should I have flagged the other one, instead?
I opted for flagging the one with less information, but maybe its location under the question outweighs the additional information in the duplicate comment under the answer
21:33
C++ folks, this is a known-good audit, but it looks like it might ask multiple distinct questions at the end. Can an SME clarify if they're just all add-ons to the same driving question/goal or if they are in fact distinct? stackoverflow.com/questions/79236845/…
@TylerH Not a C++ person (most of my knowledge of weird C++ stuff is from listening to my partner talk about it), but they seem like add-ons to the same driving question/goal to me.
22:27
[ SmokeDetector | MS ] Manually reported answer (93): How to search for code in all projects simultaneously?‭ by mboutir‭ on stackoverflow.com
23:16
[ SmokeDetector | MS ] Manually reported answer (93): 'float' object is not iterable typerror‭ by user28846139‭ on stackoverflow.com

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