Yes, I think in general it removes the tension from people who don't want to be involved, keeps room6 on topic and the one on one conversation can be resolved quicker without distraction
The issue isn't having a meta discussion in here. It's having one that's out of proporttion in terms of reaction and time taken compared to the action taken. It's ok to ask an RO why an action was taken. Get a response and move on, bring it up at a meeting if you feel it's problematic. It's not ok to do that every time you see an RO take an action, or to ignore feedback you got in the past when bringing it up.
I have to leave so will not be here when we get to New item #1 (new contributors) - can I just add to the record "Include a link to github/issues on sopython.com (either wiki or main page)" and "create a pdf/visual guide to contributing to room 6 <- I'm going to try and work this up by completing one of the small issues this weekend" as not everyone is familiar with the framework
@davidism I'd love to get a response and move on. The only response I've received so far is "this is an old discussion (that I had with someone else, not you)".
I'd rather get a feedback form on sopython, if that's acceptable to people as a start. With the understanding that an ocassional question in here is perfectly fine, but continued disruption is not and should be taken to feedback.
Yes, and I think it would be good to 1) make it anonymous, or give the user the option to disclose their identity, and 2) have it viewable for all ROs, and not just the one who handles it
Not only are we not seeing many of the members that are very active in python on main, we are actually losing members that were good contributors - look what happened with @Aran-Fey recently
Yes, a feedback form on sopython sounds excellent. Let's see how that goes. If it works well we probably won't need to bother with a separate grievance room.
Yes. Please. @wim Not to take away from your concerns here, but I think we just agreed on putting something in place to help provide feedback directly to ROs to act faster on valid concerns
I put forth two points regarding the implementation detail. I'd like to know if those are appropriate... or perhaps now is not a good time to discuss specifics?
We need an understanding that whatever feedback does happen, both parties need to accept it. If you provide feedback, get a response from other ROs, then ignore that response, that's not acceptable.
If you think there's an issue, but the general consensus is that it isn't an issue, then you'll need to escalate in some other way than disrupting the room.
@wim "I don't believe you should have <taken action> because <objective reason>" is not ad hominem and will not be hurt. "Are you completely crazy?" is.
The mods have more or less said that the Code of Conduct doesn't/shouldn't really affect day-to-day moderation. It's just a more stringent codification of the values that the site has had all along.
I agree that proper legitimate warning is required and failure to do so should be brought up so we can all reflect on why this happened and see what should have been done instead
But I refuse to accept any allegations that we should tolerate disruptive users on account of being nice. The JS room has been highly tolerant with trolls for fear of seeming unwelcoming, and it looks awful.
@AndrasDeak There have been times where a new users was having a conversation with a RO and then got booted out of the blue because they were slow to understand something or didn't do enough research before asking their question, and the RO in question lost patience
The Meta.SE guide to moderating chat hasn't changed. meta.stackexchange.com/questions/271267/… We're still going to moderate the room to keep it on track. We're also trying to ensure a user has been communicated at before taking action rather than after.
Re: warning before kicking, I agree, with the caveat that particularly egregious offenders aren't going to read our cajoling anyway, since they didn't the previous ten times.
@Aran-Fey to add to this, the user would post and post almost allocating the whole page for their question. Not saying who is right or wrong, just something I've noticed. Also when someone tries to have a separate conversation then it might become difficult; or others don't want to start something during a "massive" convo. (just observation).
@Aran-Fey This is exactly what the topic about opening a communication channel was about and we are implementing that to help resolve/clarify these issues.
@Aran-Fey What Kevin said. The only time I've seen that happen is with repeat offenders. It may not not be apparent to bystanders that an irregular visitor has a bad track record, so it may seem like a kick without warning.
But I refuse to accept any allegations that we should tolerate disruptive users on account of being nice. The JS room has been highly tolerant with trolls for fear of seeming unwelcoming, and it looks awful.
Try not to assume the worst when you see moderation either. There are a lot of users, some years old, who we have notes on, but to you might look like an arbitrary kick or trash. When in doubt, don't assume malice.
There are also chronic problem users who get very little leeway considering their history. I don't want to name a few out of niceness, but regulars shouldn't instantly shout dictatorship when a long-time vampire gets moderated very fast. Users with long history will also be moderated based on their history, not just the specific new messages alone.
I think collectively in this room, I hope we can agree that to a certain degree we want to help control the behaviour in a way that doesn't cause the room to accept trolling.
What I've heard from site mods is that we have a reputation as a very well moderated room. We have a list of rules, they're hopefully pretty quick and clear, and we'll continue to enforce those rules.
The thing is, I know a few recurring vampires and it's actually pretty rare for them to be booted wordlessly. So I have trouble understanding what's going on when a user I've never seen before gets the boot out of nowhere.
@wim But when a vampire comes back with a few years of history and starts yet another incoherent mess of messages, we won't wait until we make sure that they still can't put a coherent question together.
When a chronic problem user turns up we like to give them the opportunity to demonstrate that they've changed their ways. But they need to know that we won't indulge them just out of sheer niceness. If they behave well, great. If not, then we have no option but to assume that they're just going to do the same old stuff. Again.
@wim we prefer not to ignore users, because we lose the ability to moderate what we don't see. Being disruptive by being a horrible vampire is almost as bad as being a flat-out troll.
Because if we tolerate slightly annoying, users will go away. The opposite of what you want. We wish to nurture the existing culture of sanity and trolllessness
We do allow members to use their ignore lists, but this still means we uphold a level of contibution we expect from the people here. Nothin more than being a minimally useful part of society.
ignore lists are a non-feature, if you ask me, since ignoring a user just means that you'll see one half of an irritating conversation instead of the whole thing
@Aran-Fey and any others interested I suggest reading eev.ee/blog/2016/07/22/on-a-technicality, as well as the other article linked at the top, for some insight into moderation. I think it's worded better than what I can say.
On that note, I was somewhat surprised recently to discover that one of our semi-regular HVs is actually quite well-behaved on another SE site. In here, he's a classic HV: he ignores half of the info we try to impart, almost always forgets to format his code, asks marginally on-topic stuff. And gets all offended when we try to explain what's wrong with his behaviour. Etc.
But on that other site he has 20K+ and uses his powers properly. The moral is: if you let a HV get away with it, they'll take advantage of your kindness, mistaking it for softness.
but there comment was responding to "what is the point of chat" or somesuch, and it was something like "a fun place to hang out and chat, less strict than the main site"
I have to leave so will not be here when we get to New item #1 (new contributors) - can I just add to the record "Include a link to github/issues on sopython.com (either wiki or main page)" and "create a pdf/visual guide to contributing to room 6 <- I'm going to try and work this up by completing one of the small issues this weekend" as not everyone is familiar with the framework
Not sure what he means about ""create a pdf/visual guide to contributing to room 6", does this mean a guide to how SOPython is structured or does this mean something else ?
> and "create a pdf/visual guide to contributing to room 6" <- I'm going to try and work this up by completing one of the small issues this weekend as not everyone is familiar with the framework
wait I didn't misplace the end quote, it's the same spot as yours, i think we both miss placed it but I left the things after the <- because I felt it's a comment of his
So I guess the actionable items here are: 1. Make it obvious that these opportunities to contribute exist 2. Make it clearer how those contributions are actually made
Ok, that's all the official agenda items. With the power vested in me, I declare that any discussion that occurs after this message is just regular complaining.
@AndrasDeak Did not want to interrupt the discussion, but I am personally experimenting getting driven away from my usual chat room because of exactly that.
@Rick My proficiency in php and javascript has not yet translated in python. From what I can understand, indicator, node = is destructuring the tuple in the stack. I don't know that much about binary trees.
@Rick then why does it matter that he knows javascript? Just asking since that was the reason you cited when asked why you were pinging him in the first place
@Rick I'd suggest putting that in a debugger and stepping through the code. upon further examination, it seems that it will process the largest horizontal size of a binary tree.
Also I just checked the "salad language" section of the rules. Why is that even a thing? I mean, I will accept "why not?" as an answer, but if there is a deeper meaning, I'd like to know if possible
Salad came into existence because we're goofballs, and it continued to exist because it's an easy shibboleth to determine who read the rules all the way through and clicked on every link
@Rick If I understand correctly, every node in the tree gets added to the stack twice. When the node is first added with an indicator of one, this signals that the node's children have not yet been processed. You can't process a node until you process the node's children, so the node gets reinserted into the stack, with its children on top of it.
Then eventually that node gets popped again. By that time, the children should have been processed, and the indicator of 0 signals that the node itself may safely be processed.
@Rick I think it's because the script needs to differentiate between the building of the stack vs actually computing the width. There are three possibilities, which if node can't express.
We normally just let votes do the talking on technically incorrect answers. But when answers give bad advice that could cause major problems, then we like to take stronger action.
An example that's still sadly too common is answers that contain code that's vulnerable to a SQL injection attack.
Yeah. We expect people to use common sense to not use bad code they see on SO. But code that could cause major stuff-ups is too dangerous to leave lying around.
@shad0w_wa1k3r It was precisely that (EDIT: I looked up "snide" on a dictionary. I wouldn't consider it that, they are some clever stuff, not "derogatory"), and it is beautiful. Also you're welcome :D
I am attempting to install my app on my new Samsung Galaxy S8 for the first time from Android Studio. When I do so, I get the following error message:
Installation failed with message Failed to finalize session : INSTALL_FAILED_DUPLICATE_PERMISSION: Package bbct.android attempting to redeclar...
Earlier today (ok, yesterday) I got a comment on an answer I wrote in the last day or two. The OP proudly linked me a Github repository of code he'd collaborated on with several other authors. I immediately noticed that a large slab of the code was a cut & paste of the answer I'd written for him on SO.
Which is fine, of course. But he'd totally neglected to give me any attribution. So I linked him to the little blurb about "user contributions licensed under cc by-sa 3.0 with attribution required" at the bottom of every SO page. A little while later he apologised and added my name to his Github stuff.
@AndrasDeak No. ;) But at least the license says: "You must give appropriate credit, provide a link to the license, and indicate if changes were made. You may do so in any reasonable manner, but not in any way that suggests the licensor endorses you or your use. "
FWIW, the code I wrote retrieves cryptocurrency exchange rates. I think the program it's now part of is for determining which cryptocurrency is currently the best value to mine. But I know hardly know anything about that stuff. stackoverflow.com/questions/51915941/…
@wim watermelon. There's a similar menu on the branches "index", the page with the list of all branches. If you hover over the row in the table for a branch, the button appears at the end of the row.