No Shit Sherlock: We found that regardless of user reputation, successful questions are short, contain code snippets, and do not abuse with uppercase characters. As regards affect, successful questions adopt a neutral emotional style.
@Roland less tags maybe mean Q is more focused, and attract the right type of users? Like when post is tagged with "A,B,C,X,Y" it is usually bad and closed as too broad.
@zx8754 I think the problem is rather that people asking bad questions tend to use as many tags as they can come up with, most of them not related to the question. See this example.
@Jaap FWIW it looks like maybe the purrr/lapply question has been re-worded to be primarily performance / structure based. That doesn't mean that opinion won't seep into the answers though.
@zx8754 Didn't read the question, but a question on SO is for a knowledge base, not just to help the question author, maybe in few weeks someone will come with a better approach or a new package simplifying it and could add an answer
That's the point about keeping questions open, closing them means they are not to be answered at all (either duplicate or won't be of real use on mid/long term)
this type of questions mainly triggers opiniated answers, so it should be closed as I said earlier, the question can stay online and doesn't have to be deleted
i mean, maybe they can write a script to, but they aren't provided tools to do so, i guess
too late for those OPs and for future OPs even if these were fixed, we'd want the rule to still be applied... need better tag watchers or some strict dependency rule (not sure if SO uses those at all)
i'd like to point out that 'verse grammar (in this case overwriting setdiff) is creating problems for its users who land on SO stackoverflow.com/questions/47292705/… as anticipated and discussed eg here chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/message/35057480#35057480 ... but hey, are we still allowed to discuss the issue, possibly in a way that is critical of 'verse design decisions and principles?
@zx8754 "code no work" == "please give a reproducible example", but we don't need an example since we can answer the q just from the code given, no? maybe i'm getting my closed reasons mixed up
So according to above, we should be able to stop libs masking some functions. I fail to understand how, anyone? Or is it to do with the order which libs are loaded first?
@zx8754 I think this is exclusively for use within package namespaces. So in my package, I could do import(dplyr, except(c(lag, filter))). I don't think this actually addresses the question.
not sure i agree with "More generally a good rule is to rely on a single attached package and selectively import the rest." since plenty of packages are careful not to conflict with each other or base and so can be safely attached together, eh
@Frank Absolutely. setdiff is particularly puzzling because it should probably be set_diff in order to be consistent. In all the chaos over the last couple of days I don't think anyone has objected to providing specific criticisms of the tidyverse.
And if they had then they wouldn't have much to stand on.
Actually, the situation with setdiff is a little different.
dplyr defines a new generic, and uses base::setdiff as the default, so it's not as bad as the lag / filter business.
@BrodieG well, there was alternation between "these two comments are offensive if you read them my way!" and "anti-'verse discussion in these rooms is toxic"
@BrodieG yeah, not sure if there's a situation in which it'd be harmful, the way it's handled in dplyr