@DanielWiddis Err... partially disagree? Just because a question is negatively scored doesn't mean that it isn't a duplicate of a question that is asked more recently. However, I agree that downvoting a question just because it is a duplicate is wrong. As you said, duplicates can be useful.
And I also agree that it makes little sense to use something as a duplicate target, and then immediately go downvote it.
@CodyGray I don't know when it was downvoted, all I'm saying is if it had +0/-1 votes and you targeted it, you personally found it useful and should have +1 to make it net zero. If the answers are useful enough to use as a dupe, the question is also useful. Anyway, not a big deal, just a pet peeve. :)
If the question is horribly written and unclear, it shouldn't be used as a dupe target. If the question is non-repro/fix by typo with 3 major errors in the code like a certain meta post, it shouldn't be used as a dupe target. My beef is with whoever chose to make a -1 voted question a dupe target: they must have thought the question was a useful dupe.
@DanielWiddis The quality of a question has nothing to do with its suitability as a dupe target. If another question is a duplicate of it, then it's a duplicate.
Anyway, just venting a bit in the silly room, it's not that big a deal. Just me insisting that someone choosing to use it makes it, by definition Useful
That's my story and I'm sticking to it.
Also, I'm hoping in about 14 hours you and Dharman have pointy little things by your names.
I think you're mixing together two different things. tp is a Charcoal thing. The system-level block I'm referring to is a real block, not Charcoal's hypothetical one. The system will block further submissions for a period of time when a red flag is validated on a user's account.
Ah, ok. In that case, the user made a test post, clearly oblivious to the existence of a sandbox, and deleted their own post upon it being pointed out. It looked like an honest mistake, and I honestly don't see the user repeating that. As such, blocking that account seems unnecessary.
I see. My feeling is you're being unnecessarily harsh with this example. I'll think about it for a while and see how I feel though. I'll play along in SOCVR at least; there's nothing to be gained by debating what punishment users deserve, or not, in that context.
@CodyGray I just used punishment since you did, but that's not the right term, you're right. As to the appropriateness of the reaction, well, I've mentioned it before, intent is a large part of how I look at the posts.
Hmm. User with nearly 100K rep posts question. Eventually realizes it's a dupe and self-votes to close as dupe. I hit it in review queue and tag the same dupe, and it auto-generates the "does this answer your question" comment. So why didn't it do that for the original user? And why didn't they get the prompt to accept the closure by community? It's still sitting there with 2 CV's on it.
I'm guessing voting to close your own question is a not well-handled edge case.
I seem to recall someone saying that you can vote to close it yourself, then subsequently accept your own suggestion. But I've never had cause to test this.
Yeah, I figured that. I suppose that makes a question about whether its summary is useful somewhat hard to properly answer.
(though more generally, there are a few device manufacturers who could honestly have a useful tag within Android questions...not naming names, but some have more than their fair share of quirks)
@RyanM I approved that one. My decision was based on some information is better than no information. I double checked and that is indeed the correct company. The questions also seemed related to what they did - the proposed description says they do PLCs and the questions were about PLCs. Presumably by that company.
I'm open to being wrong, of course. Just wanted to explain my reasoning.
It's not ideal, by any stretch of the imagination, but it seems not horrible, better than nothing, and no fault of the suggester that the tag is a bad tag.
Hmmmmmmmmm.
Normally, that option deletes the post, taking the suggested edit along with it. I wonder what it does for a tag wiki edit?
Hmm, sometimes I regret rejecting an edit. And not because I should have approved instead. The opposite - I find out that somebody has approved it, so it feels like the correct action would have been Reject and Edit.