@Scratte Really, it's not a joke. Any of it. I did get the 20 bucks (though I never bothered trying to spend any of it - probably expired by now). Lisa did tell me I'd be getting it; and I did ask for 200 rep. instead. Whether or not her smile was truly wry (or something far more sinister) I can't confirm.
But I always wondered where those 20 upvotes on some of my worst answers came from. ;-)
Because it's 'out of the ordinary'. Real-time interaction for a 30-45 minute period requires assigning time that cannot then be spent doing other stuff.
@Scratte Indeed! And without knowing about the reward. Which was why I said "I'm probably not supposed to tell..." Next time, there'll be thousands of volunteers wanting their real Unicorn points from the Stack.
"Do us a go back to your botany lab." Well, I did work one summer in a botany lab, but somehow I don't think I'd be welcome back there if I just showed up...
It's a user script I knocked together, not a mod feature per se.
I have no idea how they got botany out of molecular biology. I mean, you can apply molecular biology to the study of plants for sure. But they're not synonyms.
I was only a few courses away from graduating with a concentration in plant biology, but my declared concentration was microbiology. Maybe they got ahold of my transcript? ;-)
But that had some sort of crazy requirement that you actually go spend some time studying near an ocean (?!), and I didn't want to/wasn't able to move, even in the summers.
But to be honest, molecular anything bothers me.. there's too much going on and one can't just put a magnifying glass to it. Light has size and all that.
I know what you mean about "too much going on", though. The thing for me with microbiology was always that there's already so much going on there that it's impossible to understand everything, and that's about as simple as it gets. Studying human cells is just too much. There's no way you'll ever get it all.
I think there was an experiment with simulation of all (parts) the internal workings of a cell. I suppose if that could be done in real time, one could "see" it.
Yeah, but you can only start simulating things once you have a fairly complete understanding of what is going on.
There are transparent cells, like C. elegans (a nematode), where you can watch things like embryonic development and neural differentiation happening in real-time.
With modern molecular genetics, you can cause proteins to be tagged with a green fluorescence (or other colors), and you can actually watch these proteins being transported around.
I can't remember any of the details though, but I do remember that one of the results were that everything happening is really messy and things go wrong and then corrected all the time.
But that's the thing, if one can see it at an atomic level, one can also "debug" it :)
Until it's debug-able, something like medicine seems to me to me mostly ideas and blackbox testing.
There are many different levels of abstraction that you can work at. It's not that different from programming. I'm pretty sure that you debug Java programs without looking at the values of individual CPU registers.
And even me, who does look at the values of individual CPU registers sometimes doesn't get out an oscilloscope and look at the electrical pulses that get transmitted across the board (...usually, unless the problem is particularly intractable).
In case that's a serious question, CPUs have tiny little areas of memory (static RAM, or "SRAM") that hold values. In a 32-bit CPU, these registers will be 32 bits in size. You usually have somewhere between 8 and 32 of them. Machine code works directly on values in registers: loading from main memory to a register, manipulating the value in a register, and then storing from a register back to main memory.
But that's exactly my point: you don't have to. And biologists and doctors don't have to debug or understand things at the atomic level.
Someone else is covering that. And if something goes wrong, I can find out if I want to. Which someone always does, and it gets either fixed or explained. If no one knew how registers work, it would be a lot harder to actually program anything. If would be like creating a language just out of observations on what happens.
And that never happens. Wait, no, it totally does.
We pathetic humans literally do not have a thorough, complete, comprehensive understanding of anything.
We just put things together in strange new ways and hope that they'll work. Sometimes they do. If not, we keep messing with them until we get them to work. Then we build up a whole mythology that explains why.
I mean, I guess you can just trust the electrical engineers to guarantee that the logical values get converted into electric pulses, transmitted over circuits, and then are interpreted correctly at the other end. So why can't you just trust the chemist who says that the organic reactions that cells depend on actually do work?
But if I want to find out to fix my gray hair I can try by applying stuff and see what happens, or.. if I could.. debuging it at the lowest level. If I could do the later, I'd probably find a solution much faster.
Oh, yes, probably. That's what molecular genetics aims to do. :-)
If we understand what genes are linked to what phenotypes, then we can manipulate those genes in an attempt to change those phenotypes, and thus reverse diseases/symptoms/whatever.
@CodyGray This.. is why we have so many useless debugging Questions here. People are figuring out (actually they're not :) their own programs by input/out :D
Yeah, that's true. Even when the tools are available to know exactly why something is not working, far too many people do not use them.
I find that especially frustrating. A lot of what I do at work involves debugging embedded systems where there isn't a debugger. Until you get the initial bring-up done, which requires that every subsystem work correctly, there isn't even a debug console!
@CodyGray So now we get back to "seeing" single atoms. If I could just see them. I could take any cell, have it do it's thing while recording it, and then I could find out exactly what it does :)
Mhmm. And with many billions of things happening every microsecond, I'm sure you'd have no problem finding exactly the events you're looking for. Even if you could isolate it down to the microsecond.
Interestingly, what we're talking about is a big divide in the field of biology, actually. There are folks like you who are systems biologists. They want to use computational and mathematical analysis to model complex biological systems. They want to use a holistic approach to understand everything that is happening, no matter how complex.
The other side are the reductionists, who want to tear everything apart and understand it in isolation.
Which is basically what scientists have been doing for centuries.
If I don't have everything, I may be missing the connection or the crucial bit..
I do not practice it at all, because there's no time to do it. I can't understand everything and I can't collect every bit of information just because it may come in handy later on.
Being paralyzed and doing nothing is never good. Unless you want to avoid getting a ban on Stack Overflow :D ..not a general one, but something like a review ban.
Heh.. I didn't find any enemies on Stack Overflow :)
We were trying to find out under what circumstances a user can undelete their own Answer.
but.. we weren't sure if there were a difference if >20K were involved. And if so, if the numbers of them changed the option. And also if one can't un-delete just by the click, than how many votes are required.
If you deleted it yourself, you can always undelete it.
If a moderator deleted it, you can't do anything but beg a moderator to undelete it. (Community is a moderator, so this applies to red-flagged posts, too.)
If the community (trusted users with delete vote privileges) deleted it, then you can cast a vote to undelete, but it takes multiple votes to actually undelete it.
The number of votes required to undelete is not dependent on the rep level of the delete-voters (diamond moderator is not a rep level). However, it is complex, and depends on the score of the question and probably some other factors. I don't know the formula.
Oh, you're talking about "recommend deletion" votes.
A lot of it is Jeff Atwood trusting people not to do stupid/inappropriate things, knowing that if you were to be caught, you could be stopped and punished.
I'm considering trying to rename myself to "Community" as an April Fools' prank sometime. Or maybe Halloween.
Well.. about the deletion. We had (I'm not sure if it's still on the table, but I think it is) a plan to send Answers to the LQP queue and have it deleted with varying numbers of recommend deletion and actual deletions, and then see if the owner can un-delete the psot.
But since the actual un-deletion sends an auto-mod-flag, we'd like a moderator to be present during the test.
Users are allowed to delete their own posts that have been deleted via review by "recommend deletion" flags, but moderators are notified of this so we can step in if necessary and perform a binding deletion.
(For what it's worth, and surprising as it may be, I agree with animuson's observation here that most of these OP-undeleted posts that I review in response to an auto-flag shouldn't have ever been deleted from review in the first place.)
It was initially started because of a post that was undeleted, by votes. However it seems that the user had tried to undelete it, but without success and that there shouldn't have been a problem because there weren't enough real deletes on it.
Perhaps I'm confused about which post it was about then.. was this one deleted twice? Once by owner that then un-deleted it and then it was deleted again?
Fun fact: it was twice used as a review audit, once in First Posts, once in Late Answers. The audit was failed by one reviewer, but passed by the other one (who votes to delete everything....)
What I'm having a problem with there is when the OP cast that delete vote. I don't see an entry in the timeline for their having cast an undeletion vote after the "post deleted from review" event.
So I'm wondering if that "undelete" vote from the OP could possibly be a bug... maybe it was left hanging around from when they did the delete-undelete dance before it was deleted from review.
If it's a bug.. then no wonder no one can make out the rule that covered this or how it happened. It's almost like finding out what happens in a human cell :D
But mods can now (it's a fairly recent feature) see who has cast delete/undelete votes, and when.
Either it's a bug that the OP's undelete vote was not properly cleared when they successfully undeleted the post, and was thus still hanging around, or because showing delete/undelete votes to mods is a relatively new feature that did not exist back in 2016, their undelete vote was not even tracked and thus not available for display to us in the timeline.
Yeah, looking at this... You can see the daily summary of votes from April 11, 2016. There's a delete vote and an undelete vote both cast on that day. Well, obviously those were from the OP, who deleted and then undeleted his own post.
No other undelete votes were cast on any day in between.
No, it's not going to be a SQL error, because the other daily vote totals are working.
More I look at it, more I suspect that the undelete vote from the OP was just a phantom vote sticking around, and that the OP never actually tried to undelete it after it was deleted from review. That attempt to undelete it almost certainly would have gone through.
The word makes me think of W. Bush and a lot of killing. And it gives me the impression of wanting to "lower" the conversation to the common denominator in an attempt to reach the stupid people too. Without giving it away, that is.
@CodyGray The hot pink is really mostly a joke. Don't tell anyone, but I'm back to a lighter and bold blue. "♦ Cody Gray" in hot pink just isn't very.. compatible.
@CodyGray So, there's only one way to save a life :D There are variations where the comma placements determines the result. Execute not innocent.. oops.
this sort of makes more sense in danish, where the "not" is generally placed before a verb, but after a noun.
Same in English, at least in this case: "Let's not eat grandma" (implying we should eat something else other than grandma) vs "Let's not eat, grandma" (implying grandma should starve along with us)
But I did notice your and Shog9's use of "folks" ;) I have been very disciplined in not outright downvoting posts just due to the word. I'd prefer a user script though.
By the way, looking the top voted questions actually look really bleak. It's resignations, closing of documentation, and mod election results. An uneducated user would think we are really happy with those. Well, the mod election results and (at least for me), documentation were good news but still.
Ordering the questions "by vote" is not that obvious, though, so maybe by the time a 'new user' has figured out how to do it, they will understand a bit more about the background?
Is it the time of year to get effectively unanswerable questions from total beginners to programming? I've stumbled across two out of two in the last two C questions I looked at. I don't like to add comments like "Maybe you should read a good book..." (as many do) ...
@Scratte I doubt it would be a big problem. I imagine you might get some trouble if you post answers that get deleted to most announcements. If it's, say, one a year that doesn't seem abusive.
@AdrianMole because I was taught British in school but see and hear American most of the time online, so I get confused and I'm too lazy to look these up. There are also things like "visualize" which I know is the US version but "visualise" just looks wrong
Words ending with -ise/-ize are trickier. There's a thing called (IIRC) Standard Oxford English, which generally says that what the 'common people' use is, by definition, wrong.
i is for case-insensitive, so it matches all cases. The capturing group extracts the first letter and I'm just checking if it's a capital or not and then make a matching "p" or "P" for the replacement.
If this gets around one could have very interesting conversations on chat.. "But that's exactly you said, see <ref to chat>". What are you talking about, it's plain as day that I said: Rullepølse :)