@cigien Not if you click the "rollback" button; that just generates the default "rolled back to revision x" message. But, you can de facto roll back by clicking "edit" on the revision you want to roll back to, typing an edit message, and submitting that edit. As was alluded to, moderators have the ability to edit revision comments ex post facto, so we can edit the default "rollback" message, but it does show up an inline note that the message has been edited. (No edit history though.)
@AdrianMole Ugh. I did JavaScript for a while because I wanted to write userscripts. It's a terrible language. Strawberries or not.
You need to express your dislike by casting a downvote. It's the most powerful, most underrated moderation tool on the site, at least for anyone without a diamond.
But on direct content only. I'm right now writing a meta about downvoting answers to express dislike of a question. To express dislike about the entire post in fact.
I'm referring to this, (screenshot for <10K) question in particular, where the question was clearly not of the best quality, but my answer to it addressed the issues with it. Is it okay to downvote an answer just because a question is bad, even if the answer addresses the issues with the question?
Since the raison d'etre for the reputation score/gamification is to motivate people to produce good content for the site, and closed questions are by definition not considered good content for the site, wouldn't it be better if the reputation gains for the answers were reverted when a question is...
Once in a while I see users downvoting correct answers and sometimes good answers. The reason for this action being that they are addressing a seemingly bad question.
A similar issue happened to me today: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/41166362/jscrollpane-not-working-no-suitable-constructo...
Broad questions like this (now deleted):
I have to make one website like
http://preview.effekthemes.com/focus
using HTML5,CSS3,jQuery and bootstrap
so please suggest me from where I have to start? which is better and
easy way to do this?
I dont have knowledge of either t...
It annoys me when people post answers to obviously off-topic questions like this one, especially after those questions have already received several close votes. Migrations seem to happen rather infrequently these days, so there's probably no reputation to gain for questions that are likely to be...
Is it justified to downvote a complete answer to a question which does not show much effort on the asker's part toward solving the question? I believe this is a question applicable to most problem-solving-based communities on SE, but if it's needed, I'm writing with specific reference to question...
This is a question which started off with a comment, then turned into an answer, and now it's a question in its own right (as suggested by Jeff). I'm not sure where it could go from here :)
It's obvious that different people cast downvotes for different reasons. (Upvotes are less controversial, ...
Today I came across this question
that obviously didn't deserve to get an answer, in preserving from getting future researchers the impression, such questions are well formed, and achieved at SO well.
Though there was an answer given by a (very) high rep user, where I thought these should know...
"you might as well be asking if you should shoot unicorns to protect against over-grazing."
Analogy game is on point.
Nota bene: some of those discussions are colored by the idea that reducing reputation gain for FGITW answers to duplicate questions would reduce the incentive for people to answer duplicates instead of search for them.
That is an argument that is somewhat persuasive to me, even still.
I see that as being a horse of a different color than downvoting answers to bad questions.
@CodyGray There is appeal to that; at least one issue as pointed out in the meta is that users might reopen in bad faith. I've actually seen answerers upvote questions to stay the roomba, or make the question harder to delete.
@CodyGray I like this idea a lot, I believe I've mentioned it in SOCVR before. There are downsides to this as well, but I think it would help.
One thing that I haven't seen suggested is educating answerers that what they're doing might be an issue. That was going to be the "constructive suggestion" part of my meta.
Good. I have a great example. The way I was educated was very nicely done. And I found the record of it :) Fortunately the comment thread was never deleted.
Would it be worse than leaving answerers bewildered as to why they're being downvoted? At least if they're told, they can choose to disagree if they want.
That's understandable. Would you feel better if it were restricted to say 10kers, or only members of SOCVR? Not saying that's possible of course, but hypothetically?
Several things. The users likely knows more about how the site operates by that point. Rep will (hopefully) matter less to them than a relatively new user, so they'll be more open to listening. They can also be more reasonably expected to identify dupes, even if they can't easily find targets. All these things are harder for low rep users. 10k was just a number by the way, but some cut off based on these criteria could work.
For the obvious reason: early on a user simply doesn't care about the site as much. If I had been made to know not to answer dupes, and other stuff like that right at the beginning, I might have given up on the whole thing, and never come to really love the site. You can't throw everything at a new user just because they should learn it eventually. Learning happens in stages, over time, and knowing not to answer certain questions is something that should come relatively later.
I don't see why we need to sequence learning how to use the site.
Finding duplicates, rather than reposting the same answers over and over, is part and parcel of how a Q&A site works.
In the same way that we already expect new users to understand the distinction between answers and comments, why would we not expect new users to understand the distinction between novel and duplicate questions?
Ok, we seem to be going in circles. Are you saying that every aspect of how the site works is equally important and should all be taught to new users immediately?
Taught by the system. The training should begin immediately.
The same way that we try to teach people not to post non-answers in the answer box.
Why should this be any different?
You could make the same arguments, and indeed, people have. "They don't have the rep to comment, so they have no choice." "They just want to share their thoughts." etc.
i can only speak for myself, but given that i joined relatively recently, I can confidently say that I remember finding recognizing dupes way harder initially. And even once I started recognizing that certain posts were likely dupes, just a few months ago finding the targets would have taken 5-10 times longer than they do now. And it's not like I know 5-10 times more C++, it's just that I've gotten used to how SO works, and learned better tricks to find questions.
Maybe I'm a slower learner than most (and I don't think I am), but I find it very strange that you're equating the difficulty of learning effective dupe recognition/finding, with learning how not to use the answer box for comments.
Damn, the 2 min window has passed, and I have no idea why I italicized dupes :p
No, I'm not saying punishing anyone. IIUC, you want to teach new users something like, "answering duplicates is not beneficial to the site because ... If you see such a question it's preferable to not answer it"?
Yes, we should teach users that there are two acceptable ways to answer a question that is asked here: (1) find another question that already contains the answer, and flag it as a duplicate of that one, or (2) post a comprehensive answer to this question.
@cigien Yeah, it's a game that is part of Winter Bash. You are a unicorn, and you have to jump over stacks of hats using the space bar.
Finding a previous instance of the same question is actually preferable, not only because of our mission to build a knowledge base, but also because it gives the asker faster access to higher-quality answers that have already been vetted by the community.
Ok, serious hurdle. When I had low rep (between 3k and getting a hammer, which was 14k for me IIRC), every now and then I'd recognize a dupe (now they're what I would call obvious dupes). I'd take some time, about 10-15 mins to look for the target, and then VTC. In the interim, one of about 3 or 4 very high rep users (we look at the same tags, so you know some of the users I', referring to) would have answered the question, and gained rep.
Rep that I could have gained by answering the question instead of looking for a target. Should I have cared about the rep? Maybe not. Did I care about the rep? Very much so, and I suspect most low rep users would as well. Even if I had received the training that you've suggested, these experiences would have untrained me, and I would be answering dupes to gain rep.
This situation is worse in tags like python and R from what I hear. Until all high rep users stop answering dupes, all the training in the world won't work against the example they set. The only users we can convince are those who have a decent amount of rep, at least enough to VTC, and preferably if they have a hammer.
@CodyGray Well, you can play Hat Dash. Do you really need to do anything else on SE? ;)
@CodyGray Resolved? No chance. Mitigated slightly, at best. There's way too much rep to be gained from answering dupes. I don't see any way that the rep granted for finding dupes could offset that.
Aside from that, it's just an argument about peer pressure. How is that different from, "This other guy got to post his thoughts [as a comment]. Why can't I?"
@cigien Why not? I mean, why can you not imagine that? If we gave the same amount of rep to people who suggested applicable duplicates, then it would literally be the same.
What are you suggesting? 50 rep for a dupe closure? How would it work for hammers? Would they get all the rep? Would it be chopped up for multiple voters?
Let people vote on the dupe closure (I agree this is a dupe/I find this dupe helpful); give rep for upvotes? Give all dupe close voters a tiny amount of rep each time that an answer on the main question is upvoted? I don't know what it is, but surely there has to be a solution. The problem is rep allocation, so the solution would also involve rep allocation.
@cigien Realize that I've been here much longer than I've had oodles of rep. The reason, in fact, that I have oodles of rep is that I've been here a long time.
@CodyGray Ok. I've been here a relatively short time, and I've had decent amount of rep right from the beginning. But I'm in no position to tell a new user that they shouldn't care about rep because I don't care about it much myself any more (I mean, I mostly don't care about rep much any more because I've already gotten every conceivable privilege I could get).
Also, did you seriously never care about rep? I'm not saying I don't believe you, I'm just finding it very hard to believe you. Are you sure you just haven't forgotten?
Right, again, the key is not that I don't care about it "any more". It's that I never cared about it.
The only reason reputation matters even one tiny bit is that it unlocks privileges.
When I was brand-new to the site, I wasn't that interested in earning privileges.
The only time I've ever experienced what I would call "rep envy" is when I, as a well-established and privileged SO user, started using other sites, like Code Review. There, I missed the privileges that I expected, and had an incentive to actually earn rep.
@CodyGray Yes, a solution could be found perhaps. I don't see it right now, but maybe something could be worked out. To clarify: such a change would require the dev staff to change the system, correct? I'm asking because I'm trying to think of some way to actually make progress on this, and waiting on staff for such a change would take time.
@CodyGray Ok, fine, I believe you. Do you think this applies to most new users? Again, I'm not asking what you think should matter to new users. Do you think there's any way, given the current correlation between rep and privileges, that rep won't matter to them?
@CodyGray Yeah, you're right. And it's a problem. But I don't see that problem going away easily. And given the gamification so far, I'm confused why you think rep wouldn't matter to new users. It's what they see as the site validating a user.
Because most new users who you're assuming are rep-obsessed also don't care about earning privileges (beyond the most trivial commenting privilege at 50 rep, which is an insanely low bar).
And once users get to the point where they want to start earning reputation so they can earn privileges, it's because they've gotten their foot into some kind of curation. At that point, I think they're more than reachable with a logical argument and at least some minor incentive to find duplicates.
@CodyGray But that's exactly what I've been suggesting. That we should educate users who've been around for a bit, and could be amenable to a reasoned argument.
@CodyGray One problem at a time please :) Note how I chose to ignore the last link you shared? I didn't miss it, I just think tackling too many problems at the same time isn't going to work. And yes, we're in agreement about no-effort, free-coding, etc. I'd love to get your feedback on those topics as well.
@CodyGray Oh, I've been thinking about it today because of the activity in SOCVR. I take it you've read, or at least skimmed the transcript. I'm open to suggestions for which avenue is the most fruitful to explore first.
Ok, that was going to be the meta that I posted today. There's 2 very nice examples of it (Scratte helpfully linked to both in this room). I was a bit upset about the whole thing, and so I decided not to post a meta until I was able to think more clearly. Then I noticed the voting pattern on the python answers and got sidetracked. That may be the right meta to post though.
The bigger concern I had was the result of translation meta I made. Similar goal, but apart from it becoming very clear that many users felt very strongly about being able to close questions without a valid reason, I feel that discussion reached an impasse.
I fear a similar outcome for a new meta post. After all, I don't have anything new to add. I'll say, "here are 2 posts that were closed for completely incorrect reasons", and the response will be, "maybe so, but the post should have been closed anyway, so it's all good". We'd be back to square one I think. I'm all ears for any suggestions on how to have a more fruitful discussion this time around. I've thought about it a little and nothing obvious springs to mind.
@CodyGray I don't know enough about SO culture to answer that last part. Wouldn't users, especially seasoned curators whom you'd be trying to address, simply ignore a PSA?
Ah, I see, that's fair. I'm not a fan of penalizing that either. I'm guessing that's contributed in part to the extreme paranoia users have about flags getting declined :(
But aside from that, as I've said countless times, having a flag declined doesn't necessarily mean that you've done anything wrong. It just means a moderator disagreed with you.
Heaven forbid if it's wrong to have someone disagree with you.
I could say, "We have heard your objections to this policy, but you are wrong."
@cigien In every class I ever taught, and most of them that I took, disagreement was encouraged, in the sense that, if you can make a well-reasoned argument, you're going to get some kind of credit for it.
@CodyGray Haha, I would love to see that post. But probably best to avoid it :)
@CodyGray Yeah. Note that education systems work quite differently across the world. Back home, that's not how we did things really. I mean sometimes, but it was quite different from how it's done in the USA for example.
Yeah, that's a good point. I had assumed you were referencing the US.
I remember that being a big pain point for foreign students. In the US, at least at the collegiate level, it is commonly expected that students will question things and think for yourself, not regurgitate information.
@JeanneDark Oh, I've used that a few times. I had a subcontractor recently write software that used delay loops in C. I had to explain to them that optimizing compilers exist and they should be using a sleep function like this. They... uh, I think they disagreed with me.
Cheap is more important to many people than good.
Beyond primary education, there's no argument to be made for regurgitation.
Even if it had some value, it wouldn't, since everyone immediately forgets it once the exam is over.
Reputation is almost like money. Some people just want more no matter how much they already have. It never ends. More more more.. every time that little green bubble comes their entire brain lights up like a Christmas tree. There's no teaching them that it's not important. Reason cannot compete with the pleasure they get from it.
There's even reputation-envy, which is probably the most ridiculous envy, since it really doesn't mean anything. It comes in two ways: Someone has more or is gaining faster than you. Someone "undeserving" is gaining "too fast".
I don't think there any way to make those go away by talking about reputation at all. I think one needs to point to another goal instead.
I see users downvoting good Answers to "force" answerers of "low effort" Questions to stop, and I'm convinced it's by users that focus too much on reputation. They think it works, but it only works on like-minded users. And even for like-minded users, I'm sure they're just hoping for an upvote later on.
I don't think we can stop the wrong closing and wrong deletions or posts by making a Public Announcement. It'll work for some that's not determined to "Make Stack a good place to find good Questions to answer" like the users argued for in SOCVR yesterday. The entire removal of posts that they personally do not find interesting, so there might be better Questions left. Their drive is not to make Stack better. It's an egocentric view and I'm not sure there's anything to be done for those.
The users to reach are the ones that think they are doing the right thing. They just need to be re-aligned about what that right thing is.
Ironically, these same people who are arguing that "how to" questions are boring/make it harder to find an interesting question to answer on SO are making that problem so much worse by turning the site into a highly localized "debug my codez" help desk.
Absolutely. But some are beyond help. They hate every Question they don't want to answer themselves, but they can't close those, so they go for the other ones and put a "gimme teh codez" stamp on it to validate their action.
But the argument that "We don't want Stack to be a debug my tictactoe" help-desk is also a little dangerous, because we risk that every debug Question starts getting closed with "No value".
Exactly.. it would also be nice if it was easier to group them.
Some of them obviously have value. They funny thing is that I've probably (read: definitely) answered some of them, but I can't find them by using any kind of search. I have to go through my own posts to find them :O
How does the Scanner class work in Java. I think I've answered a few debugging of those. And I'd like to use them as duplicate targets, but then when I try to find them, they don't show up. That's what I'm trying to say :)
Perhaps it's the titles. I'm not sure. One of those posts that was closed and deleted yesterday, even unanswered, came up at nr. 1 on the search I did on the internet. And despite saying that, people all they their lynching forks out.
They seem to have a list of arguments and despite none of them actually applying, they just keep repeating them.
@CodyGray Did you read the transcript in SOCVR? Because that was basically their first reason for removing the post. And then they changed to post meta links and repeated something akin to "just following the guideline"
The thing that bugs me is that they successfully had the Answer and the entire post removed.
(And me posting it in here to keep a record had yet another user adding to the removal, which also bugged me)
If you ask SEDE to find comment about "free coding service", I think you'll find that that particular issue is very prevalent.
Ahh.. I see :) Yes. I responded to the missing arguments though, by saying that they didn't actually make any.
And that pasting a link wasn't an argument at all.
We're trying to educate new users of how to use Stack. But seasoned users are misguided and are "educating" users by what they think the guideline is. Now we're trying to both educate new users and seasoned ones.. it's a mess.
And seasoned ones seems quite set in their interpretation and not very welcoming of any education at all :D
Urgh!.. I really don't like it when users post their request in SOCVR and never respond when others question their request. It seems to me that some do that as strategy.
I've raised my concerns, but the general reply I get is Room Owners to not interfear and we don't want to require users respond to questioning and if enough users complain we'll remove the request. But that last one is not helping as by then it's already a little too late.
Ok, so real question, is a mask a hat? What about a bandana? That could be worn on the face or the head. Where is the dividing line? Things like sweat bands can be worn on the forehead...
Maybe its because I've been thinking of these as distinct groupings. Instead, maybe they're just descriptive. If an object has mask-like qualities, its a mask, regardless of whatever else it might be. I guess a ski mask then can safely be both a mask and a hat (although we've opted to call it a mask foremost)
Interesting, how does it check quacking at compile time? I nominally know C++ but I haven't used it since school. I kind of get the feeling I never really learned the ++ aspects (past the standard objects)
Template metaprogramming. Basically, you define a template, and then at compile time, the compiler instantiates your template and tries to plug in the specified object. If it fits, then it compiles.
@code11 Yes. It's amazingly cool. Also mindbendingly difficult at times, but most of that is done by the geniuses who maintain the standard library, so the average programmer just benefits without having to deal with the complexity. If you want to, well, there's SO. :-)
I've found that futons work well when its hot outside. They retain heat less since you don't sink into them and usually are on the ground. I've gotten through many 90+ degree nights (37 C) with my futon.
I heard all over the place that memory foam mattresses were "hot", since they retain heat and you sink down into them. I was a bit leery of that, since I first bought a memory foam mattress living in Texas, where summers get... hot. I've never been able to reproduce that experience, though. It's been a wonderful purchase, and I've never woken up too hot because of the mattress.
Not that there isn't stupid marketing out there, but... this is well supported by research and people with real medical degrees.
Too soft is bad, too. Not supportive enough.
And soft sofas are the worst. You sit down and you literally sink down into them, to the point where you're sitting on your back, not your butt. Obviously terrible for every part of you.
@CodyGray No. Getting weak has taken time. Not sure if getting stronger is feasible for me at this point though. But I think I could sleep OK on the floor a full night after a week of uncomfortable.
@Scratte I used to wear a tie, collared shirt and jacket to work even during the summer when I was on the client site. they refused to change the AC from what felt like 50f
@code11 Well.. no. It depends on who you are. Being cold is not something you fix with putting on more layers, if you're not a "warm" person. And it's hell for those people where every joint in the body is aching from the cold.
We're meant to be able to tolerate 40 degrees, but our body does not sustain 5 over long periods without help from some source of heat or insulation. It's easier to get used to being in a hot place at all times, than being at 5 degrees at all times.
Story time: I recently got some backpacking equipment. I've been meaning to for a while and covid times seemed like the opportunity. However, because of ordering delays, it came in just as the season was changing. I went anyways, and, key decision, opted for a camping hammock instead of a tent. Long story short I was up several thousand feet at below freezing temperatures. Even with a rated sleeping bag, I've never been so cold.
I'd even speculate that 10 is also too cold to sustain without blankets and a lot of extra layers. And some people just cannot do it, ever.
@CodyGray I meant what we can naturally cope with without ruining the planet.
@code11 Nice story.. and just my point. No layering helps you. I bet you'd been better off at 40 at night for a month than that for a month. It drains your resources faster than you think.