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12:12 AM
@CodyGray post a comment and see if anyone replies with the same thing
@CodyGray well, usually you just set it to an obscenly high number like 9999 and pray that no other element has the same z-index value
 
@OlegValteriswithUkraine Why isn't 1002 an obscenely high value? That's my point... it's not like you're going to have 1001 discrete items that need a lower ordering.
 
1:08 AM
They'd have to create a lot of CSS classes to get that high. -z-index-1003, -z-index-1004, -z-index-1005, -z-index-1006, ..., -z-index-9997, -z-index-9998, -z-index-9999.
 
 
4 hours later…
4:51 AM
@RyanM Yeah. But I need the time more than I need the rep...
I see Mark Ransom kind of already did, which is what I was hoping would happen.
It's quite hard for me to see what the issue is. You literally just look at the documentation, type in the appropriate parameters based on what it says and you want to do, and you're done.
I couldn't answer that question with an answer that met my own standards, even if I had time to do it...
 
5:43 AM
That is, I think, not even half the total deleted comments on that answer...
 
That's the ones I just removed? Or you did another answer on the same page?
 
Yeah, they're the ones you did.
I was curious what question someone had flagged with "this question is a waste of time."
 
Not that.
Also, be honest: you were more curious what my response was.
 
It was a little of both...
 
Yes I would believe there were already quite a few deleted comments there.
It's been a trend I've noticed. It appears that once there's a single thank you comment the post. That post is more likely to get more similar thank you comments than posts with no (visible) comments.
 
5:57 AM
In criminology, the broken windows theory states that visible signs of crime, anti-social behavior and civil disorder create an urban environment that encourages further crime and disorder, including serious crimes. The theory suggests that policing methods that target minor crimes such as vandalism, loitering, public drinking, jaywalking, and fare evasion help to create an atmosphere of order and lawfulness. The theory was introduced in a 1982 article by social scientists James Q. Wilson and George L. Kelling. It was popularized in the 1990s by New York City police commissioner William Bratton...
 
Yeah that. Which appears to be statistically true wrt comments here on Stack Overflow at least.
It's why I switched to mostly flagging 1/1 or 1/2 thank yous.
I do also generally look at the other end though too. I have yet to find a post with 70+ comments that are mostly useful.
 
I posted a ticket about a technical issue on another site. And just got a response that it's completed but the wording on it is amazing:
> Feedback Status: Complete
>
> The issue you reported has either been resolved or cannot be resolved based on the information you provided.
 
That about covers it.
 
@VLAZ Perfect way to combine the "typo" and "needs debugging details" close reasons
(/s)
 
Code like this stresses me out
 
6:09 AM
Because it's not properly vertically aligned? Yeah.
Err... that code can't/doesn't work. There's no parentheses enforcing precedence, so there's no grouping.
 
It's the inconsistent line length and spacing around operators really
 
Yup, exactly. If they did that, it'd line up nicely in columns.
 
I assume that's what is meant by "If/Else statement with || and && giving the wrong result"
 
Good point that they're probably having an issue with it not doing what they want, otherwise they wouldn't be asking a question on SO. Not sure why I didn't consider that.
 
It's also only tagged [reactjs]
 
6:11 AM
Isn't that a thing?
It got Henry to react.
 
Yeah. I'm definitely reacting to that js
 
What's wrong with the second comment? ;-p
Haha, too bad I can't undelete chat messages.
 
The second one is fine now. But now there's a third...
 
The code is difficult to read due to the lack of vertical alignment. But also for the lack of actual information what the code is supposed to do.
 
Man, people! They really think that if we had word filters to detect curse words, they'd be so naive that they wouldn't trigger if you replaced an "i" with a "1"?
 
6:15 AM
@CodyGray Alas. (I removed it because it had been handled)
 
@VLAZ It's supposed to work properly. You know, give the right results.
> The issue that I'm having is that parcelItems = {s:1, m:12, l:0}, but I'm getting 'small' instead of 'large' as the size.
 
@CodyGray In fairness, the filters we do have are often very naive.
 
Are you saying that our existing filters are the p0rblem?
 
@CodyGray I'm even more confused now. Why is 1 small, 12 medium, and no large a large parcelSize? =S
 
Hmm, yeah. Unknown.
But you aren't being asked to check the correctness of the spec!
 
 
8 hours later…
2:00 PM
@CodyGray not that it isn't, but the normal practice is to use something like 9999 unless you meticulously bookkeep z-index levels. SE seems to have taken the second approach, and look where it got us :)
 
 
6 hours later…
8:03 PM
sigh 2 votes for Needs Focus stackoverflow.com/questions/73347075 The duplicate target may not be ideal, but what focus does it need?
 
 
2 hours later…
9:57 PM
@lorro stop feeding such vampires, just make your life happier, and help us curating this site. There are good reasons why such questions are closed and deleted. You're welcome to join us. — πάντα ῥεῖ 24 mins ago
Comment on an answer to a clear, focused, how-to question :(
 

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