@TylerH I'm too picky with my queues, I don't think I'll get the badges any time soon: There are no items for you to review, matching the filter "[c#]"
I always use filters.. half the questions take way too much time to grok and figure out if the question is unclear or I'm just unfamiliar with the technology
You can't entirely verify their validity, so you have to assume the flags are valid
I think the question was can anyone exploit this and go around trolling otherwise innocent non-English rooms with false flags and causing them to all get warned/shut down for a crime they did not commit? — BoltClock ♦2 days ago
@BoltClock Sounds like yes, but that's partially a risk that turns up with the creation of a non-English room - we can't risk actual offensive content going through and putting people in danger, so err on the side of caution and ask people to chat in English. — ArtOfCode2 days ago
I mean that since chat rooms are kind of an 'extra', then I suppose outright banning non-English rooms isn't that bad, since chat rooms are fairly trivial to setup for a community elsewhere
What amuses me is the fact that people don't flag stuff that they understand even though it is against the rules to use such words. For example "FUC*ING C*NT" is not flagged but "kaisa hai bhai" (which means (how are you brother?) is :\
@Magisch Flagging a shitton of messages just because of their language is abuse. The flagger will most likely be banned, and possible chat bans resulting from the flags may be reverted.
> I'm currently working on a project which was made by some guy who worked here before me. Only God and that guy knew what is written there. Now only God knows.
@TimCastelijns - "When I started coding it, Only God and I knew what was going on. Now that I've finished writing it, only God knows what's going on" :P
I typically remove them all for false reports - since blacklisting is used to catch re-offenders. If they don't always post abuse/spam, they don't really need to be blacklisted for one offence (especially since it's automatically added on manual reports). Though I'll ping @Tunaki for his opinion anyway :)
@PetterFriberg Smokey sees the following things as comments when replaying to him, look out if you using those in your reply: naa n k true tp tpu f false falseu fp fpu spam notspam rude abuse abusive offensive delete remove gone postgone why poof
I am really on the fence with that question. On the one hand like @Cerbrus says it id basically a code dump and do suggest how I can do my homework. On the other hand like @MadaraUchiha says it basically invites a list of things not to do in your code if you want to be a competent programmer which I do like which is broad but a lot like some other conicals. I'm so torn on which one outweighs the other one.
@MadaraUchiha But he never told us what so we could be telling him exactly what he has already done. After much internal debate I feel it is off topic until the OP details what he already has done and what constraints he is under. Right now even answers that say pick the wort time complexity algo would answer that Q and I doubt that is an acceptable answer.
Rule exceptions require rules to extend/retract the category if the category is to be well-defined. Anyone offering that exceptions should be allowed to the current too-broad category definition should be sure to offer new rules to define the exceptions. — kjhughes1 min ago
@MadaraUchiha: Can you make heads or tails of that?