hey does anyone know if twitter is original? Twitter replies are listed as replies, but are also posted as a new tweet, so people can also reply to it. Is this functionality original to twitter?
sorry for off topic question but it's way better than posting a thread and getting it taken down lmao
@nikolay While we do allow off-topic chatter in here from time to time, that's generally from people who are using the room for its intended purpose. Popping into a random room to ask a random question is generally considered poor etiquette.
... someone spent their time and effort in making that answer. So why should you have the right to delete their efforts? If it's a really serious issue (and, I mean, really serious), then raise a custom "In need of moderator attention..." flag. But do that with caution and, if you do, provide a very good reason.
@SecretKeeper Can I ask why you're interested in deleting it? Your question is positively scored and seems fine to me; it seems several people have found it useful.
@RyanM @HovercraftFullOfEels i guess it have mental reasons , i dont wanna have any question on stackoverflow, since 5 years ago i just have 1 , i am posting my cv for finding some new jobs and they asked me my stackoverflow account and the problem with my question is it so basic (or maybe fool or new body) question , to be honest it hurts me when i see it
For what it's worth, I have a friend who's been quite successful in their career and has a (very popular) Stack Overflow question to the effect of "how to add an element to a dictionary"
At any rate, if you really want your name off of it anyway, your best option is to request for it to be disassociated from your account. That way, the question will be preserved for anyone who wants the information, but the author will be changed to "anon" and your profile link removed. Note that you'll lose the reputation you gained as well.
Well I figure moving from "I don't know git" in 2015 to managing a project and having commits totally 50,000 new lines of code helps in the "what did you learn" department. Especially when applying for a job writing open source software.
I fully understand that this room does not "review" users, but I wonder if I could ask any caring soul (other then RyanM) if they would nudge this user (who has only just started to contribute) to improve their posting style beyond code-only answers.
They seem to be a smart-ish programmer, but did not like my advice to explain their answers, and they didn't add an explanation after RyanM recommended it here. Judging by their profile, they are relatively disgruntled. With enough gentle nudges, maybe they'll improve? Getting them earlier will pay off in the long run.
I don't want anyone to "thump" them or anything. I just feel like this is a great opportunity to "tune" a new contributor to be more generous and improve content on SO.
Unfortunately, the two code-only answers that I bothered to open up and look at are upvoted, so they are getting the impression that code-only answers are "good enough" to earn unicorn point and therefore are "good".
This question is asking at the bottom: "why was the language designed like this". Isn't there an MSO canonical that such questions are off-topic? The Q seems to lack focus for that reason alone.
@mickmackusa Seems close to one-liner spamming. But there's not much nudging to be done unless the user breaks rules.
Opinions on this question (encountered in qa burnination). I think the question's closeable but the answer is useful. If this were a review I'd hit 'skip' but I need to decide to edit or close.
@mickmackusa that's actually a good concern. But I'm seeing way too many troll and sock puppet accounts in recent times to exercise good faith at the moment.
@mickmackusa E.g. I saw a few cases of high-reps getting their FUBAR Q's roombad and then asking them with a bounty just to bait someone into answering and not awarding. Word has it on MSE those are actually sock puppets doing rep-transfers.
Is stackoverflow.com/q/63177201/1974224 a General Computing question? Judging by the topic, I'd say yes, but on the other side OP needs this for development purposes...
@mickmackusa wow, there are multiple NAA's on that question
Python Tutor often refuses to process not-so-complicated code like creating a class with few methods. On the other hand, I was able to start Python Tutor locally and it did not fail. I'm not happy with the fact that two different Pythons are used -- the one in Colab and the one in Python Tutor
What I meant was: I think that answer was "Try this code with %%debug_cell_with_pytutor" which is a bad and wrong answer, but I don't think it was just randomly copied text from the question.
When I am called "the self-righteous man", is this just needless chattiness or is it rude? (I'm generally not easily offended, so I need to ask people with warmth in their blood.) ...errm, unless you no-comment downvote one of my answers!!! GRRRRRRRR!
@SurajRao looks like a rather opinion-based answer, but I don't feel like the question is opinion-based. Agree?
At any rate, which option you choose to use when flagging a comment is nearly irrelevant. All comment flags mean essentially the same thing: this contains nothing of value and needs to be deleted.
If you think it's unfriendly, then pick that flag. By picking that flag, you do run the risk that a mod disagrees with your assessment of its unfriendliness and declines the flag on that basis, but still deletes the comment. So, if you're overly concerned with arbitrary numbers on a web page (such as your "helpful" flag count), then you'd probably want to err on the side of NLN.
No comment flags involve an automatic cooling down period. The U/U and HBA flags do, after enough have built up, result in an auto-flag on the user for a mod to review. If we agree that the comment flags were "true positives" and the user needs a talking-to, then we will do so.
I am, perhaps, one of the only mods who would ever countenance editing a comment to remove an "unfriendly" portion from a comment that otherwise contained useful information. U/U flags are perhaps the best way to make that happen. An edit would still mark such flags as "helpful".
@mickmackusa Even in my book, that is pretty unfriendly/unkind.
I reckon 1. it doesn't add anything of substance to the page and 2. it intends to offend (even if I'm not offended). I'll give one more pass, then flag rude next time if it happens again.
@mickmackusa I personally prefer the "lacks MCVE" close reason in such cases, as, while that is nearly a strict subset of "unclear", it contains a more detailed description of what the problem is and more actionable advice on how to solve it.
Is this question either general computing or opinion-based? One reason why an Linux VM runs faster than Windows 10 on the same machine in this question is that Linux is more similar to a server than Windows, so there's less overhead from background processes, but this might alternatively be interpreted as opinion-based.
@JeanneDark @karel The one thing I don't think it is is general computing. It's in a specific software-development context. I could totally agree that it lacks enough details, though, to be answered. In particular, a repro case.
I think I'm out of touch with this world, I see those Coinbase spam posts, I instantly recognize them as spam, but on the other hand, I have no idea what "coinbase" means, nor why is it worth spamming about it...
I thought these spammers were fighting a pointless battle because it all gets deleted so quickly. I didn't realize that they are really trying to just get their message in front of the moderators who so desperately need it.
@Locke This is not the type of issue that moderators typically weigh in on as moderators. Closure of off-topic or otherwise unsuitable questions is generally handled by the community, and unless some sort of clear rule violation is going on, mods are generally reluctant to step in and settle reasonable disputes by throwing their weight around.
Therefore, although I see there was already some discussion here, including by TylerH (who originally requested its closure) and Dharman (who happens to be a mod), if you are unsatisfied with the conclusions which were reached and/or want to discuss it further, then I really encourage you to write up a question on Meta Stack Overflow. That way, mods and regular folks can weigh in, and the best (or, at least, the most popular) perspective will win out.
I can see both sides of that question being closed. What I can't see is a justification for deleting it. If that happens, then I'll happily step in as a moderator and undelete it (possibly also lock it, to prevent deletion from happening again, but I'd rather not do that, for the reasons you mentioned).
@DaImTo SO is not a helpdesk, but a library of programming knowledge. The OP only needs to have done enough research for the question to be useful to others also.
@JeanneDark Thank you I agree with that 100%. OP has not done their homework and is just asking about the web application.
@RyanM Yes but before that they ask "Does google calendar events have option to redirect participant to external URL as meeting is ended" This is about the Google calendar web application not the API. The api question was an after thought.
@AdrianMole there is no google-calendar tag it has a synonym that points everything to Google-calendar-api you cant tag it as google-calendar. becouse we dont want web app questions.
@RyanM Do with the question what you will. Lets just call it a question of semantics then.
I understand what you're saying: the question of whether this option exists is not unique to the API. Which is a fair point. I just think it's not so off-topic to require closure.
@Cristik good news: the spammers have defined it for you! "Coinbase is the crypto exchange platform. Coinbase provides user friendly platform for the customers and investors for the long term money making profits."
They also note that "farmhouse, a cottage, and an English-style. carriage house, all set on 3.71 parklike. acres with lake views and an additional 15.51. acres of farmland nearby. The estate provides a steady stream of."
I assume that is what you will buy with all those long term money making profits.
@mickmackusa Can we convert that into a non-opinion-based question by focusing exclusively on the last paragraph, concerning which is more optimal, and eliminating the nebulous "best" stuff?
@CodyGray Not without the asker's blessing. If this is about benchmarking, then they will need to express the volume of their data (which will also reveal if they are seeking premature optimization). I commented another approach which could be an answer, but it is highly subjective to say that it is most appropriate. If they have working approaches (and I'm not convinced that they do), then CodeReview is appropriate.
@CodyGray plus we already have canonicals that explain that classic loops out perform function based iteration. ...somewhere. This would be ignoring that the foreach has a big O of n and the array_map is easily more with the multiple function calls.
@mickmackusa Some of that sounds suspiciously like an answer to me, implying you don't actually need to see the specific data in order to be able to tell which is more performant. :-)
@GeneralGrievance Yes and no. I can count on one hand the times I've used it. The main use case is that the OP admits the answer is obsolete but the original answer had some use at some point
The "no" part is you need to make sure you don't need a SME. Merely flagging "This answer is obsolete and should be locked" is likely to get declined unless you have a mod who is an SME
Others (including mods) can delete them just fine. You can mod flag for deletion if you gave a poor answer that got accepted but was superseded by a later answer
@mickmackusa sounds like they were calling someone else self-righteous, not you
@Cristik Yes, General Computing. The feature is not a tool/thing used primarily by/for programming, but general computer users. A developer can just turn it off or use a better browser if they are doing development and it is getting in the way.
@AdrianMole hope you recover it, don't forget to cancel all your credit cards
"I'd like a QA person who has minimal coding skills to be able to do the above." Could also be interpreted as "recommend me a tool that allows a QA person with minimal coding skills to do that" and the answerers also thought so
I guess a red flag will be declined, but maybe try a custom flag - possible job offer but definitely off-topic and should be deleted - or something along those lines.
and even more (emphasis mine): "Simply put, I'm looking for something that could do the following"
@AdrianMole Except that when you try to have "democracy" and find people being dishonest, dogmatic or overly rhetoric that abuse the system, then you start having issues with it.
@dbc "are not working" is not a great description of a problem. It looks like the person who answered took a guess at what was wrong and was able to solve the problem. I'd think the problem could be better described in the question so that it can be found by others with similar problems, or closed as "needs debugging details"
Hmm, there seems to be a disagreement about the meaning of the tag pom.xml. Sometimes it's used for Selenium's Page Object Model. But the tag guidance refers to A Project Object Model or POM is the fundamental unit of work in Maven. A mess I don't know how to clean up since I don't know anything about Maven.
@KevinB Yea I agree the question needed debugging details but the answerer managed to figure it out anyway. I can't add the debugging details, but take a look at my edit to see if the question is any clearer.
@TylerH well yes, I actually have the solution but writing it up in a comprehensible fashion is a pain. (The whole issue is more intricate than it might seem).
@TylerH May I ask why you ask? I'm rather surprised to see you take interest in a Python Enum narrowing Q... :D
Ahh, because I commented in January under the answer: "I solved this and will be posting the solution today or tomorrow."?
@TylerH LOLOLOL :D that's actually the only Google hit for the error message and the only SO Q on that specialty item. I know for a fact the core dev himself upvoted and bookmarked :D
It'll be a future trend... But right now I'm set on trying to rush 10k (which I may or not be able to do in the near future...)
Isn't that so unfair? Energetic curators (like me!) want to work but just can't. Like I ran out of CVs hours ago, and I'm not getting them back anytime soon...