I've recently bumped into "How do I set the text of a GtkTextView?" via Google, which I thought would be helpful to me, but it wasn't. (The question was about C#/GTK#, and I was looking for a C/GTK answer.)
I've edited the original question (Setting the text of a GtkTextView) to include the word GTK# (Setting the text of a GtkTextView in GTK#) to save some time for others having the same problem and for possible SEO. My edit was approved, then shortly after, someone changed the title to How do I set the text of a GtkTextView in GTK#?, which was reverted to How do I set the text of a GtkTextView?, with the following comment: "removed tag from title".
According to "Why is removing tags from the title suggested so often?" here in Meta, my initial idea was good. What should I do in such a situation? Should I start an "edit war" and add my edit again?
Please note that I've read "Removing words from titles because they're in the tags?", where it's explained that the search results in Google include the most popular tag already. In this particular case, it's misleading, since gtk is the most popular tag, not gtk#. Or maybe we could just remove the gtk tag?
What's the best course of action here?
EDIT: In a comment below, Cody Gray asked this: "Who gives a darn if there's a question mark or not? Who cares if it says GTK# or GtkTextView? Both seem equally valid and descriptive titles to me. "
GtkTextView
does not hold any information regarding the language it is used in. To make it clear, the solution for C# looks something like this:
textview1.Buffer.Text = "Some sample text that will be displayed."
And the solution for C looks something like this:
GtkTextBuffer *buffer = gtk_text_view_get_buffer(textview1);
gtk_text_buffer_set_text(buffer, "Some sample text that will be displayed.", -1);
Now, one could argue that the internal logic of the two is the same (get the buffer from the GtkTextView
and set it's text property), but still, I don't feel that the questions / solutions are interchangable. Unless of course, for example, it's acceptable to answer a Python question with a Haskell answer, which is just plain silly IMHO.