Here is a link to the post: Why is this array undefined when I call .length?
Note: I'm not asking "why did I get downvoted?"
I was recently banned from asking questions. Since then, I've really been working hard to write better posts. This has included reading all of the materials in the help center and revising all of my previous questions to better fit the criteria set out in the help center.
The post I linked to is my first SO question post since my question ban was lifted. I really tried my utmost to make a clear and generally useful question with minimal, complete and verifiable example code. I also think I demonstrated prior research by including a link to a similar question and elaboration on why my post is different.
I am very satisfied with the answers that I got.
However, my post got a downvote, which suggests that my understanding of community standards is still not on par with reality. A comment on this previous Meta post I made on the topic of "better questions," which says "your edits to your questions have[n't] been improvements at all, with one possible exception I can see," corroborates that dissonance between my understanding and reality.
How could I have improved my asking of the question linked to at the top of this post?
The first few comments here make a fair point: it's a pretty basic question. As soon as I got the answer, it all made sense to me. But what I am asking is: are there any problems with the way I asked the question?
What I am taking away after a handful of comments is that the format of the question is good. The reason it initially received downvotes is that it's a pretty basic question for most programmers. As @louis writes: "That you did not know when you asked has no bearing on how the SO crowd is going to respond to your question."
array
is undefined, which should be one of the steps you take in your debugging process for any language, not just javascript.array
has a value of undefined; it's not an array at all, despite the name. With a careful reading of the error message you probably could have diagnosed this yourself.console.log()
or going step by step with the browser debugger.list
, but it's an object/dict/lookup that obviously does not have alength
key. It's not immediately apparent that that's your expected output, and the error is upon trying to generate that, and it took me some rereading to get past the odd choice of variable name