Sorry, I guess I'm old.
On one of my questions, I was asked for the "TL;DR version".
What does that mean?
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Sorry, I guess I'm old. On one of my questions, I was asked for the "TL;DR version". What does that mean? |
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Too Long; Didn't Read It means they want a summarized version. |
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It's an abbreviation for "Too Long; Didn't Read". What it means on SO is that somebody didn't feel like digging into what you wrote for all the details without more guidance in the way of a summary. Since you're asking for help, and you're going to get it from unpaid volunteers who do it for their own reasons, you might then consider getting the question into a more readable form. There are people on this site who get ticked at being asked to figure out a question when the questioner didn't seem to care enough to be clear and explicit. Usually, they'll go away and not pay any attention to your question. Posting something like "tl;dr", while perhaps a bit rude, is a useful suggestion. Fundamentally, two things will happen to any unpaid Q&A site. Either there will be some action to keep the quality of the questions up, or the people who actually know things and are useful go away. We've already lost a really good C++ guy, apparently fed up with question quality among other things. |
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Wiktionary also contains Internet slang words. For TLDR ("TL;DR" is listed as "alternative"):
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