Hot answers tagged automation
17
I like this. The grace period allows people to turn a question around while helping to automate the janitorial process.
If the site as a whole (and this applies to the owner as well) doesn't have the time/inclination to try and improve the question (which doesn't have anything good in the way of answers already) to the point where it can attract/be good ...
12
I don't think code edits should be treated any differently from any other edits. Just because somebody has entered an extra blank line / a bunch of spaces, doesn't mean that the code appearance has actually been improved, or was necessary. The race to fix newly asked questions can already turn into a bun fight, where people try to get their small change ...
10
On topic cross posts are exceptions, most cross posters either don't know that questions can be migrated or are trying to get more visibility for their questions, disregarding the scope of each site. I recently found a user who posted almost every one of his questions on at least 3 sites, and his latest question on 5 (!!!). A lovely mess that wasted ...
10
Once you remove the 0 score questions (ones that are going to be deleted anyway within a year) we are left with a measly 2153 questions it's really just a drop in the ocean.
I do not support automatically deleting anything that got a bunch of upvotes and views, the list is tiny and the community can easily work through this - I do not want another ...
9
I'd ask SE to nuke the tag if there is a consensus that it doesn't serve any purpose. Manually deleting it and destroying the frontpage just to get rid of it doesn't serve any purpose, it harms the posts on the frontpage that get displaced by the mass-retagging and just wastes everybody's time.
There is precedent for SE nuking tags directly, Jeff went on a ...
9
Updates based on comment
Here's the list of questions that meet your criteria. There are 10,654 of them. Many of them have been merged, deleted (due to the existing sweep) or migrated.
Even if we remove merged and migrated posts its still 10,072. While this only represents .38% of all questions, this does represent 1,216,070* views of bad pages.
Removing ...
9
This is a year-old feature, documented here, meant to ease the lives of everyone who's constantly pointing users towards the various sites in the SO family or the FAQ.
The request and subsequent answer describing the completed feature were well received (126 and 109 net votes currently), so unless this question sees significant support, it's unlikely to be ...
8
Let me just say that sometimes questions without answers are very useful!
Ah I'm not the only one who had this problem!… and we both use ⟨insert crappy software/distribution/hardware/whatever here⟩, so the issue is probably due to this and not to this!
7
Interesting suggestion.
Maybe a user script would be a good way to start. (No, I'm not volunteering!)
I think that the corrections list could be customisable (per user, per site?), I'm not sure why you're against that, especially as it creates your second negative.
I suspect that the highlighting and 'this is not an edit' functionality might make this ...
7
I agree. It was funny, but wrong. I would like to see this changed. Normal words in square brackets should not change into something unexpected: it is as unfortunate as some websites that change :) into a smiley. shudders It should be changed into something like [[so]]; there is a reason Wikipedia uses double brackets, not singles.
6
Could verbatim plagiarized content be automatically detected?
Some of it could. Almost certainly not all, but a lot of the more obvious examples where the entirety of the post is copied, yes, it's possible.
Should it be pushed into a review queue similar to low quality posts for other users to confirm?
It probably just belongs as a mod queue. At ...
6
For now, home automation questions seem to be accepted on the Home Improvement site. There are a few security questions there as well, but they don't seem to be very high-tech, so I can't say what kind of results you'll get.
There's also a Home Automation proposal on Area 51 that you can commit to in order to help it get closer to launching.
6
Having taken a shot at transcribing, I would say that something that could aid my efforts would encourage me to do it more. What ends up happening is that I hear a segment I think is really good, and I want to transcribe it (because with other material I appreciate being able to locate it later, maybe quote it and send it to someone, etc). So I take 5 or ...
5
My idea (which was accidentally posted as a duplicate) is to block exact, word for word duplicates when the same user tries to post them on another site. Sure, it's easy enough to change one word and get by it, but most of these cross site posts are exactly identical which is where the problem is. An exact duplicate isn't appropriate even if it's on topic, ...
5
Per
Simple method for reliably detecting code in text?
We just deployed a method that we think is quite reliable for blocking 98% of posts submitted with code that has improper code formatting (or no code formatting at all).
For example, when I go into Chrome incognito and attempt to ask this question body on Stack Overflow right now:
I needed to add up ...
4
Perhaps when you enter a "bad" tag and click submit, it would alert you in some way?
Say you enter the subversion tag and click submit, it would say something like "Please use the svn tag instead of subversion"..
This would only happen the first time you click submit, so you could ignore it, should it be wrong.. It could also be done AJAX'ily, the same way ...
4
I feel like I'm reading some sort of Sphinx riddle that has been poorly translated from Greek. But, if I understand correctly, you're proposing that the system auto-generate SQL statements to create and populate a database table based upon an ASCII sketch.
Why would that be a worthwhile use of the developers' time? Not only is it a non-trivial task, it's ...
4
Just because something is in the close votes queue doesn't mean that it needs to be closed. I think people are losing sight of the forest for the trees here, and focusing on driving that number down without thinking about why questions should and should not be closed.
This is one of the reasons why audits were recently added to the close votes queue, ...
4
Workaround: escape with backslashes
You can avoid this problem (and any similar problem with Markdown-reserved characters) by escaping them with a backslash. This removes all special meanings for the following character. For example, to write [so], the corresponding Markdown is \[so\].
4
I have been using this userscript made by Tom and others in Super User which was pretty useful. Maybe you could give it a try?
Click to install the script.
The script was a fork of SE Editor Toolkit and is generally pretty functional.
3
"Automatically delete" is a bad idea. It's a doubly bad idea to delete content that the majority of voters find useful.
Let's work through a test case:
User taras.roshko asked a question about the .NET source code. (Aug 30 '11 at 10:13)
User Marc Gravell♦ commented with an answer to the implied programming question. (Aug 30 '11 at 10:21)
User casperOne♦ ...
3
I love the magic links!
I use those probably 20 times a day (~1.1k chat messages per week chat messages).
Whereas, I probably have never yet put the word so in 'editorial brackets'. Make that \[so] and: problem solved
So no, I don't think it should be 'fixed', (in fact I'd love it if it were easier to link to questions/answers like this [post:123456], ...
3
Jeff/Joel,
Would you be interested in a community podcast transcription service that utilizes the power of your site's tribe/users/community. It would all be driven by a ridiculously simple-to-use UI and API. The goal would be for your users to stay on your site, but hit a little button/link on the side of the page that says something along the lines of ...
3
No, we don't want to do this.
It's entirely possible to get a great drive-by answer from a 1 rep new user on any old question -- I used to see it all the time on Coding Horror (before I had to require logging in to comment due to size).
Since most questions are the definition of "long tail", I don't think this will be necessary except in outlier questions ...
3
I propose a different solution.
There's a very good possibility that a question on the Stack Exchange network should not have 30 answers in the first place. If a question has 30 answers it most likely fits into one of the following categories:
Popular and attracts loads of Thanks answers.
Argumentative, open ended and/or needs discussion.
It's a list ...
2
Here is my first attempt at such a script. Currently it prints out new questions to stdout. Maybe I will add a pluggable output class so that it can be emailed or SMSed or popped up on screen.
For example, to track Python use
$ python sofeed.py python
Here is the code.
Edit: changed getNewQuestions to generator without sleep,
so it is up to the user now ...
2
Well, I completed the suggestions in "Perhaps:", so that leaves
automation
automatic
2
Revisit the idea of making teh Googles work in transcripting these with their rolling out feature of auto-captioning on Youtube.
You'd have to clean it up some later with all those dings and dongs that distract them so from forming proper words in the stream of things.
Bulk of the work would be done for you.
The hard part is actually listening to them ...
1
Obviously, the next step would be to
automatically answer those questions,
so I can beat John Skeet
You are joking, right? ;-) No one has ever and will never beat Jon Skeet. Didn't you hear about the guy who down voted Jon Skeet's answer? Better edit your question soon before he sees it. ;-)
You can subscribe to tags and monitor the questions. I am ...
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