New answers tagged review
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Suggested edits to code, other than for formatting and presentation, should be rejected, using the "invalid edit" category. As you note, these edits can change the code, and possibly make it worse. Even just correcting a typo in the code or an obvious performance improvement should be rejected. The correct action to take is comment on the post, not edit the ...
-1
"Not an answer" usually means that it's not an answer.
Except when it is actually an answer, but someone flags it as "not an answer" and a moderator agrees.
A answer may be deleted as "not an answer" even when:
The answer was the first one given
The answer does address the question
The answer is correct
If there are subsequent better answers (like ...
4
This may qualify as a gray area. My opinion though, is that the 'answer' you refer to here was not an answer in any way, shape, or form. Or, to be more semantic to the flagging reason, it was not an attempt to answer the question.
An 'attempt' to answer a question requires having read and at least thinking you have understood the question. There is no way ...
3
"Not an answer" does not mean "a bad answer", or "not quite an answer to this question, as it turns out".
It means "not an answer". That is, not an answer at all.
The answer is certainly an answer; in this instance, it's a bad answer that misses the mark and, as such, you should downvote it and move on.
Flag comments and links as "not an answer".
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This was the answer:
(Here's the transcript for blind people)
The most important question when reviewing answers for "not an answer" answers, imho, is: Is this an attempt to answer? If the answer is no, and only in that case, you should flag it as not an answer.
Examples of "not an attempt" answer are:
"Thanks" answers
"I have the same problem" ...
1
I think this idea is generally a good concept, but the implementation should be different. Rather than expecting people to sit on the review page waiting for a popup, how about we stick with the general look&feel of SO, and put a little red bubble over Review when there are items to review? That could be optional (on the Review page, somewhere leave a ...
4
Technically the close banner is this comment. I agree that the current banner could be improved or branched out to be more specific.
The current close system is being improved, I think that these improvements cover this feature request adequately (specifically the branching out of NARQ and NC).
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I've mocked up what would only require 1 click to get the same information.
Notice the addition of progress indicators (taken from within the individual review task pages).
Can this be implemented? The functionality is already there, so it would be easy enough to do:
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I became active little over a month ago, and seen the close queue grow from approximately 51.2k to over 53k during that time. That means the queue structurally grows faster than it can be emptied, at a rate of over 300 questions per week, or some 40 per day. Each of those 40 questions needs 5 votes to close, or 200 votes total. Giving a relative handful of ...
0
I agree that limits need to be increased. I don't get a lot of time to do reviews, but when I do I tend to have a block of time, get on a roll, and hit the limit fairly quickly.
I'm willing to do reviews but cannot do small numbers on a regular basis. When I have the time I'd like to be able to knock out more than 40. A limit of 100 sounds about right.
...
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The only main difference is: if you close any question from the Review queue it will considered as a review (your review count will be increased). While from the Tools your review count will not be increased.
From the Review queue you can review only 40 questions/day. Review can be either close or leave open or edit. While from the Tools you can close ...
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Guidelines for reviewing Site Self-Evaluations
This review queue appears periodically on sites to evaluate the overall quality of the Q&A. After a few days, this queue will disappear until it is time for the next quality review.
Basic workflow
Run comparative Google searches on these questions and see if the content is better or worse than what is ...
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I wouldn't call it overly offensive. That most of the suggestions are getting rejected means that they suggested edit system is working, especially if it's the only edit the user is making (too trivial).
Hopefully the user gets the message eventually, but if it's a hassle to scrub these, and you don't want to out the user here, flag one of the answers that ...
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Failed/passed reviews are visible in your activity history.
Example:
This suggested edit audit is visible on my activity history
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Guidelines for reviewing Reopen Votes
The items in the Reopen Queue may take more time to process than other queues. If someone votes to re-open a question, either community members disagreed, or the content of the post has changed in an attempt to improve it, so you will need to understand and evaluate the contention.
Basic workflow
Review the question ...
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I don't think the review leader boards are the cause of the problem. Looking at the stats for the First Posts review queue for people who have a minimum of 300 reviews in the last 30 days, I get a list of 45 names. I can see a decent number of names from both the "All Time" and "Today" leader boards. On average this group hits "No Action Needed" 63% of ...
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Community is very active on Stack Overflow. Since you still have quite less reputation, you are able only to flag such questions but users with higher reputations can also cast close and delete votes on questions.
For the link in your question, the question has already been deleted from Stack Overflow. You can use custom flag with text like "Troll detected" ...
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I saw this and another question from the same user in the flag queue just now. For various reasons I think they're the work of a long term troll.
Any sensible flag is helpful, but for cases like this I'd suggest a custom flag reason so it doesn't get cleared as helpful on close. Usually things like this benefit from a moderator looking over them, but if ...
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In this case the edit should be rejected because the appropriate tag has not been added (if it exists). The user may not have the privileges to create a tag or they may simply not have thought about it.
While we do want to remove unnecessary tags from titles we still want complete edits rather than half-done ones.
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There's nothing wrong with having tags in your title, but make sure they blend nicely to the title:
Why shouldn't I use mysql_* functions in PHP?
As opposed to
PHP - Why shouldn't I use mysql_* functions?
In your particular example, rephrasing the title while keeping the technology's name would probably be wiser.
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The review in question: http://stackoverflow.com/review/reopen/2104282
When you go to the Reopen Votes queue, there are a few options to choose from:
Leave Closed
Edit and Reopen
Reopen
Skip
You have chosen "Edit and Reopen", and that's the warning you get before it casts a reopen vote.
To just edit the post without casting a vote, click on "link" ...
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Guidelines for reviewing Close Votes
Basic workflow
You may select filters to focus on a particular category. Each question will ask you "Should this question be closed as X?" however you may vote to close for any reason, or leave open. These reasons are based on previous close votes and automated algorithms, and usually accurately identify the "risk" ...
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Guidelines for reviewing Late Answers
Answers in the Late Answers review queue are also First Posts or very nearly so, since they are posted by new users, so apply all the steps for reviewing First Posts here.
Basic workflow
Many Late Answers are spam or self promotion. A new user searches for a word or phrase and adds the answer "My product does that - ...
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Guidelines for reviewing First Posts
Keep in mind that the user is new to Stack Overflow, so they don't know all of the ins and outs of posting a question/answer.
Questions earn votes according to their value to future users as well as the asker, and according to their answerability. A question that just asks "How do I ..." without clarifying the ...
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Guidelines for reviewing Low Quality Posts
Questions appear in the low quality post queue both by algorithm and by flags from users. [TODO remove this todo if you know this information is correct :) ]
Basic workflow
Check if the post can be improved. If it can, by all means Edit it. A typical example are code-only answers, which can benefit from ...
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I agree with most of the points in Makoto's answer. However, regarding one claim:
There's no harm in it
In my opinion, incomplete edits are actively harmful, and not "helpful, but just barely".
Approving incomplete edits incentivises a quick, cursory reading of a post, followed by a superficial edit. Since there is a rep reward for successful suggested ...
4
The only automatic system against bad reviewing is the review audits. Failing to pass a number of audits will result in an automatic short time suspension from reviewing.
Other than that, moderators recently got access to reviewing statistics for all queues and the ability to manually suspend users from reviewing:
Moderator newsletter, March 2013
...
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I personally would've rejected both as 'too minor'. Editing someone's post is invasive, sometimes even considered offensive, so better make it worth it so the original poster also sees the added value in his work being adapted. Given the amount of questions from non-native speakers, it could even be considered degrading to just fix a few minor grammar ...
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To answer your specific examples:
I would have rejected this edit, it makes some improvement but totally fails to fix the other capitalisation and grammatical errors. This means the question may still be a candidate for the low quality review queue. When a question is only 3 sentences long there is no excuse for not doing a proper fix on it. Those with ...
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So...since I was on both of those reviews (small world, huh?), let me walk you through a bit of my thought process.
The first post - there wasn't much that needed improving. There weren't any misspellings, grammatical improvements that could be done, or anything that was glaringly added to the original question - but the formatting could be changed. That, ...
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I'm broadly in agreement here and largely because I've been active over the past few months and done a bit of (ok, a fair amount of) queue-busting...
The only passage in your post I'm pondering over is:
I've dived into this before, and noticed that most people that actually do a proper job reviewing have a reject rate of between 25% and 50%, like ...
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I don't think the approve/reject ratio has any meaning in this case.
Most of my reviews are approved (though there are far less of them than in the example you provided). That's not due to the fact that I blindly approve everything. I read each suggested edit I review carefully.
When I see an edit that looks valid, I approve it. When I see an edit I'm not ...
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Instead of adding blank spaces so that the formatting is better; you should post a comment asking the OP to do so themselves.
This may sometimes be skipped if the posts are quite old. In which case; you can always search for smaller edits/title updates/retagging.
If you're still unsure about it; leave the post as it is!
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There's an inappropriately small check box above to Save edits, which says Suggested edit was helpful. This is what it looks like:
If you check this, then they gain the +2 for submitting a helpful edit. If you don't check this, then they lose the +2. This also counts as an acceptance or rejection - if you say it's helpful, Community will accept. ...
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You can already do this:
The Improve button allows approvers to apply changes to the edited version of the text, so they can correct typos introduced by the original editor or to make further changes. The revised text is published when the improver saves their changes.
When improving an edit, the reviewer also has the option of marking the suggested ...
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I consider this behavior appropriate for most of the audits. If you're clicking "close", you probably do want to close the question.
However, it kinda falls apart when you want to close a known-good question as a duplicate.
Fixing this would require dragging in code that's currently being extensively re-written; doing so is not feasible at this time. It ...
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Because your assumption is wrong: They're not both about checking the first contributions of a user. One of them is about checking Late Answers, and the other is about checking First Posts.
Late Answers are answers on questions which are more than 30 (60?) days old. While it's true that most of these are from newish users, that's not always the case. I've ...
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Perhaps it might be a good idea to follow the suggested rule "2+ rejections is an automatic denial". Several thoughts:
It seems the preference should be to reject and not to accept — if the edit is that important, someone else will edit it anyway.
Further, if there are more errors (or bigger errors), my guess is that means it is likely that a ...
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I agree with @Servy that we shouldn't consume (an infinite? number of) people on this kind of edit voting, and I don't think "more eyes" would solve the problem. But perhaps, since it is easier to "pass" the review, if at least 2 (of 5) people reject then the edit should be rejected.
In my opinion this edit was bad and should not have passed through the ...
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I would've down-voted that one.
FWIW, this is one of those cases where glancing at the sidebar helps:
That question already had an answer. An accepted answer. An old accepted answer. A partial answer in this case isn't really helping anyone. Older questions often collect new answers that are either copies of older ones, half-assed attempts to answer ...
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I would downvote and leave a constructive comment - something like:
This only answers the (1st|2nd) part of the [OP's][original] question. Could you provide the rest of the answer?
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Before you consider fixing 'the system', pause for a second to consider the age old adagium "if it isn't broken, don't fix it". What you see there is showing exactly why the moderation system works, and the community moderation principle at its best by expressing their opinions through voting.
In this case, I myself agree with both the too minor votes and ...
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They're random: The questions in the close vote queue are those which have been flagged to close or have a close vote. There is a way to filter by tag (see the "filter" option on the queue), but there is no inherent sorting AFAICT.
My guess is that you're seeing this because you're active in the most popular tag on SO (c#).
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Why is it "not realistic"? I think it's perfectly realistic and is exactly the formula I stick to when deciding whether to vote to close as a duplicate.
When a feature request is declined, it's done for a reason. That reason may be valid or invalid but either way you have to come up with a convincing argument against it. If you fail to come up with a ...
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I personally would approve the post.
The content is only useful for later visitors if they are searchable, and with the current state, it is going to give false positive for those who search for "longest string" and give false negative for those who search for "anagram".
The intention of the post is clear enough from the example, so I think there is no ...
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I totally understand why it wasn't approved. It seems like the reviewers saw a whole block of text being deleted, and that was too much to even bother reading the exact content.
After reading carefully the edit I would consider approving the edit, but in real time I'd probably agree with the keepers of the sacred words: Ni, Peng and Neee-Wom (@Knights).
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The title was probably what immediately caused them to reject the edits. No matter how you think about it:
Finding the longest words in a text file
has a vastly different meaning than:
Finding the longest anagram of a given set of letters
That, and the enormous deleted block of text is by far too much to let pass. While it may not be changing the ...
1
However using any of the above flag the post is going to delete very soon. But the question which flag is better to use ?
You can flag it in any of the way ( either as spam or as NAA ), but the better would be flag it as SPAM, the reason is
SPAM flag has higher priority for moderator handling and that's why it will get deleted faster.
The post comes ...
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Undoubtedly flag it as a SPAM. Though it is true that the answer is also not an answer. So we should not disagree with a flag not an answer. After all they brought the spam post in our attention.
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