| bio | website | |
|---|---|---|
| location | Sunnyvale, CA | |
| age | 27 | |
| visits | member for | 3 years, 9 months |
| seen | yesterday | |
| stats | profile views | 35 |
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Apr 9 |
comment |
Unbump a question if the answer providing the bump is deleted @GUIJunkie No, that leads to the problem mentioned here (and I also mentioned it on cooking): users can undelete their posts in order to deliberately bump them. Potential solutions are messier; you have to distinguish between owner deletion and mod deletion. |
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Apr 6 |
comment |
Answer appears automatically converted as a comment @Nick While I'm also frustrated by the feature, the community is really bad at voting on things like this. People definitely upvote trivial answers. People upvote answers that are explicitly copies of answers from other questions. And even high-rep users sometimes post things that are too trivial. The one time I ran into this, I realized I was indeed doing a bad job of summarizing what I was linking to. It's just the implementation that's problematic. |
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Mar 20 |
awarded | Yearling |
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Mar 20 |
comment |
Is it inappropriate to post long answers with sample illustrations? @GangDownvoted The two aren't mutually exclusive. If you could put everything in the answer, there'd never be a need for external links. The thing that's bad is when important information is only on linked-to page. In that case, link rot means the answer becomes useless. If the link is a "for reference" or "for more information" link as part of a good answer, then the link is useful to the readers, and even if it rots the answer is still good. |
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Mar 20 |
answered | Is it inappropriate to post long answers with sample illustrations? |
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Mar 11 |
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How do I contact a user privately, as a moderator? You say that you should make the room private and grant write access before super-pinging, but then the steps have it in the other order. Which is right? |
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Jan 25 |
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How can we provide feedback when improving suggested edits? @AndrewBarber Ah, great. From the post about notifiaction: "Tab name completion can be used... It also does not work for editors." And it sounds like the lack of completion for this "rare use case" is deliberate. In any case, this isn't exactly a full solution, because it only works when you marked the edit as helpful. Otherwise, the user never edited the question and can't be @-notified. |
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Jan 25 |
comment |
How can we provide feedback when improving suggested edits? @AndrewBarber Given that I don't get the autocomplete popup on for the users who suggested edits, I'm not sure that actually works. |
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Jan 25 |
revised |
How can we provide feedback when improving suggested edits? added 47 characters in body |
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Jan 25 |
asked | How can we provide feedback when improving suggested edits? |
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Jul 23 |
comment |
Unbump a question if the answer providing the bump is deleted I don't know what the best answer is, but I can motivate solving the problem. For <10k users, it's pretty annoying when reading new activity from the front page that some of it might just be from bad new answers immediately deleted by mods. 10k users can at least see the deleted answers and quickly realize, but <10k users (assuming they even know that this can happen) have to scroll through and see that there's nothing new, or remember the username and search for it. Sometimes I spend as much time doing this as reading actual new content. |
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May 3 |
accepted | Addressing users who make many trivial edits |
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May 2 |
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Addressing users who make many trivial edits @Gilles: I don't really want to say yes or no to that, but I can say that this is definitely not an attempt to escalate that meta post. (Front page issues aside, I think it's still a useful question, because unlike most other things with stackexchange, there's not an upvote/downvote mechanism for good/bad edits, so it's not obvious how to respond to ones that seem to need feedback.) |
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May 2 |
awarded | Nice Question |
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May 2 |
comment |
Addressing users who make many trivial edits Thanks for the answer! I do think that the home page is a bigger deal than some make it out to be; if you're not a person who knows all the answers already, you might be interested in reading new answers to existing questions, so the home page is great. I also think that in some cases, the problem is a lack of distinction between pedantic edits (new version is more correct) and useless edits (new version is just different style). But I think you've done a great job covering all the possibilities here! Big +1. |
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May 2 |
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Addressing users who make many trivial edits @Dennis: I aimed for brevity in the title. "Too much" can easily also be in the sense of "making too many unnecessary changes as part of an edit"; I think "many trivial edits" misses some of the point - but feel free to edit (ha ha) the title if you like. |
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May 2 |
comment |
Addressing users who make many trivial edits It can be partially an issue of quantity: there's the home page crowding with bumped questions, and the fact that if it were just one in a thousand of dubious quality, they could be swept under the rug (or fixed), without any need to address the user's behavior on the whole. |
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May 2 |
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Addressing users who make many trivial edits @Dennis: Like I said, my general attitude is that it's possible to go far. There are two general ways. One, too many trivial edits (especially to valid but unnecessary ones to old questions) makes the front page useless. (Perhaps this is a problem with the front page implementation, but I obviously do not want to include that in the scope of my question.) Two, an editor can be overzealous in editing others' posts to conform to their style ("I would have said it this way") when the original was okay; the edit is not "wrong" but it is unnecessary. |
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May 2 |
asked | Addressing users who make many trivial edits |
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Mar 13 |
revised |
Sorting new answers to old questions added 192 characters in body |