| bio | website | |
|---|---|---|
| location | Netherlands | |
| age | 39 | |
| visits | member for | 3 years, 7 months |
| seen | May 22 at 17:45 | |
| stats | profile views | 287 |
I'm a software developer at a telco supporting line-of-business applications. We use a variety of technologies from ASP.NET to Perl. I've come to appreciate SQL more over time, and I now spend most of my time in the database.
If you'd like to learn SQL properly, consider the awesome free SQL course from Stanford. The organization behind the course offers many other classes. I'm enjoying the Fantasy and Science Fiction course.
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May 21 |
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We need to be a little less hostile team "close" and team "downvote" are now beating team "edit" and team "salvage" to the punch. --> exactly! :) |
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May 20 |
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We need to be a little less hostile @Slaks: Forbidding something often has the opposite effect. People will probably make a sport of posting the questions in such a way to avoid the vote ban. |
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May 20 |
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We need to be a little less hostile So the question would be better if it included a list of failed Javascript snippets, and a list of Google queries that did not show up an answer? Rather, I think "lack of research" is just a nice front for the underlying reason, "I don't like people who don't follow SO etiquette". But that category includes all new users, and they deserve better. |
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May 20 |
answered | We need to be a little less hostile |
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May 19 |
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Should there be a religion stack exchange site? @Yannis: Thanks, I assumed Meta was the discussion site for Area 51, but it looks like Area 51 has its own discussion site. |
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May 19 |
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Are moderators closing good questions as “Not constructive” +1 I think it would be great fun to have a non-constructive stack exchange site. You might call it trolls.stackexchange.com :D |
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May 19 |
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Are moderators closing good questions as “Not constructive” Are you sure that a regular user can vote to reopen a question that was closed by a moderator? |
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May 19 |
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Should there be a religion stack exchange site? Why is this question off-topic? Where would it be on-topic? |
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May 14 |
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Quick downvotes for question that looks simple but is not @FreshPrinceOfSO: By "research", I suppose you mean Google. I assist many people in IRL. Although many are highly educated and intelligent, few of them can find row_number() with Google. |
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May 14 |
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Quick downvotes for question that looks simple but is not @FreshPrinceOfSO: In SQL at least, failed attempts have little value. Many people will not know row_number() and there is no obvious way to learn about it. Most people who downvote those questions couldn't even answer them. |
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May 14 |
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Quick downvotes for question that looks simple but is not Yet another example |
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May 13 |
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Quick downvotes for question that looks simple but is not It's a practical programming problem. It's downvoted because people think it's easy to figure out with a bit of effort. But it's not. Even if you took a regular SQL course, I doubt you would learn about count(distinct col1). |
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May 13 |
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Quick downvotes for question that looks simple but is not Here's another one The given close reason is "not a real question", which is not rational. If SO encourages this behavior, there should be close reasons for "I personally don't like this question" or "The OP is a slacker" |
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May 13 |
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Quick downvotes for question that looks simple but is not The question is about fairly general issues people run into when using EF, but the title did not mention them. Perhaps a more specific title will help. |
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May 13 |
asked | Quick downvotes for question that looks simple but is not |
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May 12 |
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Should authors be encouraged to maintain their answers? @RichardTingle: When you edit an old answer, the questioner is no longer there to judge it. There are no other answerers to compete with. You're just talking to yourself, corrupting an old Question & Answer flow. |
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May 12 |
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Should we have “fault” and “no fault” versions of “not constructive” closes? @Shog9: Thanks, haha omg. Maybe that's why so many new user questions receive downvotes-- it's free! |
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May 12 |
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Should we have “fault” and “no fault” versions of “not constructive” closes? Most close votes express dislike. For example, a question about regex html parsers would be closed. Not because it's a bad question, but because people (rightfully) dislike regex html parsers. It seems obvious that dislike translates more easily to a free downvote (by way of close) than to a paid downvote. |
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May 12 |
answered | Should we have “fault” and “no fault” versions of “not constructive” closes? |
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May 12 |
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Should we have “fault” and “no fault” versions of “not constructive” closes? What's the purpose of the automatic downvote? Have you considered the effect on well-willing new users, who are not yet "educated" to SO etiquette? |