| bio | website | |
|---|---|---|
| location | ||
| age | ||
| visits | member for | 2 years, 7 months |
| seen | Feb 5 at 20:21 | |
| stats | profile views | 13 |
Some Guy
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Feb 5 |
asked | Support for proxy-questions on other SE sites |
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Aug 21 |
comment |
What to do with an accepted answer that doesn't really answer the question? Do the moderators who mark questions as duplicates ensure that they understand the subject of the question before doing so? I'm wondering about dupes of questions with accepted-answers that might help the OP but don't answer the actual question (eg. because the answer is now out of date or the question was badly worded or misleading and the OP actually meant something else). |
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Aug 5 |
comment |
Flag .. it doesn't belong here .. off-topic does not let me flag articles to move to other sites on Stack Exchange Is this really the correct way to flag for migration? The "It doesn't belong here" option really seems like the most obvious option to select if you think that the question belongs somewhere else. How are new or even experienced users supposed to know this? Telling users to "read the FAQ" or "search on meta" is all very well, but most people don't/won't/haven't and these are really just excuses for an interface that could be much more intuitive with some simple improvement. Rather than tell people "RTFM", let's eliminate the need for a manual all together. |
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Sep 30 |
comment |
Asking a follow-up question This seems sensible, but see here: stackoverflow.com/questions/1231616/… The original poster asked a question, the question was only partially answered, with no reputation I had to add a follow-up question as a new answer because I couldn't comment. If I posted my follow-up as a new question, it's simply a duplicate of the original question which isn't very good. |
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Sep 30 |
comment |
what's the justification for the commenting reputation requirement? This does make sense, but if random spammers can post questions/answers anyway it seems a bit strange to restrict comments. It also very frustrating for new users and I think it is bound to lead to comments being posted as "answers" which reduces the relevancy. |
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Sep 30 |
awarded | Scholar |
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Sep 30 |
accepted | what's the justification for the commenting reputation requirement? |
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Sep 30 |
awarded | Student |
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Sep 30 |
asked | what's the justification for the commenting reputation requirement? |