| bio | website | medoragroup.com |
|---|---|---|
| location | Phoenix, AZ | |
| age | 32 | |
| visits | member for | 2 years, 4 months |
| seen | 17 mins ago | |
| stats | profile views | 103 |
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1d |
comment |
What is the best way to style this semicolon? @KeithThompson - I don't disagree on something like braces/brackets. Ideally, the question/answer would show the line of code (or in this case, desired output) illustrating the point so there is no ambiguity. The bigger issue might be that the semicolon was the only thing edited, resulting in multiple, trivial edits which are equally valid (or invalid). |
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1d |
comment |
What is the best way to style this semicolon? Why wouldn't the text spell out the word, i.e. "Add a semicolon to the end of the current line..."? Or perhaps I'm missing something. |
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May 17 |
answered | Why vote down if the answer IS constructive? |
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May 15 |
comment |
Potential sockpuppets of a troll that don't seem to be trolling themselves. What should I do? Agree with @Juhana. Not saying you are wrong in this particular case, but there are many such questions that match a query such as, "mvc build my own framework". Example, Example, Example, Example |
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May 15 |
comment |
Potential sockpuppets of a troll that don't seem to be trolling themselves. What should I do? "These are pretty unusual questions." - not really. There are dozens of such vague questions that get asked every day, so I wouldn't consider that to be a red flag per se. With regards to a hijack, a moderator can look for IP discrepancies, but based on prior questions by the user, it just appears to be a poor question related to their current skills. |
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May 14 |
comment |
Trivial editing on my answer Personally, I'd go with a semicolon after the word "this". However, I think both edits were fairly useless. They certainly didn't address a "substantial issue". |
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May 13 |
comment |
A sincere request for help in earning my “question asking privileges” back +1 for trying to do the right thing. Tangential to the actual question, but I suggest building up your technical baseline through books/training. It's hard to build a foundation just using the help you find from an online community (even one with helpful people). With your semi-technical and educational background (and being motivated), you probably could exceed "beginner" status quickly. |
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May 5 |
comment |
It's rather difficult to look over an answer that doesn't exist Yes, I'm pretty sure the link in the answer has little or nothing to do with the question. It looks like someone threw together an answer as a cover for spamming a link to their blog? |
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May 5 |
revised |
It's rather difficult to look over an answer that doesn't exist Added screenshot; updated verbiage to reflect. |
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May 5 |
comment |
It's rather difficult to look over an answer that doesn't exist I guess it's because I'm logged in...I see my edit to the post without any indication that it's actually pending. When I view the post anonymously, it appears in its original form. Confusing, though. |
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May 5 |
comment |
It's rather difficult to look over an answer that doesn't exist That's odd...I edited in a screenshot, but (even though I was told it needed to be reviewed), it instantly appeared and there's no edit history. |
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May 5 |
suggested | suggested edit on It's rather difficult to look over an answer that doesn't exist |
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May 4 |
awarded | Nice Answer |
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May 4 |
comment |
Does this edit really lose the original meaning or intent of the question? In terms of quality, I think it's a night and day difference. Unfortunately, it's so much better that the original author may no longer understand it ("anagram", "dictionary file", "given set"). |
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May 4 |
revised |
Stack Exchange is too harsh to new users—please help them improve low-quality posts and avoid being uncivil added 327 characters in body |
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May 4 |
answered | Stack Exchange is too harsh to new users—please help them improve low-quality posts and avoid being uncivil |
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May 4 |
comment |
You should use 'mysqli..' comment argument It's the same as when I see someone using archaic HTML elements like center and frameset...it usually doesn't prevent me from answering, but I'd be doing them a disservice if I didn't throw up a big red flag. As active SO users, we see such advice all the time, but you'd be surprised how many people are unfamiliar with best practices. |
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May 2 |
awarded | Nice Answer |
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May 2 |
comment |
Show suspended users with their normal reputation in the Data Explorer I see. So the concern is that you can easily view every suspended user with a single query? or were you able to extrapolate more than that (just curious, I already +1 your suggestion on the basis of accurate results). |
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May 2 |
comment |
Show suspended users with their normal reputation in the Data Explorer Definitely agree from the perspective of not skewing metrics. Can't say I care much about the privacy of someone with 9500 points of voting fraud who is banned until 2019. Of course, there may be implications to the innocent to be considered, and there are far less grievous offenses for which a user might be suspended. |