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May
13
comment JavaScript vs. jQuery, why wasn't this question closed?
@GeorgeStocker, I have a pretty good idea of how to make it not a list question, while keeping it basically exactly the same. This seems more like a political maneuver than anything, but I'll do it if it will help you take the question seriously. I'm not so sure about not eliciting extended discussion, clearly it's a controversial subject and people want to "discuss" it rather than answering it. Believe me, I would have loved to avoid chatter and just get a straight answer, but it's difficult given the culture surrounding that particular technology. I'll see what I can do.
May
13
comment JavaScript vs. jQuery, why wasn't this question closed?
Alright, that's interesting, I was under the impression that comments were mostly discouraged, and that it would be better as part of the question rather than a series of comments, which would probably be difficult to read (especially with quotes in them, and code).
May
13
comment JavaScript vs. jQuery, why wasn't this question closed?
@Servy: "A few sections of what was deleted possibly should have been re-added, but the majority of what was deleted shouldn't have been." ... I assume you meant "shouldn't have been re-added," not "shouldn't have been deleted." What's the appropriate way to respond to parts of an answer, if not by quoting it in the question?
May
13
comment JavaScript vs. jQuery, why wasn't this question closed?
@Servy, check the mod's note on that edit, apparently he didn't read what he was editing. The part he edited out was not an answer. He also edited out material that contained specific parameters for what was and was not to be considered "trivial," which apparently confused answerers here (see the "how many lines of code" part of Manishearth's answer). The existing question is deleted and that cannot be reversed AFAIK; I see no reason to edit it. I will make a new, similar question.
May
13
comment JavaScript vs. jQuery, why wasn't this question closed?
@Servy, I see. I have a copy, I'll fix it up to adhere to the guidelines and post it again.
May
13
revised JavaScript vs. jQuery, why wasn't this question closed?
added 150 characters in body
May
13
revised JavaScript vs. jQuery, why wasn't this question closed?
added 150 characters in body
May
13
revised JavaScript vs. jQuery, why wasn't this question closed?
SE hates comments
May
13
comment JavaScript vs. jQuery, why wasn't this question closed?
"A re-open vote already? I wonder who that could be" ... wasn't me, I "spent" my reopen vote the first time around. Maybe it was someone who actually read the question?
May
13
comment JavaScript vs. jQuery, why wasn't this question closed?
Yeah it is. Read it again, it's very clear.
May
13
comment JavaScript vs. jQuery, why wasn't this question closed?
@RichardJ.RossIII, I disagree. The answer goes something like "promises, XHR, and possibly event handlers" with an explanation for each. Of course I can't provide the answer myself since I'm no jQuery guru.
May
13
comment JavaScript vs. jQuery, why wasn't this question closed?
@RichardJ.RossIII, clearly it was relevant enough to the users of SO to generate a good bit of interest. It certainly wasn't a tumbleweed question, and as it applies to a fairly large audience, it wasn't localized either. I don't think that really applies here.
May
13
comment JavaScript vs. jQuery, why wasn't this question closed?
Of course they shouldn't do it. It defeats the purpose of having a self-governing system. As I understand it, they only have the ability to do this so people can't bounty-lock things. The question had no active close votes (and 2 net upvotes) when I applied the bounty, before Meta got dragged into it.
May
13
comment JavaScript vs. jQuery, why wasn't this question closed?
In fact, in light of this conversation we're having here and the last three paragraphs of this "answer," I'm starting to doubt that you guys actually read the question. That's fine, I didn't write the question for Meta, I wrote it for SO. If you're going to vote on it, close vote and reopen it, and so on, at least read it first so I don't need to rehash it all here.
May
13
comment JavaScript vs. jQuery, why wasn't this question closed?
@Servy, the question specifically applies only to the browsers supported by that version of the library, and no others.
May
13
comment JavaScript vs. jQuery, why wasn't this question closed?
@Servy why does it require work? I'm only asking about a specific version of the library; the "list" will never change.
May
13
comment JavaScript vs. jQuery, why wasn't this question closed?
@Servy, well then, don't think of it as a list. Think of it as one single answer, detailing the non-trivial features of the library, all at once. Otherwise, we can call any answer on the site that discusses more than one aspect of one thing a "list."
May
13
comment JavaScript vs. jQuery, why wasn't this question closed?
@Servy, listing two or three features in one answer is not appropriate? Are you sure? I thought the reason list questions were out of scope had more to do with never-ending lists or lists of "dozens of things," as George Stocker indicates in his answer
May
13
comment JavaScript vs. jQuery, why wasn't this question closed?
"It's a list of X question: Any answer is equally valid. So long as that answer lists something that isn't natively available to a browser, it's "in". That means you could have dozens of equally valid answers. Which answer should be accepted at that point?" Not dozens. One or two. Maybe three. Is that too many things to list? Keep in mind I was asking for non-trivial features, which I specifically quantified in the part of the question you deleted.
May
13
comment JavaScript vs. jQuery, why wasn't this question closed?
I also added a note detailing a specific boundary between trivial and non-trivial features (4 LOC at 80 characters per line) to avoid any subjectivity. I was only asking about non-trivial features, not trivial ones. My goal was to learn about the non-trivial features of the library. Apparently it is a very short list, I didn't think listing them should be a problem.