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| visits | member for | 1 year, 5 months |
| seen | Jun 2 at 4:34 | |
| stats | profile views | 202 |
Snark Overflow
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Mar 2 |
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Serial downvotes not being reversed? Hmm, so this is not the place to handle it then? |
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Jan 21 |
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Should Programmers.SE exist? @RobinWinslow welcome to Meta Golf ;) |
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Jan 21 |
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Is a question asking for an algorithm to sort socks into pairs on-topic? Even if it's a research-level computer science question, it doesn't mean it has any connection with software development / programming, or is actually on topic for SO. If all of these questions were on-topic for SO, why would things like cs.stackexchange need to exist? |
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Jan 21 |
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Mobile detection with JavaScript “not constructive?” And there is no point in improving a question if it's not going to be reopened. So it seems the thing to do if I want the best chance of collecting some answers with minimum delay is actually to leave it alone and make a better question, and hope it gets answered before it gets marked as a dupe. |
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Jan 21 |
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Is a question asking for an algorithm to sort socks into pairs on-topic? @AnonE.Mouse You're right, I take it back, he did cover that. I'm still not at all sure what would be done with look-alikes, though. I have tons of socks that all look alike, how will I find their one-and-only? If there are no look-alikes and each pair is visually distinct (holds a visual reference its mate), why do we need an algorithm at all? Just ask the sock who its mate is / spread them all out and look at them / whatever fits the analogy. |
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Jan 21 |
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Is a question asking for an algorithm to sort socks into pairs on-topic? Josh Caswell, right... we likely wouldn't have to ask those questions if this were an actual software development question. Missed the part where the extra space question was handled though, good catch. |
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Jan 21 |
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Is a question asking for an algorithm to sort socks into pairs on-topic? It's also a question of whether the socks are already monogrammed/colored/whatever. Do they have distinguishable features? Does it matter if we pair a sock with a look-alike that is not actually its mate? How much space do we have available to make piles of socks? But yes, also, are we allowed to mark the socks, or will the wife yell at us? The question is silly. |
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Jan 21 |
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Is a question asking for an algorithm to sort socks into pairs on-topic? Ehh, open, whatever ;) |
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Jan 21 |
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Is a question asking for an algorithm to sort socks into pairs on-topic? Those are just closed, not closed as off-topic. |
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Jan 21 |
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Is a question asking for an algorithm to sort socks into pairs on-topic? @Shog9, Who makes those decisions? Isn't it just left up to close/reopen votes and mods, case-by-case? For example, here's one... |
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Jan 21 |
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Mobile detection with JavaScript “not constructive?” Hardmath, yes, but without being sure that people will be allowed to provide more answers, there's a good chance I'd just be wasting (more of) my time. |
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Jan 21 |
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Is a question asking for an algorithm to sort socks into pairs on-topic? It's vague because it's just an analogy that never ties in to reality, so you get all kinds of answers that just have an analogy to go on... so now we're monogramming socks and dying them different colors and so on, and at this point it's unclear how the extended analogy actually ties back in to software development. If it wasn't vague, this guy could have given one answer instead of three. |
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Jan 20 |
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Is a question asking for an algorithm to sort socks into pairs on-topic? This is also a terrible question, I thought it was quite fitting. It is vague, it begs for discussion, and without having the slightest clue how it's supposed to be applied to actual software, it's impractical to try to answer it in a useful way. |
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Jan 20 |
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Is a question asking for an algorithm to sort socks into pairs on-topic? I can handle an analogy. I have a low tolerance for high-volume blatant trolling. And as I said, if you want to take it seriously, fine, let's close it as a duplicate. |
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Jan 20 |
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Mobile detection with JavaScript “not constructive?” Maybe I'm going about this the wrong way... if I opened a new question with very similar title, but put more effort into it, do you think it would be likely to be closed as a duplicate of the question I linked here? I'm really just hoping the answers can be improved on, although I don't have a better answer myself. +1 BTW, thanks. |
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Jan 20 |
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Mobile detection with JavaScript “not constructive?” Apparently this system only lets you flag / vote on a given question once, that's what I'm saying. So now I'm stuck, I can't act on it, I can only get others to act on it, which sort of feels wrong if I just have friends do it because I asked nicely or whatever. |
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Jan 20 |
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Mobile detection with JavaScript “not constructive?” And the proper channel for getting it reopened would be what, exactly, now that I can't vote on it or flag it again? Or, if it changes enough, will the system let me act on it again? I suppose I can just go into a chat room and have people vote on it, but I'd like to do it the proper way. |
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Jan 20 |
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Mobile detection with JavaScript “not constructive?” I don't agree that it should be closed. I'm willing to edit it to meet whatever requirements need to be met for it to be a "real question." |
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Jan 20 |
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Mobile detection with JavaScript “not constructive?” Alright, so what is the next step in the process of trying to get it reopened, since the close reason is pretty clearly invalid? Is there an appeal process for flags or something? I think I'd like to just keep reopening this as long as it keeps getting improperly resolved. |
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Jan 20 |
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Mobile detection with JavaScript “not constructive?” Maybe what I'm missing here is the overall point of these questions. I'm assuming that if the question is useful, and the answers are useful, then even if the OP made no original research attempt or whatever, the question should be left alone, as it will benefit a large audience. Maybe that's not the case? |

