There's a question that's collected quite a comment thread. Two of the comments are, IMAO, against community standards. As non-American-non-native English speaker, I would like to have clarification if I didn't quite understood the tone and used inappropriate flags.
The flags were "Rude or abusive", but both were rejected. I would like to know why. The flagged comments are belittling and, I would say, portrait their poster as a jerk.
First one, flagged-and-rejected:
You have at least two lines of invalid syntax in your batch file. If you read the help for the IF command you should see that your IF...ELSE syntax is incorrect. Also the line that begins with %%i should throw a syntax error because I am pretty sure the computer name is not a valid command.
To me, this is not a constructive comment. Instead of explaining the error, it merely tells the OP to read documentation. This is quite passive-aggressive, akin to saying "I know what's the problem, but am not going to tell you." Is this appropriate a way to talk in person with someone one respects, or am I reading too much in it?
The OP asks for details:
Where's the mistake? Here's the Microsoft help page: docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows-server/administration/…
And gets another passive-aggressive reply, flagged-and-rejected. This is a bit more constructive, as it hints to more details. But should one play twenty questions anyway?
Open up a command prompt and type: IF /?. In regards to the link you posted you should be able to see it clear as day. Third and fourth example
The OP seems to be annoyed, and rightly so:
These recommendations are not helpful if you are seeing a clear syntax error. Call out the apparent mistake already.
So, to sum up: where did I go wrong with the flags?