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This can be considered a follow-up to the following. Because it's the same people and the same problem, but I have a few additional questions.

What should we do when one person tries to delete every duplicate?

  1. What do you do when a secondary tag, such as regex, results in the downvote and closing of questions on a primary tag inappropriately?
  2. What do you do when people take retaliatory actions via downvoting?

It seems like SO is aware of this, but I am not sure it has been corrected.

Consider this question. It is an R question. It could be a bit more clear, but it's not a bad question. Any R user would know how to assist here.

However, the OP made the mistake of tagging this with one of the regex flavored tags. Using this tag places you at high risk of being subjected to hostile behavior. So despite being a decent question, especially for a brand new user, it was voted on to be closed, and downvoted twice (within minutes).

I proceeded to answer, but made the following comment. Yeah, maybe a bit aggressive, but enough is enough.

Why is this downvoted so much? Can the regex mafia be a little kinder to new users?

I then pretty quickly began getting downvoted on other questions that I had answered. They are completely valid R answers, and some may consider them better answers than the regex gurus provided. Because they replace a convoluted regex with a more domain-appropriate solution.

To me, regex is a secondary tag, not a primary tag. What do I mean by this? It means that a question tagged as R, or Python, or Java is first a question about that language and second a question about how to apply a regex. In many of these languages, you actually want to do something else instead of a regex. But team regex seems to disagree and will provide their own vigilante justice to dominate the primary tag, and downvote solutions that do not use their tool of choice.

What do I do as a user about this openly hostile behavior on this site? Can I report retaliatory behavior via downvoting? How do I report a user (we all know who it is). Would that even matter?

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    How is down-voting considered unkind or hostile? We are supposed to vote on question and answer quality and site appropriateness, regardless of poster status, nothing less and nothing more. Also, the first question that you link to looks more like an overly broad work request than a SO question that would help future visitors, and I'm not sure if it would make the best example to illustrate your point. Nov 8, 2022 at 20:00
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    When I make a comment that they do not like, and they go to my page and randomly downvote prior answers that I had, that is unkind and hostile. I also consider it unkind to downvote a brand new user's question while providing no feedback on why it was downvoted. Especially when it's not a bad question, but just not right for their tag (remove the tag and move on).
    – user10917479
    Nov 8, 2022 at 20:02
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    Ah yes, the "must comment when down-voting" argument, new-user subsection. Have you searched meta for previous discussions on this topic? Or have you been involved in prior discussions on this topic on meta? Just curious. Nov 8, 2022 at 20:04
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    I'm sorry I am just very frustrated. I have watched this same exact thing happen on multiple questions, all with the same tag (I answer a sometimes overlapping tag). I remember having questions and not having a clue how to approach it, so I try my best to ask and tag the tool I think I want to use. To have these questions instantly shut down because they chose the wrong tag is just... wrong.
    – user10917479
    Nov 8, 2022 at 20:07
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    As for your other claims, about receiving retaliatory down-votes, that is something that none of us can prove or disprove, and should be flagged the moderators for their decisions on actions. Myself, I just accept that they occur on my questions and answers and move on. Nov 8, 2022 at 20:07
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    The question received 3 downvotes and a single close vote. How is that a continuation of a user who tries to delete duplicates? How do you even know that the downvotes are due to the regex tag? I know a little bit about R, but the question doesn't look well researched. What are "sub-variations" of a regular expression? Even when putting that aside, there is no indication of what op has tried and it looks like a "do my work for me" request.
    – BDL
    Nov 8, 2022 at 20:09
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    I understand your frustration, and the site is not very welcoming to newbies, I agree, but efforts to make it more welcoming have been tried and have not worked well yet. Right now, the biggest effort is with the Question Wizard (I think that it is called this), and perhaps this may help. But regardless, user status should not have bearing on how to vote on a question, not at all. The question should stand or fail, on its own, and regardless of who posted it, a newbie, myself, or Jon Skeet. Nov 8, 2022 at 20:10
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    The question now has a delete vote. I think it has gone a bit too far now, as the question is not bad enough to be deleted.
    – The Thonnu
    Nov 8, 2022 at 20:11
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    @BDL the edit history tells you who removed the tag. It's the same user. You are right, it's not a perfect question. But to many R users, that is a pretty clear question.
    – user10917479
    Nov 8, 2022 at 20:12
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    There is actually a [regex] tag here on MSO for questions about the users of that tag, but I'm not sure if it should be added to this question.
    – The Thonnu
    Nov 8, 2022 at 20:20
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    step one: Determine whether or not the hostility is actually hostility. Step 2, if it is actually hostility, is it hostility from the community, or a single unhappy user. Step 3. If it is a single unhappy user, move on. they have. No amount of further comments or frustration will fix anything at this point, the target of your frustration is gone. Flag any unfriendly/unkind or no longer needed comments.
    – Kevin B
    Nov 8, 2022 at 20:23
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    I am going to the very sound advice of @KevinB and move on. Thanks all. I am not here for the rep (though it is fun). I am here because I like challenges and helping people
    – user10917479
    Nov 8, 2022 at 20:26
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    There was a similar meta question a few months back about similar downvoting behaviour in a particular tag (with very strict patrolling in the tag, that is, scrutinising every single question). Was it the same tag? Nov 8, 2022 at 23:51
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    Yes, the same tag (the meta question is from August). It (not surprisingly) goes further back: "I admit that I (a fairly high rep user) am afraid to post questions in the regex tag. My first question in that tag got attacked (and I deleted it). I was a ~30K rep user at the time. ... you needed to be really really sure ... extra extra good and worthy question before posting one in the regex tag. (Basically, if a tag could be considered "unfriendly", then that tag is." Nov 9, 2022 at 0:04
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    "Can I report retaliatory behavior via downvoting? How do I report a user (we all know who it is)." No, we do not. Jun 26, 2023 at 12:08

2 Answers 2

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...why did you comment with that at all? What value does it actually add here??

The synopsis of the circumstance, as best as I can interpret from this, is:

  • Question gets downvoted
  • You decide to answer
  • You also make inflammatory comment about the downvoting activities on the question

I'm not going to sweat the serial voting since there's a system that handles that already. But I'm absolutely going to chide you for deciding to engage in a flame bait practice.

Use comments to achieve these goals:

  • Clarification on a question (as in, make sure you know what the person is asking)
  • Correction on an answer (as in, you can inquire if this answer is right or ask about a specific angle on an answer; if you think their answer is wrong, you can provide an answer yourself)

Do not use comments in the fashion you did. The people that downvoted are anonymous; you won't know who they are, and knowing who they are won't matter in the long run.

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Frame challenge: improve the question yourself

I'm really confused by that question. It's unclear why they're talking about recognizing a regular expression—there's no regular expression there to "recognize", whatever that means. It's also unclear from the description what they want. You sort of need to guess what they mean by looking at the output, and even then I'd be guessing. In my opinion, the closure is totally valid.

You have edit and reopen vote privileges, so if you understand the question, you can edit it to improve it, then vote to reopen it. It'll be reviewed by the queue.

We encourage improving questions you answer—we even offer three badges for it: Explainer, Refiner, and Illuminator.