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?
- What do you do when a secondary tag, such as regex, results in the downvote and closing of questions on a primary tag inappropriately?
- 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?