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S Jul 1, 2014 at 22:24 history notice removed CommunityBot
S Jul 1, 2014 at 22:24 history unlocked CommunityBot
S Jul 1, 2014 at 21:21 history notice added animusonStaffMod Comments only
S Jul 1, 2014 at 21:21 history locked animusonStaffMod
Jul 1, 2014 at 21:08 comment added fbueckert And I'm done. There's no reasoning with you, I see.
Jul 1, 2014 at 21:03 comment added fbueckert @cluemein Again, you are using the answer to prop up your question. Questions have to stand on their own in order to be valid. Whether you got an answer or not is entirely immaterial. From a quick read of your first question, it seems to be asking more for a primer on testing than an actual problem. I don't use SO much, but if I did, for something like this, I would attempt to solve the problem on my own, and if I ran into a problem, I would narrow it to the specific issue I'm having. The second seems to be a best practice question. Doesn't seem to be a programming issue.
Jul 1, 2014 at 21:03 comment added Servy @cluemein If you don't care then that's certainly your decision. Asking quality questions that meet SO's guidelines is hard. If you can't/won't meet them, then that's your decision to make. There are plenty of people who have no interest in asking questions SO considers acceptable, and that's fine.
Jul 1, 2014 at 21:02 comment added Servy @cluemein And yet there have been quite a lot of people who have looked at your question, and quite a lot more have felt that it was too broad than felt that it wasn't. It seems that your opinion of how broad a question should be simply differs from the other members of the community. SO is designed for specific programming questions.
Jul 1, 2014 at 20:59 comment added cluemein I have been polite, but now, I really am STARTING (caps for emphasis, so I am CLEAR on what I mean) to not care at this point.
Jul 1, 2014 at 20:50 comment added fbueckert @cluemein And by strawmanning, you have demonstrated why your questions have not been reopened. You are making an attempt to apply the feedback, but you seem to be of the attitude, "I have put in my effort, that makes the question acceptable." Never mind that while, yes, effort is a good thing, it does not automatically make what you are asking acceptable. You've been given more feedback on what you need to improve to make the question better. You can either accept it, or not.
Jul 1, 2014 at 20:49 comment added Servy @cluemein I didn't say it wasn't clear. I said it was too broad. That you like the answer doesn't make the question not broad, for exactly the reason demonstrated in the example in my last comment. Attacking me, rather than discussing the question, isn't going to help you.
Jul 1, 2014 at 20:46 comment added cluemein Its a very clear question with very clear answer. The accepted answer is educational in relation to the question, very helpful and informative. I think you just don't want to change your mind. If you had believed the world was flat and I put you into space, you would still think it was flat through some contrived reason. The answer was clear. The answer successfully answered the now very narrow question, is educational, and if you disagree with that, I have to conclude that SO is truly lost, and I might as well stop giving a flip about quality, since it doesn't help me at all.
Jul 1, 2014 at 20:40 comment added Servy @cluemein The problem is that an answer to your question of "do A or B" cannot be answered with just "Do A". It merits explanation. Again, just because a given answer provides all you want to know doesn't mean it's a complete answer to the question. If someone asks, "What should I do with my life" and someone answers, "become a programmer" the fact that an answer is provided doesn't mean that the question isn't broad. The fact that the answer was acceptable to the person asking the question also doesn't mean the question or the answer are quality posts.
Jul 1, 2014 at 20:32 comment added cluemein It has a complete answer in my view, and is helpful. I now just narrowed the question so much, that there are only two or three possible answers. No question, none, can be narrower than that. Otherwise we should all start flagging every question as too broad because by that logic, simply being a question makes it too broad. And I am sorry for putting too many words in your view, but I like to be very very clear, very detailed, etc. etc. I don't want to be unclear, deliberate irony there, as the other question was flagged for that. So do we all start flagging every question in existence?
Jul 1, 2014 at 20:26 comment added Servy @cluemein A quality, complete answer should be able to be posted in just a few paragraphs or less. As it is, you're clearly not to that point. The question is attracting incomplete answers precisely because it's too broad to answer completely.
Jul 1, 2014 at 20:25 comment added Servy @cluemein You're asking how you want to approach testing a problem. How is that not a broad question? Even the answers make it clear that the question is too broad when they open up with "it depends". They each had to make a whole bunch of assumptions to narrow the context themselves to provide a reasonably scoped answer, but since those assumptions aren't in the question, the answers are incomplete. They'd need to cover all possibilities that they choose not to bring up to be complete answers.
Jul 1, 2014 at 20:24 comment added cluemein I have improved it multiple times, drastically, and its still to broad; what, does it fill the whole universe and I have to get it down to the width of an atom?
Jul 1, 2014 at 20:21 comment added cluemein I do not understand how it is unclear or too broad, I narrowed it down as far as it goes. Also, if you don't understand the other question, why judge the other, because though not the same question, its in the same topical area, or are we talking about different questions here? For it to be less broad, it would be going into another dimension. So please, really, explain how it is too broad, because I can't fathom this at all.
Jul 1, 2014 at 20:13 comment added Servy @cluemein Your second question is absolutely too broad, there's no question there in my mind. The first question I don't understand the subject enough to judge whether or not it is clear.
Jul 1, 2014 at 20:11 comment added cluemein Well, have you read my question? It seems to be quite clear, and not broad to me, and I made it less so now. I am starting to feel that it is all chance now, and I might as well clear cookies and cache, and all other tracking, wait for my ip address to get renewed to a new one and make a new account. Because if I make my questions better, and they simply get voted down for the heck of it (read what it was previously, it was improved, I put work into this), I really have no incentive to try improving my answers. speaking hypothetically, not planning to, just illustrating the implications.
Jul 1, 2014 at 20:00 comment added Servy @cluemein You're drawing a whole bunch of attention to your questions by posting about them here on meta. They've been viewed by lots of people who could reopen the question if they felt that it merited reopening. That they haven't indicates that they feel it shouldn't be reopened. Getting a downvote indicates the same thing; people read the question and felt that, after the edit, it was not acceptable.
Jul 1, 2014 at 19:58 comment added cluemein Ok, the question that was closed, and I made better (and which I made better), is still closed, and even worse, just got voted down more. After making many improvements. I was on Servy's side of this argument, until that happened. I fix it so it gets voted down further?!?!
Jul 1, 2014 at 19:01 comment added Servy @PeterHorvath Sounds like you simply don't like the closing criteria, rather than that there are questions not meeting the close criteria that aren't being reopened.
Jul 1, 2014 at 19:00 comment added fbueckert @PeterHorvath Classifying it as misuse is exactly the wrong attitude to have. Could it be? Maybe. I sincerely doubt it, though. Rather, look at it as a sign of needing improvement. It's constructive criticism at it's core, and taking a hostile approach to what is, at its essence, feedback designed to help, doesn't do you, or anyone else, any good.
Jul 1, 2014 at 18:45 comment added peterh @Servy Your statements directly contradicts my experience. It is simply not so. Hostile closing of questions, marking similar questions as (exact) duplicates, it is quite common here. I really can't understand, what is the psychological background, what makes the misuse of the power so funny.
Jul 1, 2014 at 18:39 comment added Servy @PeterHorvath Before the reopen queue existed, yes, that was more or less true. Now that we have a reopen queue that's simply not the case, and posts that get improved to the point of no longer meeting the close criteria can easily be reopened.
Jul 1, 2014 at 18:37 comment added peterh You aren't speaking from the important thing. The important thing is, that there is practically no way to reopen an once closed question. Yes, I know, theoretically yes. But practically, none, because most of the reopen votes never ends or have a negative result. It is partially the problem of the system (there is no way to contact the people closed your question), and partially the moderators/reviewers (they are using your power often for unneeded hostility).
Jul 1, 2014 at 18:36 comment added cluemein ok. But would improving the question actually get it reopened since its already been answered? (Also a long time ago I just realized, I ignorantly closed one of my own questions because it had been answered, whoops rofl).
Jul 1, 2014 at 18:01 history answered Servy CC BY-SA 3.0