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May 23, 2017 at 12:38 history edited CommunityBot
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Jul 23, 2014 at 11:59 comment added Shafik Yaghmour @RobertHarvey so generally the community closed a lot of undefined behavior question in the C tag as a dup of Why are these constructs undefined behavior? but it is not really a general question. The C++ tag has Undefined Behavior and Sequence Points which is more of a catch all. So you are saying the C tag need an equivalent? Otherwise we have to find exact duplicate questions to close these sequence point questions?
Jul 22, 2014 at 16:51 comment added Shafik Yaghmour @RobertHarvey I think it is a bit of a stretch but I reposted with a corrected link anyway.
Jul 22, 2014 at 16:51 comment added Robert Harvey Mod If you want to eliminate the answers, then the questions are clearly not dupes in any way.
Jul 22, 2014 at 16:50 comment added Gilles 'SO- stop being evil' @RobertHarvey sigh It isn't even a Freudian slip. Your remark about answers making questions duplicate is obviously a strawman, considering that we are now talking about questions with the exact same code.
Jul 22, 2014 at 16:50 comment added Shafik Yaghmour @RobertHarvey I found you an exact duplicate here which by the way was closed similarly to the one in this question. Should it be reopened too? It was highly downvoted most likely b/c SO tends to really dislike these questions, despite the fact that it would be hard to figure what is going on unless you know the terminology which if you did then you would not ask.
Jul 22, 2014 at 16:47 comment added Robert Harvey Mod @ShafikYaghmour It actually does matter. Whether it's a Freudian Slip or not, answers don't make questions duplicates, questions do. If you really want a generalized sequence-point question to close duplicates against, then write a canonical question/answer pair that addresses them in the general case. But don't close questions as "your answer can be found on this question over here" unless the question itself is a dupe.
Jul 22, 2014 at 16:44 comment added Gilles 'SO- stop being evil' @RobertHarvey The duplicate close box understands that when you paste an answer into it, you meant the question. It's not too far-fetched to hope that humans would understand that too.
Jul 22, 2014 at 16:44 comment added Shafik Yaghmour @RobertHarvey I must have found it in search through the answer and forgot to copy the share box under the question. I can delete and repost my comment if you think it makes a difference.
Jul 22, 2014 at 16:29 comment added Robert Harvey Mod @ShafikYaghmour: Why are you pointing to an answer?
Jul 22, 2014 at 15:14 comment added Deduplicator @ShafikYaghmour: That's more a carbon-copy than just an exact duplicate ;-).
Jul 22, 2014 at 15:01 comment added Shafik Yaghmour @RobertHarvey so are you saying that with all the sequence point questions we need all the same elements to line up or it is not a duplicate? That sounds a little silly, if you are not saying that, then can you spell out the details because I don't see it.
Jul 22, 2014 at 14:48 comment added Gilles 'SO- stop being evil' @RobertHarvey As someone who has taught this in a class, I don't see how it is not a duplicate. It's not just that they're both about sequence points (which is indeed too vast a topic to cover in a single question), but they're both about assigning to a variable in one argument to a function call and accessing that variable in another argument. What is different about the questions that makes them not duplicates? Why make people answer the same question again (which so far two users have done in a catastrophically bad way)?
Jul 22, 2014 at 14:21 comment added Robert Harvey Mod It doesn't look like a duplicate to me; it looks like an end-around. I've reopened. That they're both about sequence points doesn't make the question a dupe.
Jul 22, 2014 at 14:13 history answered Gilles 'SO- stop being evil' CC BY-SA 3.0