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I'm afraid this is a "me too" answer (the alternative was yet-another-duplicate-question), but I hope it adds an interesting perspective.

In this question: using boost condition variableusing boost condition variable

The accepted/upvoted answer is clearly wrong to someone with experience in this area, and clearly plausible to the naive.

The OP said "this does not work (my program hangs)" The author of the answer replied with a comment that said "Oh you should use this hack (timed wait on a condition variable)" and that was the end of the discussion. The answer itself was never fixed and is still wrong.

Yesterday I posted a correct answer, downvoted the incorrect answer, added comments that indicated what was wrong with it and asked the answerer to edit the code in the answer to (at least) reflect the conclusion reached in the comments.

So is there any other way to help the community process fix this situation before it misleads future SO users?

Just to be clear, I'm not in this for rep -- I'd gladly delete my answer if Nim fixes his. I just hate having to diagnose and fix this problem yet again the next time one of my co-workers finds this misleading answer.


  

Update: Nim updated his post, but he took a different approach, so I left my answer up, too. I.e: the process worked -- the answer is now usable.

I'm afraid this is a "me too" answer (the alternative was yet-another-duplicate-question), but I hope it adds an interesting perspective.

In this question: using boost condition variable

The accepted/upvoted answer is clearly wrong to someone with experience in this area, and clearly plausible to the naive.

The OP said "this does not work (my program hangs)" The author of the answer replied with a comment that said "Oh you should use this hack (timed wait on a condition variable)" and that was the end of the discussion. The answer itself was never fixed and is still wrong.

Yesterday I posted a correct answer, downvoted the incorrect answer, added comments that indicated what was wrong with it and asked the answerer to edit the code in the answer to (at least) reflect the conclusion reached in the comments.

So is there any other way to help the community process fix this situation before it misleads future SO users?

Just to be clear, I'm not in this for rep -- I'd gladly delete my answer if Nim fixes his. I just hate having to diagnose and fix this problem yet again the next time one of my co-workers finds this misleading answer.


 

Update: Nim updated his post, but he took a different approach, so I left my answer up, too. I.e: the process worked -- the answer is now usable.

I'm afraid this is a "me too" answer (the alternative was yet-another-duplicate-question), but I hope it adds an interesting perspective.

In this question: using boost condition variable

The accepted/upvoted answer is clearly wrong to someone with experience in this area, and clearly plausible to the naive.

The OP said "this does not work (my program hangs)" The author of the answer replied with a comment that said "Oh you should use this hack (timed wait on a condition variable)" and that was the end of the discussion. The answer itself was never fixed and is still wrong.

Yesterday I posted a correct answer, downvoted the incorrect answer, added comments that indicated what was wrong with it and asked the answerer to edit the code in the answer to (at least) reflect the conclusion reached in the comments.

So is there any other way to help the community process fix this situation before it misleads future SO users?

Just to be clear, I'm not in this for rep -- I'd gladly delete my answer if Nim fixes his. I just hate having to diagnose and fix this problem yet again the next time one of my co-workers finds this misleading answer.

 

Update: Nim updated his post, but he took a different approach, so I left my answer up, too. I.e: the process worked -- the answer is now usable.

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Dale Wilson
  • 9.4k
  • 17
  • 7

I'm afraid this is a "me too" answer (the alternative was yet-another-duplicate-question), but I hope it adds an interesting perspective.

In this question: using boost condition variable

The accepted/upvoted answer is clearly wrong to someone with experience in this area, and clearly plausible to the naive.

The OP said "this does not work (my program hangs)" The author of the answer replied with a comment that said "Oh you should use this hack (timed wait on a condition variable)" and that was the end of the discussion. The answer itself was never fixed and is still wrong.

Yesterday I posted a correct answer, downvoted the incorrect answer, added comments that indicated what was wrong with it and asked the answerer to edit the code in the answer to (at least) reflect the conclusion reached in the comments.

So is there any other way to help the community process fix this situation before it misleads future SO users?

Ooh-- I know I can mention it on meta and maybe garner some attention to help the correct answer rise to the top.

Just to be clear, I'm not in this for rep -- I'd gladly delete my answer if Nim fixes his. I just hate having to diagnose and fix this problem yet again the next time one of my co-workers finds this misleading answer.


Update: Nim updated his post, but he took a different approach, so I left my answer up, too. I.e: the process worked -- the answer is now usable.

I'm afraid this is a "me too" answer (the alternative was yet-another-duplicate-question), but I hope it adds an interesting perspective.

In this question: using boost condition variable

The accepted/upvoted answer is clearly wrong to someone with experience in this area, and clearly plausible to the naive.

The OP said "this does not work (my program hangs)" The author of the answer replied with a comment that said "Oh you should use this hack (timed wait on a condition variable)" and that was the end of the discussion. The answer itself was never fixed and is still wrong.

Yesterday I posted a correct answer, downvoted the incorrect answer, added comments that indicated what was wrong with it and asked the answerer to edit the code in the answer to (at least) reflect the conclusion reached in the comments.

So is there any other way to help the community process fix this situation before it misleads future SO users?

Ooh-- I know I can mention it on meta and maybe garner some attention to help the correct answer rise to the top.

Just to be clear, I'm not in this for rep -- I'd gladly delete my answer if Nim fixes his. I just hate having to diagnose and fix this problem yet again the next time one of my co-workers finds this misleading answer.

I'm afraid this is a "me too" answer (the alternative was yet-another-duplicate-question), but I hope it adds an interesting perspective.

In this question: using boost condition variable

The accepted/upvoted answer is clearly wrong to someone with experience in this area, and clearly plausible to the naive.

The OP said "this does not work (my program hangs)" The author of the answer replied with a comment that said "Oh you should use this hack (timed wait on a condition variable)" and that was the end of the discussion. The answer itself was never fixed and is still wrong.

Yesterday I posted a correct answer, downvoted the incorrect answer, added comments that indicated what was wrong with it and asked the answerer to edit the code in the answer to (at least) reflect the conclusion reached in the comments.

So is there any other way to help the community process fix this situation before it misleads future SO users?

Just to be clear, I'm not in this for rep -- I'd gladly delete my answer if Nim fixes his. I just hate having to diagnose and fix this problem yet again the next time one of my co-workers finds this misleading answer.


Update: Nim updated his post, but he took a different approach, so I left my answer up, too. I.e: the process worked -- the answer is now usable.

Source Link
Dale Wilson
  • 9.4k
  • 17
  • 7

I'm afraid this is a "me too" answer (the alternative was yet-another-duplicate-question), but I hope it adds an interesting perspective.

In this question: using boost condition variable

The accepted/upvoted answer is clearly wrong to someone with experience in this area, and clearly plausible to the naive.

The OP said "this does not work (my program hangs)" The author of the answer replied with a comment that said "Oh you should use this hack (timed wait on a condition variable)" and that was the end of the discussion. The answer itself was never fixed and is still wrong.

Yesterday I posted a correct answer, downvoted the incorrect answer, added comments that indicated what was wrong with it and asked the answerer to edit the code in the answer to (at least) reflect the conclusion reached in the comments.

So is there any other way to help the community process fix this situation before it misleads future SO users?

Ooh-- I know I can mention it on meta and maybe garner some attention to help the correct answer rise to the top.

Just to be clear, I'm not in this for rep -- I'd gladly delete my answer if Nim fixes his. I just hate having to diagnose and fix this problem yet again the next time one of my co-workers finds this misleading answer.