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Some community members think this question is not about programming and ought to be closed. So I wonder what has changed. I have been a member for almost 6 years now and it did not used to be like this!

I asked this questionthis question yesterday and received a very insightful comment that helped me solve the problem. Now given specific nature of my problem I may chose to delete the question myself since it may be of little use to anyone else or I may keep it around with a reasonable self answer as encourage by @Yakk (in this case).

OK, on further inspection I can tell that actual reason to close this question precisely is:

This question was caused by a problem that can no longer be reproduced or a simple typographical error. While similar questions may be on-topic here, this one was resolved in a manner unlikely to help future readers. This can often be avoided by identifying and closely inspecting the shortest program necessary to reproduce the problem before posting.

Which is fine. It's really a good thing and I stand by this. I'm new to the meta discussion so I'm not really sure what the vibe here is but what I've been missing is a way for people to redeem themselves.

I can actually turn this around and make something useful out of this. The fact of the matter is that the problem was due to the way I was tracking memory not the implementation and I was absolutely sure that I was using the stuff incorrectly (which I was) but I jump between different languages and environments so much that I sometimes forget details, like I assumed that the key was copied as soon as I put it in the map but we don't need to just close them we need to rewrite them or channel them in a form that's more useful to SO members.

Like this Condition Variables C#/.NETCondition Variables C#/.NET I had an insightful experience working with conditional variables and it turned into a rather nice little example which turned into a wiki entry instead and it appears to be appreciated by some people.

Can't we figure out a way to funnel or encourage people to better themselves and rewrite questions that don't make sense to the community into things that do?

Some community members think this question is not about programming and ought to be closed. So I wonder what has changed. I have been a member for almost 6 years now and it did not used to be like this!

I asked this question yesterday and received a very insightful comment that helped me solve the problem. Now given specific nature of my problem I may chose to delete the question myself since it may be of little use to anyone else or I may keep it around with a reasonable self answer as encourage by @Yakk (in this case).

OK, on further inspection I can tell that actual reason to close this question precisely is:

This question was caused by a problem that can no longer be reproduced or a simple typographical error. While similar questions may be on-topic here, this one was resolved in a manner unlikely to help future readers. This can often be avoided by identifying and closely inspecting the shortest program necessary to reproduce the problem before posting.

Which is fine. It's really a good thing and I stand by this. I'm new to the meta discussion so I'm not really sure what the vibe here is but what I've been missing is a way for people to redeem themselves.

I can actually turn this around and make something useful out of this. The fact of the matter is that the problem was due to the way I was tracking memory not the implementation and I was absolutely sure that I was using the stuff incorrectly (which I was) but I jump between different languages and environments so much that I sometimes forget details, like I assumed that the key was copied as soon as I put it in the map but we don't need to just close them we need to rewrite them or channel them in a form that's more useful to SO members.

Like this Condition Variables C#/.NET I had an insightful experience working with conditional variables and it turned into a rather nice little example which turned into a wiki entry instead and it appears to be appreciated by some people.

Can't we figure out a way to funnel or encourage people to better themselves and rewrite questions that don't make sense to the community into things that do?

Some community members think this question is not about programming and ought to be closed. So I wonder what has changed. I have been a member for almost 6 years now and it did not used to be like this!

I asked this question yesterday and received a very insightful comment that helped me solve the problem. Now given specific nature of my problem I may chose to delete the question myself since it may be of little use to anyone else or I may keep it around with a reasonable self answer as encourage by @Yakk (in this case).

OK, on further inspection I can tell that actual reason to close this question precisely is:

This question was caused by a problem that can no longer be reproduced or a simple typographical error. While similar questions may be on-topic here, this one was resolved in a manner unlikely to help future readers. This can often be avoided by identifying and closely inspecting the shortest program necessary to reproduce the problem before posting.

Which is fine. It's really a good thing and I stand by this. I'm new to the meta discussion so I'm not really sure what the vibe here is but what I've been missing is a way for people to redeem themselves.

I can actually turn this around and make something useful out of this. The fact of the matter is that the problem was due to the way I was tracking memory not the implementation and I was absolutely sure that I was using the stuff incorrectly (which I was) but I jump between different languages and environments so much that I sometimes forget details, like I assumed that the key was copied as soon as I put it in the map but we don't need to just close them we need to rewrite them or channel them in a form that's more useful to SO members.

Like this Condition Variables C#/.NET I had an insightful experience working with conditional variables and it turned into a rather nice little example which turned into a wiki entry instead and it appears to be appreciated by some people.

Can't we figure out a way to funnel or encourage people to better themselves and rewrite questions that don't make sense to the community into things that do?

Changed title to reflect discussion more accuratly
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John Leidegren
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People who overly agressively close or moderate Should I delete my own questions for no particular reasonif I use SO to get unstuck when nobody else is around?

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Some community members think this question is not about programming and ought to be closed. So I wonder what has changed. I have been a member for almost 6 years now and it did not used to be like this!

I asked this question yesterday and received a very insightful comment that helped me solve the problem. Now given specific nature of my problem I may chose to delete the question myself since it may be of little use to anyone else or I may keep it around with a reasonable self answer as encourage by @Yakk (in this case).

OK, on further inspection I can tell that actual reason to close this question precisely is:

This question was caused by a problem that can no longer be reproduced or a simple typographical error. While similar questions may be on-topic here, this one was resolved in a manner unlikely to help future readers. This can often be avoided by identifying and closely inspecting the shortest program necessary to reproduce the problem before posting.

Which is fine. It's really a good thing and I stand by this. I'm new to the meta discussion so I'm not really sure what the vibe here is but what I've been missing is a way for people to redeem themselves.

I can actually turn this around and make something useful out of this. The fact of the matter is that the problem was due to the way I was tracking memory not the implementation and I was absolutely sure that I was using the stuff incorrectly (which I was) but I jump between different languages and environments so much that I sometimes forget details, like I assumed that the key was copied as soon as I put it in the map but we don't need to just close them we need to rewrite them or channel them in a form that's more useful to SO members.

Like this Condition Variables C#/.NET I had an insightful experience working with conditional variables and it turned into a rather nice little example which turned into a wiki entry instead and it appears to be appricatedappreciated by some people.

Can't we figure out a way to funnel or encourage people to better themselves and rewrite questions that don't make sense to the community into things that do?

Some community members think this question is not about programming and ought to be closed. So I wonder what has changed. I have been a member for almost 6 years now and it did not used to be like this!

I asked this question yesterday and received a very insightful comment that helped me solve the problem. Now given specific nature of my problem I may chose to delete the question myself since it may be of little use to anyone else or I may keep it around with a reasonable self answer as encourage by @Yakk (in this case).

OK, on further inspection I can tell that actual reason to close this question precisely is:

This question was caused by a problem that can no longer be reproduced or a simple typographical error. While similar questions may be on-topic here, this one was resolved in a manner unlikely to help future readers. This can often be avoided by identifying and closely inspecting the shortest program necessary to reproduce the problem before posting.

Which is fine. It's really a good thing and I stand by this. I'm new to the meta discussion so I'm not really sure what the vibe here is but what I've been missing is a way for people to redeem themselves.

I can actually turn this around and make something useful out of this. The fact of the matter is that the problem was due to the way I was tracking memory not the implementation and I was absolutely sure that I was using the stuff incorrectly (which I was) but I jump between different languages and environments so much that I sometimes forget details, like I assumed that the key was copied as soon as I put it in the map but we don't need to just close them we need to rewrite them or channel them in a form that's more useful to SO members.

Like this Condition Variables C#/.NET I had an insightful experience working with conditional variables and it turned into a rather nice little example which turned into a wiki entry instead and it appears to be appricated by some people.

Can't we figure out a way to funnel or encourage people to better themselves and rewrite questions that don't make sense to the community into things that do?

Some community members think this question is not about programming and ought to be closed. So I wonder what has changed. I have been a member for almost 6 years now and it did not used to be like this!

I asked this question yesterday and received a very insightful comment that helped me solve the problem. Now given specific nature of my problem I may chose to delete the question myself since it may be of little use to anyone else or I may keep it around with a reasonable self answer as encourage by @Yakk (in this case).

OK, on further inspection I can tell that actual reason to close this question precisely is:

This question was caused by a problem that can no longer be reproduced or a simple typographical error. While similar questions may be on-topic here, this one was resolved in a manner unlikely to help future readers. This can often be avoided by identifying and closely inspecting the shortest program necessary to reproduce the problem before posting.

Which is fine. It's really a good thing and I stand by this. I'm new to the meta discussion so I'm not really sure what the vibe here is but what I've been missing is a way for people to redeem themselves.

I can actually turn this around and make something useful out of this. The fact of the matter is that the problem was due to the way I was tracking memory not the implementation and I was absolutely sure that I was using the stuff incorrectly (which I was) but I jump between different languages and environments so much that I sometimes forget details, like I assumed that the key was copied as soon as I put it in the map but we don't need to just close them we need to rewrite them or channel them in a form that's more useful to SO members.

Like this Condition Variables C#/.NET I had an insightful experience working with conditional variables and it turned into a rather nice little example which turned into a wiki entry instead and it appears to be appreciated by some people.

Can't we figure out a way to funnel or encourage people to better themselves and rewrite questions that don't make sense to the community into things that do?

deleted 1 character in body
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John Leidegren
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Bart
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John Leidegren
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