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May 23, 2017 at 12:37 history edited CommunityBot
replaced http://stackoverflow.com/ with https://stackoverflow.com/
May 3, 2016 at 19:37 comment added Anders @gnat That someone in the past started a discussion about another question does not get the bad question I stumbled upon out of the review queue, which was the purpose of this post.
May 3, 2016 at 19:36 review Close votes
May 3, 2016 at 20:54
May 3, 2016 at 19:36 comment added Anders @gnat The question is about a specific question, and is now tagged as such. The only way to keep bad questions out ot the review queues is to start a meta thread about every single bad question in the review queue. Please do not flag such questions as duplicates.
May 3, 2016 at 19:35 history edited Anders
edited tags
May 3, 2016 at 19:18 comment added gnat Possible duplicate of I do not understand why I failed this audit
Oct 5, 2015 at 23:17 comment added Harry Johnston @Servy: looks like a perfectly good answer to me. Can we get an opinion from a subject-matter expert? (Are you looking at the last paragraph? That just outlines an alternative approach, the previous two paragraphs had already answered the question, or so it seems to me.)
Oct 5, 2015 at 15:36 comment added Servy @HarryJohnston That's a common fallacy when it comes to Too Broad questions. People love to answer extremely broad questions with woefully incomplete answers. People will frequently just start to answer the question, provide a bit of information on the topic without actually answering the question as asked. This is in fact what you see here. The question is really only "answered" by explaining how to get to the actual answer.
Oct 5, 2015 at 15:24 history edited Anders CC BY-SA 3.0
added 117 characters in body
Oct 5, 2015 at 4:18 comment added Harry Johnston The fact that the question was successfully answered in two paragraphs suggests to me that it is not too broad.
Oct 2, 2015 at 20:21 comment added Anders @NathanTuggy Ah. Yes, I took quite some time. Thanks for fixing the edit, you were quicker than me.
Oct 2, 2015 at 20:19 comment added Nathan Tuggy @Anders: It's likely that someone else had already finished the audit before you, so it wasn't saved the same way. (Either you took long enough that the 5-minute lock expired, or they did.)
Oct 2, 2015 at 20:18 history edited Nathan Tuggy CC BY-SA 3.0
Fixed typos, mistaken "Triage" labeling
Oct 2, 2015 at 20:16 comment added Anders @NathanTuggy No idea why theres a different user. I just copy pasted the URL. Cant find the review in my review history, perhaps audits arent saved? I just realized that it was not triage but first post, though. I mixed them up in my head when I wrote the question - my apologies. I will edit the question.
Oct 2, 2015 at 20:08 comment added Nathan Tuggy The review link is to someone else's passed First Posts audit, not your own Triage audit. What's up with that?
Oct 2, 2015 at 18:06 history edited Peter Mortensen CC BY-SA 3.0
Copy edited.
Oct 2, 2015 at 17:39 comment added Hans Passant No, that's not a problem. This is a site for programmers. If being aware of the limitations of a machine causes distress then you picked the wrong job :)
Oct 2, 2015 at 17:22 history edited Anders CC BY-SA 3.0
added 48 characters in body
Oct 2, 2015 at 17:05 comment added Anders @HansPassant The little birdy is correct. That is exactly the kind of cognitive dissonance you get when you try to please the magic audit dragons fanciful wishes. Isn't the fact that you have to skip or vote intentionally wrong just to pass an audit a problem? Is it right to punish people who flag a question that should be flagged just because they don't realize that you should not flag questions that should be flagged when it's an audit? Instead you should revisit the question outside of the review system and flag it. How silly of people not to just realize that by themselves.
Oct 2, 2015 at 16:54 comment added Hans Passant Hmya, you voted "no action needed", it is not very obvious why you so strongly disagree with yourself. A little birdy tells me that you were fully aware that you were being audited and therefore chose another vote than you'd normally pick. Obviously can do both, you can click Skip if you can't stomach voting intentionally wrong and you can revisit the Q+A and vote however you please.
Oct 2, 2015 at 16:36 comment added Anders @HansPassant Also, I think I should judge whether a question should be flagged or not based on its actual content, not the number of views, the upvotes on the answers or the time it has been open without getting closed yet. If you came across this question when it was fresh, without any answers, bounty or votes, wouldn't you at least have considered flagging it as too broad?
Oct 2, 2015 at 16:33 comment added Anders @HansPassant I strongly disagree. Whether a question "should have been closed before the OP put a bounty on it" should influence how you behave during an audit. The bounty is not even visible from the review page! Are you suggestion that every time I flag a question as "should be closed" in a review, I should first check that there isn't a bounty on it?
Oct 2, 2015 at 16:22 comment added Hans Passant If a question draws multiple answers with one that is highly upvoted containing just three paragraphs and was not closed in the past two weeks with over a hundred views then a logical conclusion to draw is that it wasn't too broad. This is what the audit tests, you were paying attention so you passed. Whether the Q+A is useful or should have been closed before the OP put a bounty on it, thus preventing SO users from closing it, plays no role in an audit. That ship has sailed, not that much point in doing it now.
Oct 2, 2015 at 16:07 comment added davidism And the highest scoring answer is literally "it's possible, parts will be easy, parts will be hard" with no insight into an actual programming solution. I don't know if I can fault the answerer too much given the question, but who actually found that useful?
Oct 2, 2015 at 15:58 comment added Dave Zych I would call that too broad.
Oct 2, 2015 at 15:55 history asked Anders CC BY-SA 3.0