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Apr 1, 2016 at 6:51 comment added Seth @JoshCaswell Done. I hope that makes it a bit more clear (and less absolute). Thanks for the feedback!
Apr 1, 2016 at 6:49 history edited Seth CC BY-SA 3.0
(Hopefully) made this a bit more clear :)
Mar 31, 2016 at 18:23 comment added jscs No one's offended, we just disagree. (A lot, in my case.) As CodeCaster said, "answers given to discussion questions on Meta are used as reference material to steer and defend future behavior". You've made some strong, absolute statements here, that appear to be directed to all editing users. If you intended them to be qualified in some way, you should edit to make that clear.
Mar 31, 2016 at 15:10 comment added Seth Woops, did not expect that much feedback. For clarification: My answer represents my point of view of this topic, which is arguably good for a "newbie". Of course people with sufficient knowledge of the topic can separate between the actual issue and a simple typo, but I - personally - prefer playing it safe, given my limited knowledge. Offending anyone was never my intention.
Mar 30, 2016 at 22:08 comment added jscs This is wrong too: "Instead you should use an answer to point out typos or bad practices." Answers are for solving the problem; if an answer only addresses tangential issues, without providing a way to resolve the thing that caused the question, it isn't the kind of answer that we're here to collect. It's a reply, like in a forum. Then when you search and find the thread later, you have to read though 84 irrelevant "By the way, don't flibber the gibbet until..." "The Razzmatazz option was deprecated in 2.4..." tidbits before you find the piece of information you're actually looking for.
Mar 30, 2016 at 20:49 history edited ryanyuyu CC BY-SA 3.0
Grammar. Renamed "answer-function" to "answer"
Mar 30, 2016 at 19:45 comment added jscs "simply because you cannot know if it's the cause of the specified problem" Horse puckey. If you know enough to post an answer to the problem, then you know enough to know which of the 300 lines of code dump are extraneous. Editing out superfluous material makes the question better, whether it's prose or code. "or the cause of a different problem" Questions here are expected to be about one thing, not fixing all the problems in someone's posted code.
Mar 30, 2016 at 19:28 comment added Artjom B. "Make use of the answer-function to point out typos [...]" - No. Comment, downvote and flag/vote to close in that order. We don't want typo questions on this site. So posting an answer makes it harder to get rid of it quickly.
Mar 30, 2016 at 16:36 comment added Cheers and hth. - Alf However, I think one should not have negative feelings about not being able to point out errors beyond what's asked about.
Mar 30, 2016 at 16:30 comment added Cheers and hth. - Alf @Carpetsmoker: I agree that silent int main fix is not as helpful as commented fix. Indeed I advised Nathan to generally comment such a fix. And I agree it would be ungood to fix it if it was already mentioned in an answer. Both because there would be reduced reason to do it, and because it's all wrong to change that which an answer is based on. Apart from teaching the OP and other readers the Right Way to do things, and making the code portable, such a fix helps avoid giving an impression of the OP as one who writes void main. I.e. it can help yield more informative serious answers.
Mar 30, 2016 at 16:26 comment added Martin Tournoij While I agree what this too much of a generalization @Cheersandhth.-Alf, I do agree with the general idea that code in questions should not be edited beyond simple formatting, for the simple reason that I can now no longer point out this error in an answer or comment. Even if this is not the source of the error, I typically point out these things if I notice them. Silently fixing them is not particularly helpful to the OP.
Mar 30, 2016 at 16:02 comment added Cheers and hth. - Alf −1 "because you cannot know if it's the cause of the specified problem" is incorrect (false, not true, no match with reality, etc.) for the case at hand. Thus the argument is based on a false assumption, and is invalid. That said, sweeping generalizations are ungood of themselves and should not be posted in meta, and it is IMHO no coincidence that this one ended up as a fallacy; that's where sweeping generalizations generally go.
Mar 30, 2016 at 13:53 history answered Seth CC BY-SA 3.0