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Timeline for Rewriting a Waffle question

Current License: CC BY-SA 3.0

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Jul 18, 2016 at 9:12 comment added William Isted +1 The "tl;dr" sounds like a constructive method. I do believe IMHO that once discussion on a question has naturally ended, (6 months+) that the question takes on a different role than to find the solution (if it has a solution) and instead people are trying to find (search for) the right question which will have the answer they're looking for.
Jul 17, 2016 at 9:53 comment added halfer (Someone who feels strongly about this would be welcome to liaise with Jeffrey on that page, or to make an edit and add a post-hoc invitation for Jeffery to edit again if he wishes).
Jul 17, 2016 at 9:52 comment added halfer The phrase I think that this is what you need - based on your description was added in 2012, prior to waffle removal. However I moderately agree about the "email" information - I don't know if it would definitely shape answers in a different way, but it is concrete enough that there's no harm it staying.
Jul 17, 2016 at 9:48 comment added Tasos Papastylianou I get the point about "polite waffle", but my point is, the new version is not only "short", it also omitted vital information, supposedly as waffle. If you look at the page, there's a number of people giving the wrong answer because the "email" information has been edited out of the question. And in fact, the accepted answer only makes sense in the context of the previous "waffle". The answerer even says "I think this is the version you need based on your description "
Jul 17, 2016 at 9:39 comment added halfer However, as to this particular question, the new version without the waffle is so short I would normally vote to close as off-topic/lazy. In this case there is probably some leniency however, since it is from 2012, when the rules were a lot more lenient.
Jul 17, 2016 at 9:36 comment added halfer Waffle that is merely a politeness but has no other function has been widely agreed to be something that can be edited out, for some years. "Thanks", "please help me", "I have spent days on this", "Thanks in advance", "I have Googled alot but was not able to solve it", etc. Only if notes about having tried something are specific (i.e. what was tried and how it fell short) does this become useful.
Jul 17, 2016 at 9:23 comment added Tasos Papastylianou actually, the original post is a good example of when waffle is context. The context of a mail server prompted answerers to point out that he should specifically be asking for rounding up to future times, rather than a general rounding answer.
Jul 17, 2016 at 9:21 history answered Tasos Papastylianou CC BY-SA 3.0