Timeline for Commenting after approval and pinging reviewers of a Documentation change proposal
Current License: CC BY-SA 3.0
7 events
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Jul 28, 2016 at 0:58 | comment | added | bwoebi | [600 char comments are not enough...] Q&A is also quite different. What gets closed here are bad questions or duplicates (duplicating creates anyway a comment, so you can be pinged). These questions are usually really bad, then it is not a major loss that you cannot appeal. Docs has sometimes quite high quality standards and I had a few cases where some medium level devs made incorrect edits. Thankfully I leaved an additional comment and they could ping me. I quite often leave comments when rejecting (when not bullshit) and never have seen much whining. You're really assuming the worst, IMHO. | |
Jul 28, 2016 at 0:52 | comment | added | bwoebi | A difference probably also is that there are a bunch of people which come along of which each of them are able to leave comments … even closed questions get some views and there are only few questions which end up closed without any comment. [They usually are downvoted first, then the asker comments, someone sees it and he gets a reply.] Reviews however are one or two people and that was it. Nobody is looking further. And yes, I like assuming good faith. It is not that bad. At least I'm going to assume that the count of legitimate, as opposed to whining, comments is going to be superior. | |
Jul 28, 2016 at 0:43 | comment | added | charlietfl | And definitely going to be lots of ruffled feathers as a result of rejections....especially the way the rep system is set up | |
Jul 28, 2016 at 0:32 | comment | added | Nicol Bolas | @bwoebi: "If you are not willing to educate people, maybe SO is the wrong site for you?" Which is why close voters can be contacted by those whose questions get closed. Oh wait, they can't. Not unless they willingly choose to by leaving a comment. Rejecting an edit request is conceptually the same as closing a question. You're assuming that everyone would use this system in good faith, to ask for clarification only when things aren't clear. As opposed to asking because they don't like the reason why it was closed or don't agree with it. | |
Jul 28, 2016 at 0:29 | comment | added | bwoebi | As for the time limit, this is a good idea - I've incorporated it into the question, thanks. … But the question is, is no comments better than people just putting the draft back up into the review queue with no improvement? This would anger me, the reviewer, far more: "Does he have nothing learned??? I've already rejected it!" — thus, ideally, simple ping, simple answer and it's all clear. | |
Jul 28, 2016 at 0:20 | comment | added | bwoebi | Actually, I, as a reviewer, would love to get the complaints so that I can educate users better. Sometimes what's obvious to us in a rejection reason is not necessarily obvious to the proposer. Additionally, rejections like "too specific" are not allowing text, so obviously I wonder why it is too specific. Reviewers ought to leave a comment, but not everyone does. In that case you should be able to ping them. … If you are not willing to educate people, maybe SO is the wrong site for you? … And if you fear arrogant reviewers; you do not have to reply to the pings. | |
Jul 28, 2016 at 0:14 | history | answered | Nicol Bolas | CC BY-SA 3.0 |