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Jun 1, 2017 at 23:37 comment added Zze I suppose that I wanted to protect SO from IMO diluting posts. I think that people are deterred by opening/reading questions which already have multiple answers on them. A completely open slather on what you can post as an answer would only detriment IMO.
Jun 1, 2017 at 23:33 comment added Zze @KevinB The purpose was to find out whether it was reasonable and accepted by the community to post jQuery for a post which did not explicitly tag any reference to a run-time language. I'm honestly not here to push my opinion, I just want the general concensus and I will change my opinion based on such.
Jun 1, 2017 at 23:31 comment added Kevin B My point is you can answer with whatever you want, as long as your answer is an answer and doesn't fall under one of the flag reasons. The usefulness and quality of the answer will (hopefully) be judged via votes. If you post an answer that doesn't address the question, the chances of said answer being poorly received are increased.
Jun 1, 2017 at 23:27 comment added Kevin B then what was the purpose of this question? what would you expect to happen to an answer that doesn't meet your requirements but otherwise a perfectly valid post?
Jun 1, 2017 at 23:08 comment added Zze @KevinB Well I've been referring to the primary definition: "able to be agreed on; suitable or satisfactory". Not; meets the minimum requirements of posting.
Jun 1, 2017 at 21:57 comment added Kevin B depending on what you mean by acceptable answer, yes. To me an acceptable answer is one that doesn't have a flag that applies to it. it's not spam, it's not rude/offensive, it's not a comment, and it's an answer, correct or wrong, useful or not useful.
Jun 1, 2017 at 21:53 comment added Zze @KevinB so just to clarify your last comment, ignoring all tags and answering with any language you want, as long as it is thorough and well formatted make it an acceptable answer...?
Jun 1, 2017 at 18:59 comment added BSMP @PeterMortensen - Off topic, but what does the "active reading" note you use in your edit summaries mean?
Jun 1, 2017 at 17:36 history edited Peter Mortensen CC BY-SA 3.0
Active reading. Removed unnecessary formatting.
Jun 1, 2017 at 15:28 comment added Kevin B @Walfrat right. but it's still an answer. it isn't "not an answer". it may or may not be low quality, but the quality of the answer is unrelated to the programming language (or lack thereof) used in the answer. it's still an answer. it's "acceptable". it may not be a good/useful/clear answer, or a correct answer, but it's still an acceptable answer. Even acceptable answers are often worthy of being downvoted.
Jun 1, 2017 at 15:12 comment added Walfrat @KevinB I disagree, what determine a question on SO (IMHO) is : does it respect it's scope : the question AND the stack. If you go totally outside of one or another, it's not an answer IMHO. Otherwise I should try to whore rep by giving Java answer to every question in all langages. But I'am pretty sure that I won't last long if I try whatever the quality of my answer is.
Jun 1, 2017 at 14:14 comment added Kevin B @Walfrat it would still be an answer. it would be invalid to flag it as not an answer, and if it's well formed it would likely survive a low quality flag.
Jun 1, 2017 at 13:44 history edited Zze CC BY-SA 3.0
Added edit
Jun 1, 2017 at 13:06 comment added Walfrat @KevinB nope, not PHP. This isn't in the scope of the question, answering with the wrong tool/langage to the question, is the same that answering a question with the same tool but not the question. What make JQuery acceptable here is that you need jQuery to have bootstrap working, so if you can't in angularJS you can "downgrade back" to jQuery. Of course a vanilla JS answer would still be interesting.
Jun 1, 2017 at 13:01 answer added BSMP timeline score: 2
May 31, 2017 at 17:21 comment added Kevin B Of course it's acceptable to give a jquery answer to a twitter bootstrap question. It would even be acceptable to give an angular answer, or react, or php. Whether or not the answer would be useful, however, is an entirely different question. Vote often and appropriately.
May 31, 2017 at 15:14 comment added Draco18s no longer trusts SE @Zze Oh, definitely should be a compute shader, I just haven't been able to figure it out. :D And for a quick-and-dirty project to support an answer on World Building I wasn't terribly concerned.
May 31, 2017 at 15:11 comment added Zze @Draco18s RIP RAM... Should've written a ComputeShader for that bad boy.... Honestly though, if the consensus is that it is acceptable then I am 100% fine with that.
May 31, 2017 at 15:05 comment added Draco18s no longer trusts SE @Zze Fair point. :) Ironically I was trying to get a particular post-processing effect in Unity a couple days ago and couldn't for the life of me figure out how to do it as a shader. But C#? Pfft, easy. Downside: it has to pipe data off the GPU to do some CPU computation and pipe it back. And crash a lot for allocating over 1.6 GB of ram...
May 31, 2017 at 15:00 history edited Zze CC BY-SA 3.0
added 43 characters in body
May 31, 2017 at 14:59 comment added Zze @Draco18s In that case I would agree with you, however these are 2 very different languages and approaches. It would be like getting C# code for a question with tags: [unity3d] [shader] and your question only includes hlsl.
May 31, 2017 at 14:48 comment added Draco18s no longer trusts SE Not knowing a lick of [twitter-boostrap], I will say that for [unity3d] questions, I would accept answers posted in C# or JavaScript (<cough, UnityScript>) regardless of what the question was tagged as just because the differences between the two are relatively minor and any decent programmer can convert from one to the other with little more than two regex replacements. I converted an entire project once.
May 31, 2017 at 14:32 history asked Zze CC BY-SA 3.0