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Vadim Kotov
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declined Declined "too broad" flag

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yivi
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Trying to understand why was I wrong in casting a "too broad" flag on this question: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/47903376/wordpress-on-subdomain-with-laravel-as-frontend, since a mod declined my flag.

flag history

When I raised the flag, the edit which added the .htaccess hadn't been made yet, but I do not think that edit actually helped the OPs case (the question states that the user is using PHP's built-in server, which doesn't read .htaccess at all, something else to address in a potential answer).

I think it is not possible to answer the question without writing the specific router for the questioner, for which there is zero code provided.

You could answer something like:

If you were not using the built-in server

you could do it like this in apache

or like this in nginx

or like this in IIS;

But if neither option is available or you do not have access to the requisite configuration files you should write a router like

 `this`
  [code showing how to build such a route on Laravel,
  despite no code having been provided by the OP]_

But I feel that such an answer would be impossible to verify against the OPs requirements, and necessarily too broad for SO scope.

So assuming this question is not too broad, why is it not?

The objective, logically, is waste less people's time raising unnecessary flags.

(Brought this up in meta because the "declined" text made me think that a mod had declined my flag directly, instead of it being disputed by reviewers; if those labels no longer reflect that distinction, my present question is rather silly.(Brought this up in meta because the "declined" text made me think that a mod had declined my flag directly, instead of it being disputed by reviewers; if those labels no longer reflect that distinction, my present question is rather silly.

I based my assumption on this answer, but couldn't find any authoritative source to explain it otherwise)I based my assumption on this answer, but couldn't find any authoritative source to explain the difference between "disputed" and "declined")

Trying to understand why was I wrong in casting a "too broad" flag on this question: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/47903376/wordpress-on-subdomain-with-laravel-as-frontend, since a mod declined my flag.

flag history

When I raised the flag, the edit which added the .htaccess hadn't been made yet, but I do not think that edit actually helped the OPs case (the question states that the user is using PHP's built-in server, which doesn't read .htaccess at all, something else to address in a potential answer).

I think it is not possible to answer the question without writing the specific router for the questioner, for which there is zero code provided.

You could answer something like:

If you were not using the built-in server

you could do it like this in apache

or like this in nginx

or like this in IIS;

But if neither option is available or you do not have access to the requisite configuration files you should write a router like

 `this`
  [code showing how to build such a route on Laravel,
  despite no code having been provided by the OP]_

But I feel that such an answer would be impossible to verify against the OPs requirements, and necessarily too broad for SO scope.

So assuming this question is not too broad, why is it not?

The objective, logically, is waste less people's time raising unnecessary flags.

(Brought this up in meta because the "declined" text made me think that a mod had declined my flag directly, instead of it being disputed by reviewers; if those labels no longer reflect that distinction, my present question is rather silly.

I based my assumption on this answer, but couldn't find any authoritative source to explain it otherwise)

Trying to understand why was I wrong in casting a "too broad" flag on this question: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/47903376/wordpress-on-subdomain-with-laravel-as-frontend, since a mod declined my flag.

flag history

When I raised the flag, the edit which added the .htaccess hadn't been made yet, but I do not think that edit actually helped the OPs case (the question states that the user is using PHP's built-in server, which doesn't read .htaccess at all, something else to address in a potential answer).

I think it is not possible to answer the question without writing the specific router for the questioner, for which there is zero code provided.

You could answer something like:

If you were not using the built-in server

you could do it like this in apache

or like this in nginx

or like this in IIS;

But if neither option is available or you do not have access to the requisite configuration files you should write a router like

 `this`
  [code showing how to build such a route on Laravel,
  despite no code having been provided by the OP]_

But I feel that such an answer would be impossible to verify against the OPs requirements, and necessarily too broad for SO scope.

So assuming this question is not too broad, why is it not?

The objective, logically, is waste less people's time raising unnecessary flags.

(Brought this up in meta because the "declined" text made me think that a mod had declined my flag directly, instead of it being disputed by reviewers; if those labels no longer reflect that distinction, my present question is rather silly.

I based my assumption on this answer, but couldn't find any authoritative source to explain the difference between "disputed" and "declined")

added 165 characters in body
Source Link
yivi
  • 46.9k
  • 30
  • 217
  • 297

Trying to understand why was I wrong in casting a "too broad" flag on this question: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/47903376/wordpress-on-subdomain-with-laravel-as-frontend, since a mod declined my flag.

flag history

When I raised the flag, the edit which added the .htaccess hadn't been made yet, but I do not think that edit actually helped the OPs case (the question states that the user is using PHP's built-in server, which doesn't read .htaccess at all, something else to address in a potential answer).

I think it is not possible to answer the question without writing the specific router for the questioner, for which there is zero code provided.

You could answer something like:

If you were not using the built-in server

you could do it like this in apache

or like this in nginx

or like this in IIS;

But if neither option is available or you do not have access to the requisite configuration files you should write a router like

 `this`
  [code showing how to build such a route on Laravel,
  despite no code having been provided by the OP]_

But I feel that such an answer would be impossible to verify against the OPs requirements, and necessarily too broad for SO scope.

So assuming this question is not too broad, why is it not?

The objective, logically, is waste less people's time raising unnecessary flags.

(BringingBrought this up in meta because the "declined" text made me think that a mod had declined my flag directly, instead of it being disputed by reviewers; if those labels no longer reflect that distinction, my present question is rather silly.

I based my assumption on this answer, but couldn't find any authoritative source to explain it otherwise)

Trying to understand why was I wrong in casting a "too broad" flag on this question: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/47903376/wordpress-on-subdomain-with-laravel-as-frontend, since a mod declined my flag.

flag history

When I raised the flag, the edit which added the .htaccess hadn't been made yet, but I do not think that edit actually helped the OPs case (the question states that the user is using PHP's built-in server, which doesn't read .htaccess at all, something else to address in a potential answer).

I think it is not possible to answer the question without writing the specific router for the questioner, for which there is zero code provided.

You could answer something like:

If you were not using the built-in server

you could do it like this in apache

or like this in nginx

or like this in IIS;

But if neither option is available or you do not have access to the requisite configuration files you should write a router like

 `this`
  [code showing how to build such a route on Laravel,
  despite no code having been provided by the OP]_

But I feel that such an answer would be impossible to verify against the OPs requirements, and necessarily too broad for SO scope.

So assuming this question is not too broad, why is it not?

The objective, logically, is waste less people's time raising unnecessary flags.

(Bringing this up in meta because the "declined" text made me think that a mod had declined my flag directly, instead of it being disputed by reviewers; if those labels no longer reflect that distinction, my present question is rather silly)

Trying to understand why was I wrong in casting a "too broad" flag on this question: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/47903376/wordpress-on-subdomain-with-laravel-as-frontend, since a mod declined my flag.

flag history

When I raised the flag, the edit which added the .htaccess hadn't been made yet, but I do not think that edit actually helped the OPs case (the question states that the user is using PHP's built-in server, which doesn't read .htaccess at all, something else to address in a potential answer).

I think it is not possible to answer the question without writing the specific router for the questioner, for which there is zero code provided.

You could answer something like:

If you were not using the built-in server

you could do it like this in apache

or like this in nginx

or like this in IIS;

But if neither option is available or you do not have access to the requisite configuration files you should write a router like

 `this`
  [code showing how to build such a route on Laravel,
  despite no code having been provided by the OP]_

But I feel that such an answer would be impossible to verify against the OPs requirements, and necessarily too broad for SO scope.

So assuming this question is not too broad, why is it not?

The objective, logically, is waste less people's time raising unnecessary flags.

(Brought this up in meta because the "declined" text made me think that a mod had declined my flag directly, instead of it being disputed by reviewers; if those labels no longer reflect that distinction, my present question is rather silly.

I based my assumption on this answer, but couldn't find any authoritative source to explain it otherwise)

added 234 characters in body
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yivi
  • 46.9k
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  • 297
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Source Link
yivi
  • 46.9k
  • 30
  • 217
  • 297
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