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Cody Gray Mod
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[T]he question I flagged was asked solely because of a bug in the tool that was being used. There is no standard flag to report questions related to bugs and thus in this case I opted for the "in need of moderator intervention" flag.

That's correct. There is no flag to report questions caused by bugs. Moderators do not need to intervene in these cases.

Instead, you should either:

  1. Cast a vote (or flag) to close the question as a typo/not reproducible, or
  2. Post an answer explaining that the problem is caused by a bug and linking to the associated bug report.

Do the former if you think no one else will ever have the same question/issue again; otherwise, do the latter.

The purpose of the declined flag message was to try and persuade you to use one of the "recommend closure" flags instead (option #1).

Add a flag for questions related to bugs. Users raising that flag would be able to provide a URL to, for example, a GitHub issue related to that bug. Questions could then be closed in the same way as duplicate questions with a link to more information about the bug (GitHub issue or the like).

This seems at first like a compelling idea, but I question the need for it. Why not just post that same thing as ana proper answer to the question? This would allow others to post alternative answers that provide workarounds (e.g., if you cannot upgrade to the latest version containing a fix for the bug for whatever reason).

In general, we don't want to be closing questions as duplicates of off-site resources, since we don't control those.

[T]he question I flagged was asked solely because of a bug in the tool that was being used. There is no standard flag to report questions related to bugs and thus in this case I opted for the "in need of moderator intervention" flag.

That's correct. There is no flag to report questions caused by bugs. Moderators do not need to intervene in these cases.

Instead, you should either:

  1. Cast a vote (or flag) to close the question as a typo/not reproducible, or
  2. Post an answer explaining that the problem is caused by a bug and linking to the associated bug report.

Do the former if you think no one else will ever have the same question/issue again; otherwise, do the latter.

The purpose of the declined flag message was to try and persuade you to use one of the "recommend closure" flags instead (option #1).

Add a flag for questions related to bugs. Users raising that flag would be able to provide a URL to, for example, a GitHub issue related to that bug. Questions could then be closed in the same way as duplicate questions with a link to more information about the bug (GitHub issue or the like).

This seems at first like a compelling idea, but I question the need for it. Why not just post that same thing as an answer to the question? This would allow others to post alternative answers that provide workarounds (e.g., if you cannot upgrade to the latest version containing a fix for the bug for whatever reason).

In general, we don't want to be closing questions as duplicates of off-site resources, since we don't control those.

[T]he question I flagged was asked solely because of a bug in the tool that was being used. There is no standard flag to report questions related to bugs and thus in this case I opted for the "in need of moderator intervention" flag.

That's correct. There is no flag to report questions caused by bugs. Moderators do not need to intervene in these cases.

Instead, you should either:

  1. Cast a vote (or flag) to close the question as a typo/not reproducible, or
  2. Post an answer explaining that the problem is caused by a bug and linking to the associated bug report.

Do the former if you think no one else will ever have the same question/issue again; otherwise, do the latter.

The purpose of the declined flag message was to try and persuade you to use one of the "recommend closure" flags instead (option #1).

Add a flag for questions related to bugs. Users raising that flag would be able to provide a URL to, for example, a GitHub issue related to that bug. Questions could then be closed in the same way as duplicate questions with a link to more information about the bug (GitHub issue or the like).

This seems at first like a compelling idea, but I question the need for it. Why not just post that same thing as a proper answer to the question? This would allow others to post alternative answers that provide workarounds (e.g., if you cannot upgrade to the latest version containing a fix for the bug for whatever reason).

In general, we don't want to be closing questions as duplicates of off-site resources, since we don't control those.

Source Link
Cody Gray Mod
  • 244.2k
  • 84
  • 722
  • 764

[T]he question I flagged was asked solely because of a bug in the tool that was being used. There is no standard flag to report questions related to bugs and thus in this case I opted for the "in need of moderator intervention" flag.

That's correct. There is no flag to report questions caused by bugs. Moderators do not need to intervene in these cases.

Instead, you should either:

  1. Cast a vote (or flag) to close the question as a typo/not reproducible, or
  2. Post an answer explaining that the problem is caused by a bug and linking to the associated bug report.

Do the former if you think no one else will ever have the same question/issue again; otherwise, do the latter.

The purpose of the declined flag message was to try and persuade you to use one of the "recommend closure" flags instead (option #1).

Add a flag for questions related to bugs. Users raising that flag would be able to provide a URL to, for example, a GitHub issue related to that bug. Questions could then be closed in the same way as duplicate questions with a link to more information about the bug (GitHub issue or the like).

This seems at first like a compelling idea, but I question the need for it. Why not just post that same thing as an answer to the question? This would allow others to post alternative answers that provide workarounds (e.g., if you cannot upgrade to the latest version containing a fix for the bug for whatever reason).

In general, we don't want to be closing questions as duplicates of off-site resources, since we don't control those.