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Apr 9, 2021 at 21:49 comment added mgc @IanKemp Glad it helped to find duplicates not marked as such until then ;)
Apr 9, 2021 at 14:08 comment added Ian Kemp @mgc Both of those are dupes of stackoverflow.com/questions/24151129/… so good job torpedoing your own argument...
Apr 8, 2021 at 17:34 comment added mgc I have the impress that some questions about connectivity problems can lead to the creation of reusable knowledge (e.g. about the configuration of the tool / library that was throwing the connectivity problem). I'm thinking for example about questions and answer about Docker and DNS settings (such as stackoverflow.com/questions/44761246/… or stackoverflow.com/questions/24832972/…).
Apr 8, 2021 at 17:32 comment added Braiam @Trilarion careful about that, you will be threading the path of the NPE question.
Apr 8, 2021 at 17:29 answer added pkamb timeline score: 42
Apr 8, 2021 at 16:01 comment added NoDataDumpNoContribution Would a "What are common causes for [insert network issue]?" question be ontopic? If so, we could close all these questions as non reproducible and still refer to this question. It may not solve the problem, but it is all the help we could give, maybe even automatically. What bugs me most is that people don't google their problem. I feel like a broken record when typing "Have you searched for it? What have you found?".
Apr 8, 2021 at 14:51 comment added Jonas Wilms Idea: A community maintained list of (Regex, Q&A) tuples, with which answers get scanned upon submit, and all that match get shown to the asker before the question gets submitted.
Apr 8, 2021 at 14:40 comment added Gimby It should be needless to say that there are always exceptions to the rule. This isn't about those exceptions though.
Apr 8, 2021 at 14:39 comment added Braiam @DragandDrop and afterwards was long forgotten because nobody will use a version with such crippling bug.
Apr 8, 2021 at 14:20 comment added Drag and Drop Some of them are not that bad. If I remember correctly there was not so long ago a a question about "Response timeout while trying to fetch https://" that was a bug in the last version of that package. And was hightly upvoted as every user that update was looking for an answers.
Apr 8, 2021 at 13:10 answer added Ian Kemp timeline score: 19
Apr 8, 2021 at 11:21 comment added nbk Such questions belong here, but can be referred to another site, if they want. a sql connection question, can have many causes so we can try to see where it hurts, that is strictly not orogramming, but as long as they are not DBA related, we answer them, it can be a ors related problem and we answer them, stiil some questionbeolong to network/Server/dba and we advise to ask there when teh answer is not quickly resolved, so try your best answer them if you can or refer them to a better side here in the network
Apr 8, 2021 at 11:16 comment added Sebastian Simon @nbk Of course; these questions aren’t strictly off-topic, just either duplicates or no-repro (note that the “not reproducible” reason starts with “While similar questions may be on-topic here, […]” despite being a subreason of “off-topic”). This question isn’t to discuss whether “network error” questions are out of scope for Stack Overflow.
Apr 8, 2021 at 11:05 comment added nbk they are part of programming so yeahh tey belong here
Apr 8, 2021 at 10:58 history became hot meta post
Apr 8, 2021 at 10:40 comment added Gimby I am sympathetic to this, particular tags will fall victim to people who get an error and then immediately want someone else to make it go away because their tutorial makes the assumption that everything will always go perfect. To me this seems like a similar situation to the NullPointerException; thousands of reasons why you could get it, most simply ask for debugging, no answer on Stack Overflow will have a magic wand to make it go away. So thinking along those lines the least bad solution would be a similarly generic canonical for connectivity errors.
Apr 8, 2021 at 10:18 history asked iBug CC BY-SA 4.0