Timeline for Should this specific mysqli page be rehammered, merged, or something else?
Current License: CC BY-SA 4.0
18 events
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May 17, 2023 at 8:00 | comment | added | mickmackusa | Update: the page in question was merged by CodyGray on 16 Feb 2023 into the dupe target that I initially offered. A sensible and favorable resolution. | |
Aug 26, 2022 at 22:16 | comment | added | mickmackusa | @TylerH There will be hundreds if not thousands of PHP/MySQLI mysqli pages on Stack Overflow that ask about fetching "rows" of data. What differentiates the older question from the majority of other pages is that the asker wants to receive the rows of data as objects (not assoc or indexed arrays). Even "row" suggests an indexed array. php.net/manual/en/mysqli-result.fetch-row.php The title absolutely should contain the vital keyword "objects" to best identify the question and aid researcher discovery. Ask yourself: if you were the new asker, would the old Q's answer resolve your Q? | |
Aug 26, 2022 at 14:57 | comment | added | TylerH | While I think "row" is certainly more specific/clear than "object", the answers on the duplicate target are about objects (e.g. answers talk about objects over arrays). I'm not a MySQL SME (or even user anymore) so I'm not sure if the edit invalidates any of the remaining answers in that regard. | |
Aug 26, 2022 at 14:49 | history | edited | TylerH | CC BY-SA 4.0 |
Revised the question to remove unrelated or loaded commentary, fixed some grammatical things and missing words.
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Aug 21, 2022 at 3:47 | comment | added | mickmackusa | @DanielW I believe Dharman was questioning what was to gain from merging. I was offering page merging as a fallback option after rehammering was refused. SO and its researchers will be best served if all answers are transferred to the older page and the positively scored signpost points all researchers to where ALL of the answers are. When all answers are on one page, the scoring and sorting feature is able to indicate which answers are best/worst. It is a win for EVERYONE if Dharman's answer is moved to the old page and the new page is its signpost. | |
Aug 21, 2022 at 3:42 | comment | added | Daniel W. | The whole system of duplicate questions on SO serves SEO reason. Engines use the canonical link and humans will follow to the higher effort content. Considering the amount of content on SO, with content very similiar yet different on a very fine level, it gets difficult to recognize for robots and humans fine variations. IMO, it's healthy SEO diversity to have similiar threads in parallel. It allows the reader to compare the topics and do an inner A/B test on the content. I'm not ready to take any side on this, I think Dharman said something good and it went like "what do we gain from it". | |
Aug 20, 2022 at 22:48 | comment | added | mickmackusa |
@Karl that is an incorrect read of the old question. Not only did the asker demonstrate that pushing objects into a result array in a loop provides the desired structure, the asker literally asked if there is a single call like $result->fetch_objects() . Both questions are seeking the exact same resultant structure. I explain this in my answer below.
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Aug 20, 2022 at 11:07 | comment | added | mickmackusa | Fortunately for the case that I am pleading, @Dharman himself believes that questions do not need to be identical but that one answer on the dupe target needs to contain the resolving advice for the closed page. I don't have a problem with this stance; afterall, signposts are good when they ask differently for the same resolving advice. Signposts are bad when they ask the same question in exactly the same way. | |
Aug 19, 2022 at 21:14 | answer | added | mickmackusa | timeline score: 2 | |
Aug 19, 2022 at 16:43 | answer | added | Makoto | timeline score: 5 | |
Aug 19, 2022 at 14:02 | comment | added | Karl Knechtel | The edit by Your Common Sense is to change the title... in a way that, to me, makes it pretty clear why the question is not a duplicate. The old question simply sought a way to get all the rows as one result, and was satisfied by the row results being associative arrays. The new question is specifically about looking for a different version of the thing that gets the associative-array result, in order to get an object result instead (without manual iteration). The new answers indicate that this is not supported. | |
Aug 19, 2022 at 13:21 | comment | added | mickmackusa | The end result was a refusal. I wanted to keep the question relatively short because MSO seems to hate my mile-long questions. @Larnu | |
Aug 19, 2022 at 12:58 | comment | added | Thom A | "The dialogue between Dharman and myself is available in the chat link on the page." It is, but I feel that just saying "they refused" is a little disingenuous. They didn't so much refuse, but instead stated that it wouldn't be right for them to do so as they are already involved in the question, and also offered reasons as to why the other question isn't a good candidate. They discussed the problem with you, they didn't refuse you. | |
Aug 19, 2022 at 12:56 | comment | added | mickmackusa | I've added the link to the question sorry. The dialogue between Dharman and myself is available in the chat link on the page. | |
Aug 19, 2022 at 12:54 | history | edited | mickmackusa | CC BY-SA 4.0 |
Linked page
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Aug 19, 2022 at 12:53 | comment | added | Thom A | It also seems that Dharman engaged you in chat and explained their reasoning. I feel it very one-sided to omit their arguments, especially as they took the time to do so (many users would not, moderator or not). | |
Aug 19, 2022 at 12:52 | comment | added | Thom A | TBH, I don't see how your assumption on their voting behaviour is related to the problem here. If, however, someone believes that a duplicate candidate is not useful/helpful and thus reopens the question, downvoting those duplicates (as they perceive them not useful/helpful) does seem correct behaviour; that is, afterall, what votes are for. | |
Aug 19, 2022 at 12:43 | history | asked | mickmackusa | CC BY-SA 4.0 |