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Mar 2, 2023 at 7:28 history became hot meta post
Mar 2, 2023 at 5:28 history edited Peter Mortensen CC BY-SA 4.0
Active reading [<https://stackoverflow.design/brand/copywriting/naming/>].
Mar 2, 2023 at 3:42 answer added Karl Knechtel timeline score: 10
Mar 1, 2023 at 22:34 comment added philipxy "The person who wrote the question is not the primary audience. Don't focus on them." Because the site goal is to be a repository of good questions for others to find. Not a help desk. If you want to offer your users a help desk this is not the place to do it in any way that is not in keeping with the site. tour help center
Mar 1, 2023 at 21:49 answer added Jean-François FabreMod timeline score: 11
Mar 1, 2023 at 20:25 comment added Martin Thoma Question A "pypdf error: encryption algorithm not supported", question B: "pypdf error: wrong whitespace in text extraction". Solution to both: upgrade to pypdf>= 3.4.0. You really suggest to close one as a duplicate of the other?
Mar 1, 2023 at 20:13 comment added Security Hound "That also means that my answers are identical ..." - If you are submitting the same solution to multiple questions, you should be voting to close those additional questions, leaving one high quality answer to rule them all. 'This question is my request to get rid of that restriction" - Is it? If so then this belongs on Meta Stack Exchange, since that type of change, would impact the entire community. This question is currently marked as a discussion, and what I see and based on the comments, most individuals are treating this question as a complaint with a "working as designed"
Mar 1, 2023 at 20:10 comment added Martin Thoma I would also be fine with somebody editing my question to focus on that part.
Mar 1, 2023 at 19:56 comment added Martin Thoma Should I create a new question on meta focusing on that suggestion?
Mar 1, 2023 at 19:33 comment added Ryan M Mod @MartinThoma for feature requests, we generally want a focused [feature-request]-tagged question for easy escalation to staff. It's hard to escalate a discussion with multiple alternative suggestions, as it's not clear which suggestions people are voting (both up and down) for.
Mar 1, 2023 at 19:32 comment added Martin Thoma @Dharman: "The person who wrote the question is not the primary audience. Don't focus on them." - why not? A lot of the questions around pypdf are the result of people not looking into existing issues on Github / understanding the issue the library has / understanding how PDF data extraction works. Often not even directly related to pypdf, but to working with Python in general (e.g. virtual environments). Those questions will likely only be of interest to beginners. Focusing the style of answer on the type of question asked is exactly the right thing to do, IMO.
Mar 1, 2023 at 19:30 comment added Martin Thoma @RyanM This question is my request to get rid of that restriction :-)
Mar 1, 2023 at 19:28 comment added Martin Thoma @Dharman '"Please update pypdf" is not an answer. ' - why not? It solves the problem. The problem was a bug/shortcomming of the library.
Mar 1, 2023 at 19:05 comment added Ryan M Mod @KevinB Well, you can't unless someone upvotes or accepts your answer. Which is, arguably, an unhelpful restriction. I'd upvote a request to get rid of it (does anyone know of one?).
Mar 1, 2023 at 18:56 comment added Kevin B I don't quite understand how the solution to "There's n questions and none are answered so i can't dupe close them" is "answer all of them" rather than "answer one of them and dupe close".
Mar 1, 2023 at 18:24 comment added Abdul Aziz Barkat You probably have some issues opened on GitHub for those bugs right? Add an answer stating it is a bug in the package having issue #PQR and is solved in version XYZ. If you have more time you could then add workarounds, etc. as needed.
Mar 1, 2023 at 18:24 comment added Dharman Mod "are clearly written by programming beginners" The person who wrote the question is not the primary audience. Don't focus on them.
Mar 1, 2023 at 18:23 comment added Dharman Mod "Please update pypdf" is not an answer. You need to say exactly what the problem was an which version contains the fix.
Mar 1, 2023 at 18:22 comment added Ryan M Mod The problem that removal of duplicate answers is intended to solve is people copy-pasting indiscriminately (often to questions where the answer really does not apply), which is not what you're talking about doing here (I'm assuming you're not considering literally just copy-pasting a "Please update pypdf" answer between all questions that can be solved by upgrading). Unfortunately, the two can look similar at a glance. It would be good if we could come up with a clear dividing line between the two.
Mar 1, 2023 at 18:22 comment added Ryan M Mod Fair. You should specify at least a specific version that has the fix, but then you'd still run the risk of duplicates among bugs that were fixed in the same version...which, of course, are not duplicate questions, they just happen to be fixed by the same upgrade.
Mar 1, 2023 at 18:15 comment added Martin Thoma Also, most of the pypdf / PyPDF2 questions are clearly written by programming beginners. They would not be interested in the very specific issues around text extraction from PDF documents, where you have to dive deep into the PDF standard.
Mar 1, 2023 at 18:14 comment added Martin Thoma "perhaps you could point to the specific fix in each answer" - that is not going to happen. This would simply drain an unacceptable amount of energy for an answer that likely nobody will ever read. People typically just want to see the solution. If they are actually interested in the root cause, they can dive into the changelog / the git history.
Mar 1, 2023 at 18:13 comment added Ryan M Mod For the ones that are just "update PyPDF", perhaps you could point to the specific fix in each answer. That would make them non-duplicate answers that are tailored to the question.
Mar 1, 2023 at 18:11 comment added Ryan M Mod Suboptimal solution for the questions that really are duplicates: Post an answer on one of them, wait to get an upvote, and then mark the others as duplicates. (it's not, admittedly, a great solution)
Mar 1, 2023 at 18:07 history edited Martin Thoma CC BY-SA 4.0
added 845 characters in body
Mar 1, 2023 at 17:59 history asked Martin Thoma CC BY-SA 4.0