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Feb 21 at 11:05 comment added Karl Knechtel @Seblor Fair enough. I'll try to figure out some further improvements later.
Feb 21 at 10:45 comment added Seblor You said you replaced "lazy evaluation" with "short circuiting" so people could find it more easily, "more recognizable and more searchable". My counterpoint is that the lazy-evaluation tag has 2,586 questions, and short-circuiting only has 471 questions. I personally (albeit in France) was taught the term "lazy evaluation". So even if both are easily understood, IMO people who need that kind of information will tend to use "lazy evaluation" in their search query.
Feb 20 at 8:10 comment added Cerbrus @bad_coder again, the user you're referring to as "a mod" is not a moderator...
Feb 20 at 5:32 comment added Karl Knechtel (Also, wow, I really am getting close to 5k edits apparently. And today I noticed that I can actually check this on my profile.)
Feb 20 at 5:12 comment added Karl Knechtel "I actually read that as high praise for having posted "canonical grade material"." That's how I intended it, yes.
Feb 20 at 4:56 comment added bad_coder @Tsyvarev LOL no, actually I made a few arguments, and the one sentence you decided to extracted is misquoting me. But thank you for taking interest, I appreciate it :D Admitting my deviousness I made several arguments to a mod who rolled back an edit with a SEO argument in the edit summary. It's recommended to antagonize mods who "take it to meta" and have technical inaccuracies in their content moderation, we must quote "The SEO is a cesspool in the middle of a dumpster fire"
Feb 19 at 23:50 comment added Tsyvarev Concerning the edit itself. Put aside the question body. But what is about the title, which now cannot be shown in the single line and even contains "optional" part (in parenthesis)? For me, a title with parenthesis is something which should be avoided by all costs, except understandability/correctness. Is "optional" part actually unavoidable in the given case?
Feb 19 at 23:39 comment added Tsyvarev @Cerbrus: "but there are a couple of users in here that still insist OP's edits should be reinstated... OP got an answer, he's happy with it, so why can't you?" - Eh? Isn't a purpose of a discussion to provide arguments for both sides? And, like on the main site, accepting an answer doesn't mean it is the best one. For me it is interesting how argumentation of some users is reduced to "Hey, the editor has 5000+ edits. Do not ever think that a particular edit was wrong."
Feb 19 at 16:26 comment added bad_coder @JonathanScholbach one mod on another side took issue with my edits, they've managed to edit less posts in 5 years than I've edited in a just a couple of days. I'm going to give you a sure rule of thumb: when an editor has +5000 edits there's a considerable chance they know what they're doing. That particular mod also had other strange tendencies, like declining flags raised on post that disclosed user's PII. So it's been my experience that when a mod invites you to chat to discuss editing criteria, they don't know what they're doing. (BTW there's a typo in your profile description.)
Feb 19 at 16:17 comment added Peter - Reinstate Monica I only edit another user's answer (or question, for that matter) in rare cases: When they contain wrong information, possibly a typo, or are somehow very badly written but still valuable. I leave a comment, explain what I did and say "hope that was OK, if not, simply revert". In this case, such a comment would have made this entire conversation unnecessary. In fact, I find it plain rude to edit other people's answers without comment. I find it frankly, as netiquette goes, unacceptable to wordlessly roll a revert back.
Feb 19 at 12:37 history edited Karl Knechtel CC BY-SA 4.0
deleted 55 characters in body
Feb 19 at 12:35 comment added Karl Knechtel Also, as it happens, I don't particularly like being reminded of that answer of mine. I'd delete it if it didn't have hundreds of upvotes (with the potential of the system automatically getting mad at me if I destroyed such "valuable" content), and I've been trying to get the question deleted (even after extensive editing, it's blatantly two questions in one, both of which have better separate versions).
Feb 19 at 12:32 comment added Karl Knechtel I'm not sure if I should write it in the answer directly, but I could also say that when an OP simply rolls back an edit without preemptively stating any reasoning in a comment etc., that tends to create the impression that OP is misguidedly claiming "ownership" of the content or feels entitled to reject changes without needing a reason. I can see (if not originally, then certainly now) that that isn't the case here, but.
Feb 19 at 12:30 history edited Karl Knechtel CC BY-SA 4.0
more links and formatting
Feb 19 at 12:28 vote accept Jonathan Herrera
Feb 19 at 12:28 comment added Jonathan Herrera Thanks for the response! It helps me a lot understanding the principles behind the edit and also accept it.
Feb 19 at 12:21 history answered Karl Knechtel CC BY-SA 4.0