Timeline for Failed review audit: high score question, but no code
Current License: CC BY-SA 4.0
17 events
when toggle format | what | by | license | comment | |
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S Sep 16 at 3:46 | vote | accept | typed-sigterm | ||
Jun 4 at 16:15 | vote | accept | typed-sigterm | ||
S Sep 16 at 3:46 | |||||
May 26 at 15:33 | review | Close votes | |||
May 26 at 21:53 | |||||
May 6 at 18:35 | history | edited | tdy | CC BY-SA 4.0 |
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May 6 at 16:32 | history | edited | Mark Amery | CC BY-SA 4.0 |
I understand the general impulse to remove "Update" labels but I think it's quite important for this kind of edit to call out that it's an edit, otherwise the question just seems nonsensical.
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May 6 at 12:07 | history | edited | yivi | CC BY-SA 4.0 |
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May 6 at 11:54 | history | edited | typed-sigterm | CC BY-SA 4.0 |
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May 6 at 7:38 | comment | added | Bending Rodriguez | I also lost my audit privilege twice on stuff like this. Sometimes its really not clear for me on first glance, why certain questions have a high voting on them. Often very old questions that seem very open to me have a high voting, maybe because the answers were useful to a lot of people even if the question wasnt very high quality. | |
May 5 at 17:03 | history | edited | Henry EckerMod |
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May 5 at 16:38 | answer | added | Mark Amery | timeline score: 10 | |
May 5 at 16:31 | history | edited | typed-sigterm | CC BY-SA 4.0 |
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May 5 at 13:11 | comment | added | Karl Knechtel | My main objection here is that the question is presented as though the OP is simply trying to run someone else's program, and has no intention of actually programming. On the other hand, it's self-answered and describes a fairly common version-incompatibility issue (or at least one that was common at the time). | |
May 5 at 11:00 | comment | added | Mark Amery | @StephenOstermiller That would have its own problems; enforcing conformity in subjective cases is probably not a good thing, and enforcing conformity in cases where reviewers tend to get results outright wrong (e.g. failing to notice plagiarism) is even worse. Using only review tasks where the correct action is totally unambiguous and there's no room for reasonable debate avoids those problems - in theory, you can't get punished for other reviewers' incompetence or for tending to have different opinions on truly subjective cases. Trouble is, not all the audits really are so unambiguous... | |
May 5 at 9:35 | comment | added | Stephen Ostermiller Mod | I personally hate review audits. It seems like the system could judge your reviews by how well you agree with other reviewers on actual items to be reviewed rather than throwing in tricky edge cases and tests. | |
May 5 at 8:35 | comment | added | BDL | On one hand I agree with Rene that the question doesn't need code when all scripts cause the error. On the other hand, it's not clear from the question alone that this is the case. Sure, if you know the cause, then it is clear, but from the question alone, I would have also asked for code or at least the exact compiler command that was called. | |
May 5 at 7:50 | comment | added | rene | Is code needed when any ML script using Gensim will throw that error? | |
May 5 at 7:28 | history | asked | typed-sigterm | CC BY-SA 4.0 |