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May 24 at 2:00 answer added Karl Knechtel timeline score: 3
May 22 at 21:31 answer added Barmar timeline score: 9
May 22 at 21:19 comment added Barmar @StephenOstermiller I've seen that mistake dozens of times. But I also generally close these as typos, just like when people mistakenly use = instead of ==. I know they're not strictly typos, they're "understandos". But they're too trivial to treat as real questions, because no amount of searching will find similar mistakes (the searchers don't even realize that's the problem).
May 22 at 4:29 history became hot meta post
May 21 at 19:15 comment added Stephen Ostermiller Mod @pkamb The error is described as "my date of November 5, 2019 being evaluated as June 27, 1975" which seems specific to the exact date used without quotes. As I said, hard to search for.
May 21 at 17:54 comment added pkamb @StephenOstermiller forgetting quotes seems like a VERY reproducible "typo" to me, and thus a valuable question for SO. Especially with the error messages quoted for future SEO.
May 21 at 13:56 comment added jay.sf @StephenOstermiller Good catch, thanks. Replaced it and clarified that these refer to closed with correct close-reason.
May 21 at 13:54 history edited jay.sf CC BY-SA 4.0
deleted 51 characters in body
May 21 at 13:17 comment added Stephen Ostermiller Mod I don't understand why you think closing as a typo wouldn't be appropriate for stackoverflow.com/questions/78375745/… It has example code that didn't have quotes around the date string so the YYYY-MM-DD date was treated as a subtraction problem. Someone commented about the missing quotes. It seems to me very unlikely that somebody else would have the same problem. Even if they did have the same problem, I don't think they could find the duplicate using search.
May 21 at 13:13 comment added TylerH @Braiam Depends on how you access the "home page". For me the home page is all questions.
May 20 at 23:14 comment added Braiam @TylerH that hasn't been an issue for SO since immemorial. The "home page" has been personalized and randomized for everyone since years ago. It's called "interesting" now. I could edit 10k posts in a minute and would be surprised if you see any of it.
May 20 at 20:30 comment added TylerH @pkamb That doesn't work on a site like SO because edits bump posts to the front page, which is designed to be a list of posts. Wikipedia does not have such a design for their front page. Aside from that, there are far fewer people reviewing edits here than there are on Wikipedia, but I suspect no less number of would-be miscreants or even people who mean well but make misguided edits. That aside, the issue of suggested edits is totally irrelevant to this Q&A.
May 20 at 20:28 comment added TylerH Stack Overflow used to list all the different close reasons that voters selected (along with which users selected each reason, visible to those with CV privileges). This was clear, accurate, and useful information, so naturally it got removed and replaced with this current version...
May 20 at 19:10 comment added pkamb I wish SE had culture/tooling matching that of Wikipedia:Be bold that allowed trusted users to just fix things. If mistakes are made, other users can just revert them.
May 20 at 17:00 answer added Braiam timeline score: 27
May 20 at 10:53 answer added rene timeline score: 5
May 20 at 8:27 comment added jay.sf @KarlKnechtel I like closing as a dupe if applicable. Thanks for your link, which suggests flagging, though, but flags on this are declined.
May 20 at 8:23 comment added jay.sf @VLAZ Yeah, that's how I usually do anyway and close-vote for debugging details. We are aware of this, I hoped discussing could raise more awareness. I agree that sometimes any close-reason will do as long as it is closed. However, I've deliberately chosen examples where new askers have obviously taken offense and we've scared them off (3). If we leave it at that, and just hope for the best, we would approve of such consequences.
May 20 at 8:06 comment added Karl Knechtel Related: meta.stackexchange.com/questions/208756
May 20 at 7:51 comment added Karl Knechtel In general, there is very low interest in fixing close reasons, largely since there are quite few cases where it can be done reasonably easily. (One example of an easy fix: if you have gold-badge privileges and find some ancient question that was closed as a duplicate under the old system that added boilerplate text to the question, and you were not one of the original close-voters, you can open and re-close it - sometimes with a better dupe target - and then edit the boilerplate out.)
May 20 at 7:41 comment added VLAZ I agree it's annoying and persistent behaviour. Users seem to equate "there isn't a reproducible example" (the "Lacks debugging details" close reason) as "cannot reproduce" (a completely different close reason). With that said, I've never found a good reason to correct this closure. The questions are usually so lazy, it doesn't matter too much what they are closed with. It's extremely rare that they are revised anyway. I just vote to close as lacking debugging details and hope for the best. Any more is a waste of effort, IMO.
May 20 at 7:40 history edited yivi
edited tags
May 20 at 7:22 history asked jay.sf CC BY-SA 4.0