Skip to main content
9 events
when toggle format what by license comment
May 24 at 15:16 comment added Karl Knechtel If there's a valid question here, it would look more like "how long will version x.y be supported?", except there needs to be a reason why there's a compelling interest in that specific version. A historical fact ("when did X happen?", even if the answer is "last week") can't help solve a practical problem, because we don't have time machines, and thus once X has happened we are in the post-X state permanently.
May 24 at 14:28 comment added Jeanot Zubler though addmitedly, a better link could be found, if one went to look
May 24 at 14:24 comment added Jeanot Zubler Yes, the answer could give more information than was asked (as also happened in your example question), but we evaluate questions based on what is written, not on what could have been asked. The question as asked is completely answered by a date and a link. This usually means it is a bad question.
May 24 at 13:52 comment added E_net4 @JeanotZubler I imagine that an answer would include not just when that change took place, but also how far it extends in time. There are real consequences when the plans to drop an LTS are within the upcoming 6 to 8 weeks.
May 24 at 13:50 comment added Jeanot Zubler I feel like the cases are different. Your Node.js example asks about the different levels of support. This has an immediate impact on e.g. choosing a version. It also is a problem of understanding the concept of LTS. The PHP question just asks, when the duration of support has been changed. This has (in my opinion) no impact on the work of a developer. The fact, that it has changed might, but nobody (slight hyperbole) cares when this change happened.
May 24 at 13:43 comment added E_net4 @TheodoreR.Smith Other than that, let's not take downvotes personally. That is the biggest mistake people make when participating on Stack Overflow. In this case, it is somewhat established that voting is different on Meta. You can also read more about it here.
May 24 at 13:42 comment added E_net4 @TheodoreR.Smith Re. the closure, there are two concerns here: whether it is admitted in the scope of the site; and whether the answers to the question will continue to be useful or whether they will tend to attract more noise than value (one of the main reasons why primarily opinion-based questions and requests for-offsite resources are off-topic). My personal assessment is that we are not better off closing it. The current counterargument is that this question isn't practical enough, though.
May 24 at 11:30 comment added Theodore R. Smith This is a good answer. The bigger question I have is why does it help StackOverflow and the Internet in general for my original question to be closed? Currently it's in the Top 5 in Google for this question. I could have asked it elsewhere... I will i nthe future. But I don't see how that's good for StackOverflow...
May 24 at 11:18 history answered E_net4 CC BY-SA 4.0