I can't seem to edit this question:
4 Answers
When this happens to me, I'm usually willing to edit the title, except when I don't know enough to edit the title to remove duplication.
I know enough about C++ to fix indentation and remove tags from the title. I used to program in C++. But that was over a decade ago. I may very well know enough about the language to correctly fix indentation and spelling errors, and yet not know enough about the context of the question to understand it well enough to propose a better title.
Please fix this feature to either:
- Allow me to fix what I know how to fix, while not fixing the title (I don't like adding "#2" to the ends of titles)
- Tell me when I start editing that you're going to force me to fix the title so I can avoid wasting my time on an edit you're not going to permit
- Maybe fix the process so that the OP is the one who finds out about the duplicate title, and not a well-intentioned editor down the road.
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2
Thanks to the comments on Shog9's answer, it's pretty well understood what's going on, so here's an answer with the information:
- When OP creates a question, it is first checked for uniqueness...
- ...and then auto-corrected to fix some minor style problems (multiple
?
's, for example).- Automated edits are approved automatically,
- and don't create revision history, so...
- Future edits are treated as though they are editing the title; since the title is non-unique, they are rejected.
This is clearly a bug. The uniqueness check must check the title that will actually be generated, not pre-autocorrection title.
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Yes, this is the main issue. Whether the editor is responsible for dupe titles is debateable. But the fact that the OP can bypass the dupe title check by simply adding two
??
is clearly a bug.– DanielSTCommented Mar 16, 2015 at 15:40 -
@slicedtoad Debateable? If this bug were fixed, questions could not be submitted with duplicate titles, so no, the editor would not be responsible for fixing them. Commented Mar 16, 2015 at 15:42
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They would be if it was an old question. Or if they wanted to change the title to a duplicate (say, to fix a type-o). But, yes, it would be a far less frequent problem.– DanielSTCommented Mar 16, 2015 at 15:43
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1@slicedtoad True, it would still be an issue for old questions, but in the case of changing a title to make it a duplicate, yes, editors should be responsible for that! Commented Mar 16, 2015 at 15:48
In theory, that question should never have been posted with that title in the first place. We strip trailing periods and there was already an existing question lacking said trailing period in the system.
However, what we didn't do at the time was trim trailing whitespace before attempting to remove or correct trailing punctuation. Trailing whitespace would then be subsequently removed just before posting, but it wasn't stripped out during validation. So, it looks like that question's original title had a few spaces at the end that allowed it to pass duplicate title checks in the first place.
A check for trailing whitespace was added to the validation code in October 2017... and I just pushed a change to move it to happen before trailing punctuation checks (whoops), so barring any other issues, we should be better at catching these issues before posts are created. I'm going to call this status-completed for now, although for any existing questions in this situation, updating the title if/when the post is edited is the way to go.
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before or after are neither perfect solutions, as demonstrated for you by this edit to an existing title. If we want a strict block, the regex should trim both spaces and punctuation at the same time, like:
([\s\.]*$)
– CœurCommented Jan 9, 2019 at 15:54
There are multiple questions with this title already.
There are multiple questions with this title already because we didn't always enforce unique titles.
This question wasn't created with that title - it was normalized via an automatic edit. Because such edits don't create a revision history entry, this effectively means any further edits will be title edits.
We now enforce unique titles. If you're saving a question - whether editing or creating a new one - it must have a unique title. If it doesn't, then either vote to close it as a duplicate or edit the title to reflect something unique about the question.
Hint: segmentation faults nearly always happen because of something else wrong with the program. Figure out what the program is doing - for instance, dereferencing a pointer initialized to the return value of rand()
- and make sure the title reflects that.
Clarification for LRiO: I'm not suggesting anyone answer questions via title edits. But if you're going to bother editing questions with terrible, nondescript titles, please try to understand what's being asked well enough to summarize it in the title - otherwise, you're just leaving more cruft to clutter up search results.
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28But as I have been told in the past editing the title to "Seg fault because programmer knows nothing about C" is not a valid title.– Zan LynxCommented Mar 13, 2015 at 23:27
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65But it's not my fault that the title is not unique! I should be able to edit the tags, or the body of this question without being held responsible for the duplicate title. Commented Mar 14, 2015 at 3:05
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8Out of curiosity, when did we start enforcing this policy? Commented Mar 14, 2015 at 4:57
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60"Figure out what the program is doing" NO! No no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no. This is the OP's job, not ours. Commented Mar 14, 2015 at 5:37
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6At the very least, it's the purview of answerers, not editors. Commented Mar 14, 2015 at 5:37
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23I'm confused (not an uncommon state of affairs). That question was posted less than a day ago. I understand that long ago SO didn't enforce unique titles. But I'm pretty sure that policy went into effect more than a day ago. So the question remains: given that the OP of this question did not modify the title while trying to edit the other question, how is it that the title wound up as a duplicate of some other question's title? Commented Mar 14, 2015 at 5:55
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62-1, I apologize for my earlier rude comment, I'm just annoyed by being teached on basic stuff based on wrong assumptions. 1. I'm a 35k rep user with a gold C++ badge. I know how segmentation faults work, and how editing works. 2. It's not my question, I was just fixing indentation. It's not my responsibility to answer the question or fix other things about the question like the title. 3. The question was brand new, so a change of policy has nothing to do with it. All of that information was readily available to you when you answered this question, and to the people who upvoted it.– orlpCommented Mar 14, 2015 at 9:31
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12I agree with orlp. I read his first question and immediately he is given one liners like he doesn't understand. Even when he mentions that he does not EDIT the title people still give him "Nope you're wrong...", and I dont think question titles need to be unique, that is pretty scary.– JonHCommented Mar 14, 2015 at 15:45
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2Sorry, @orlp - I didn't recognize which bit was bothering you here - see my edit. For future reference, please try to describe the behavior you would expect to see when you intend a post here to be a bug report; if you just report a specific message like this, I'm going to assume you just don't understand what it means, since that's true in the vast majority of cases (yes, even for 35K users).– Shog9 ModCommented Mar 14, 2015 at 19:17
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3I don't care about downvotes, @orlp. This is my opinion on the situation; you're free to dislike or straight-up ignore the advice if you wish.– Shog9 ModCommented Mar 14, 2015 at 19:23
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25@Shog9 As soon as you force editors looking to improve a question in one aspect to improve it in multiple you will end up with editors not improving anything at all.– orlpCommented Mar 14, 2015 at 19:24
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22We are able to make multiple edits on a post so if someone can't think of a better title but can otherwise improve the post, forcing them to abandon their edit is silly to me: why not allow it, then let subsequent editors find a better title? It seems to me like you are punishing editors for the OP's mistake. It's great when editors can clean up a title, but banning them from making any improvements when they can't? Dunno, biting the hand that feeds... SO is getting extremely prescriptive. Commented Mar 14, 2015 at 19:36
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9I guess the duplicate-title check when posting should come after the automatic-correction check when posting, not before it. Commented Mar 15, 2015 at 14:38
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16Something definitely doesn't smell right - if the title is going to be rejected by the system, that should happen when the OP saves it, not when someone else tries to edit it later. That way, we're forcing the author to engage with the site's policy, not letting them post a bad question and expecting someone else to clean up the mess. If it's working as described, you can use extra punctuation as a back-door to create as many duplicate titles as you want, which doesn't seem right at all.– IMSoPCommented Mar 15, 2015 at 16:14
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18Do I understand this process correctly? OP creates a question with a unique title, passes uniqueness test. System autocorrects title to non-unique title, side-steps uniqueness test. Editor attempts to edit body/tags (not title), but because autocorrection has since invalidated the title, title uniqueness fails and editor can't submit edits. If this is the case, it would seem like a pretty clear bug with the autocorrection routine.– jedwardsCommented Mar 15, 2015 at 20:10
Program received signal SIGSEGV, Segmentation fault.
could have been the title, and when the period was removedProgram received signal SIGSEGV, Segmentation fault
became a duplicate title. However, adding the period in for the screenshot did not remove the error dialog even though it would have brought the title back to its original state. The dialog will only be removed when the onchange event occurs which requires a blur from the input element. I was able to reproduce this i.imgur.com/KdKLCNN.png