I was looking at what seemed like a typical low quality noob question, when I noticed some strange comments on it. Like this one:
Your question title asks for how to replace pixels but your question is asking for an algorithm to create clouds, without any of your current code. We can't help you with that until you post your code.
Out of context, this is a perfectly normal comment. But the question I was seeing was:
Why does it have to be -= or +=?
IN java there is a constant usage of +=, -= and other similar arguments. I know they are a shortcut for var = var - 1, but why is it like that?
I looked at the revision history, and the post was edited into a COMPLETELY new question at least 3 times (with the delightful edit summary of "stuff 3"). The user only has the one question on the account.
My guess is that there is something like this going on:
Can I get out of a question ban by editing my previous questions into completely new ones?
I flagged a mod with this message:
The revision history shows that this post used to be an entirely different question. The changes are very suspicious...
Two important things have happened since then:
- The question was answered. I have no clue if the person even read the comments, or if their entire screen was blocked by their desire for rep.
Here is the answer:
Variables often have long names, longer than just 'x' or 'y'.
It would be more convenient to write
++disabledLocksCounter
thandisabledLocksCounter = disabledLocksCounter + 1
especially if you also have something likeenabledLocksCounters
.With just 'x' or 'y' it is also more convenient, actually. And it comes from C++ which Java was designed to resemble in form.
It is completely ok to write
x = x + 1
(comments)
I did 'var = var - 1' as an example. Consider 'var = var + 10'. Why is it that 'var + 10' completly alone isn't enough? -OP
-
What is there to consider about adding 10 to 'var'? -Answerer
(1 more comment)
Obviously, I wasn't in the mood to up vote the answer, but then...
- Everything was deleted. I'd be glad that they are just one step further towards a ban (because of the answer), but I don't think it matters when the user will just undelete it and change the content again.
I looked at Drastic Question Revision, but the answer is not applicable in this case, because the question is already self-deleted. I am afraid that this user will just keep dodging the ban.
(If you are 10k+, you can see the train wreck here: https://stackoverflow.com/posts/37055328/revisions)
My question is: what's going to happen now, especially since everything was deleted? Did I do the right thing or should I do something else in the future?
The other thing is I want everyone to know that this is happening.
Watch out for suspicious comments. And when you're browsing the new questions page, check the date the question was asked to see if it was recently undeleted.