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Is there a way to block a proposal, essentially launching a counter vote to not add another topic?

Laravel for instance has their main documentation at /laravel, a second one for a minor version and is now voting to bring in yet another minor version.

The original documentation spans from 5.0 to 5.3. I tried extending some topics to include 5.4. However, my changes were repeatedly denied (all I wanted to change was the version that is noted at the top of each topic for example, this one has 5.0-5.3 when it should be up to 5.4. I digress).

Is there a way to counter vote as it isn't good to spread the documentation so far and wide? Along with that, can you burninate topics or is that just tags?

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    If I'm not mistaken all the minor version should be rolled into the main tag and you just use versioning on the examples to show the differences. I believe CM's have merged theses on other tags. Commented Apr 27, 2017 at 12:15
  • Hi @NathanOliver, I'm not too used to the meta side of SO, how would you go about starting that process? And yes you are correct they should be all rolled into one.
    – Ian
    Commented Apr 27, 2017 at 12:18
  • The meta post should start the process. Might need a mod flag but I'm not 100% certain. Commented Apr 27, 2017 at 12:18
  • See also the Bash, sh, shell, command-line and command-line-interface mess. Commented Apr 27, 2017 at 15:43
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    @JonEricson This is nowhere near status-completed. The question asks about countering a Docs proposal that happens to be about Laravel, while all that's done so far is merging laravel-version tags into laravel. Commented Apr 27, 2017 at 18:48
  • @dorukayhan: Correct. That's why I closed it as a duplicate of the other question which is still open. As far as I know, the immediate support portion of the question is complete.
    – Jon Ericson Staff
    Commented Apr 27, 2017 at 19:25

1 Answer 1

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I already merged a bunch of Laravel tags. Today, I merged and into . (Please go over the topics in Laravel to make sure they are all needed and there aren't duplicate topics.) I also merged in under the assumption that it will eventually get enough questions for people to start proposing it.

Did I miss any?

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  • Nope they look good, however you bring up an interesting point as Laravel 4 is completely different to Laravel 5, I would say 4 should have it's own docs, hopefully there won't be enough questions to warrant it due to being superseded by 5.
    – Ian
    Commented Apr 27, 2017 at 18:45
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    I don't really know the difference between various versions of Laravel. However, Docs is designed to handle divergent versions such as Python 3.x and 2.x.
    – Jon Ericson Staff
    Commented Apr 27, 2017 at 19:28

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