My ten questions:
How to set initial values of MDL slider programmatically?
Score +0/-0 (0), 1 accepted self-answer (0), 0 comments, 27 views
Way too specific. The question could have asked how to interact with Material Design element through JavaScript, but instead asks about setting a minimum and maximum value for a slider, while there are many more elements with many more properties in that library.
Not a bad question, but only useful and findable for very few people.
Is it slow to use the PHP date() func to compare with SQL datetime fields?
Score +0/-0 (0), 2 answers (+1, 0), 54 views
They're executing an SQL query (inherently slow) and are asking whether a single date()
call (and including the resulting string in their query) would noticeably slow down their code. Opinion-based (race your horses), duplicate (Faster to use MySQL's CURDATE() or PHP's date()?), no research shown. Comments indicate the same sentiment. I would downvote.
Arrays first index displaying wrong element
Score +0/+0 (0), 2 answers (+2, 0), 3 comments, 115 views
Asker needs a book, not an answer. Question does not properly explain what the code they wrote should do. Anyone with a bit of experience could see that, and offer a solution. Commenters agree with that.
This question is not useful for anyone else. Asker commented on the +2 answer, didn't accept, hasn't ever voted on any post.
How to sort sql query result pivotally
Score +1/-0 (1), 1 accepted answer (1), 0 comments, 32 views
"This is my data, this is my desired output. Gimme the codez." An 18K rep user happily obliged.
Should not have been upvoted, zero effort shown, plenty of duplicates exist.
Keeping strok tokens after the initialization function ends in C
Score +1/-1 (0), 1 accepted answer (0), 2 comments, 33 views
Something about accessing local variables in other methods and "corrupted pointers", initially without code. The comments address this, after which the OP added code, which according to a new comment doesn't compile. Can't verify.
The principle itself has been discussed in plenty of other duplicates.
Angular 2 performance issue when displaying a list of items
Score +1/-0 (1), no answers, 1 comment, 31 views.
"Why does this [screenshot of code] spend the numbers of milliseconds shown in the screenshot?". Why was this upvoted? Where is the MCVE? But that's a trend in the Angular2 tag anyway, it looks like a cesspool of help vampires and enablers.
Domain Hijacking / Unrestricted EPP
Score +0/-1 (-1), 1 unaccepted self-answer, 1 comment, 11 views
OP has done a vulnerability scan on their site using a not specified tool and pasted one of the findings (of which the description is tool-specific) in the Stack Overflow Ask-a-Question box. This happens quite often for various of such tools.
A question like this could be useful when they at least mention what tool they used and what their research for the mentioned finding turned up, but neither are present. The comment mentions this, no action by the OP was taken to clarify. They self-answered with something along the lines of "You can configure this with your domain host", without explaining how (host-specific of course).
Laravel total of products from Pivot table
Score +1/0, 2 answers, 1 accepted (+2, +1), 4 comments, 50 views
"How to sum a column of rows I render in a table". I can't imagine this question not to have been asked before, so should've been closed as duplicate instead of answered. It also shows no research effort.
The comments don't mention any of this.
How do I not display "0" when printing my array?
Score +2/-2 (0), 5 answers, 1 accepted (+2, +1, 0, 0, 0), 4 comments, 76 views
The question "How can I let a user enter any amount of numbers and [do something] with the numbers they entered" comes by at least once per day, and every time they have to use an array (not a List, because hey, we're using C# to teach programming, we're not teaching idiomatic C#), and if the user enters fewer than the preallocated numbers, the rest of the array contains 0's and the calculation or printing they do with the array isn't correct.
I don't know why two people upvoted (one apologist in comments explained the OP is here to learn, so that might be it). One commenter complains this reeks of homework (it does), and the question has been answered by users with a reputation ranging from 1K to 21K, while this question shows zero research effort and must have at least a hundred potential duplicates.
So, what do we see in questions with this score? We see exactly what we see when browsing the frontpage of Stack Overflow: a load of zero-effort, poorly worded, hardly salvageable questions that get answered by people who care more about their reputation than about deduplication and quality on the site. Nothing surprising to me.
When I disagreed with any of the scores above, it was because the question was scored too high. Would I have encountered any of them organically, I would've downvoted all except the first.
dummy
to break the cache. Also, I think mentioning thedummy
value in the answer also helps others to avoid accidental duplicate set of questions. Otherwise, please input own user ID as the dummy to prevent duplicate value :)