Seems I got the luck of the draw concerning bad audits this week:
https://stackoverflow.com/review/close/19046192
This is a review and I think I understood, why it was picked as a review: it has 5 close votes and was deleted as abandoned. One would assume it could be a good candidate for an audit.
What I don't understand is why it was closed in the first place. If you click on the edit history, the first version is too broad. However, it was edited into shape in the following 8 minutes and I would think it is a good post:
- The user explains what he wants to achieve.
- The user posts his code
- The user posts his input data/testcases
- The user posts the expected outcome.
- The user posts the actual outcome.
That is a pretty well defined problem. Compared to others I see, I would say the user checked more boxes than the average with his edit.
Yet, almost an hour after his edit, this question was closed as too broad.
Why would the current version be closed as too broad?
And what do I do to get this removed from the audits?
As the question itself is deleted and not visible to everybody, this is the body of the question as presented in the review and as voted upon by at least the final close-vote:
How would I code a funtion in Python which utilizes two integer paramaters and outputs whether the second to last digit in both integers is the same? Here's what I've got so far:
def secondToLast(num1, num2): num1 = str(num1) num2 = str(num2) if num1[-2] == num2[-2]: return True return False print("secondToLast:") print(secondToLast(7, 101)) print(secondToLast(19, 31)) print(secondToLast(11, 661))
It should output True, False, False, but instead outputs nothing.