Some time ago I asked a question about making custom binary file handlers, and it got deleted pretty quick (1 day to be closed, and 10 days to be deleted) and after that every time I have a problem I see an "fun" warning about "asking ban". I've tried to look up how long does this warning last, but no luck finding the answer (it looks like it is indefinite). Having this warning has hindered me in asking questions in general.
What I am curious is next:
In your experience, have you ever witnessed that someone has recovered from this type of warning or ban?
Conclusion
After a conversation with users in comments, and my last short fused response. I can say next:
The clean up works! After I've cleaned up first two questions, the warning disappeared! So to all users who had similar problem as mine, the methodology described here almost momentarily improved my status.
My mistakes:
I didn't know where to find all my deleted posts and therefore I was under false impression I deleted one or two questions (while I had 7 deleted questions). If you were like me and deleted any question (no mater how verbose it was) if it didn't have any response after 30 days, please ask moderator to point your questions to you.
It takes time to learn tech linguo. As I started coding ,being self thought, often my implementations were rediscovering the wheel, so issues I had were often (and are now) too complex for my vocabulary to process with some ignorance. So my questions were unclear and often jungle of words. If you have similar problems, (don't delete your question, let it plummet in votes), and return every month or so with new eyes and greater experience to revise your own questions.
Votes taketh, can be returneth again
.
What helped me
I still have every project I tried or done in archive, which helped me understand my own questions (which is ironic now) and after some number of years be able to look up the documentation for the code and be very concise in editing questions that are at fault. So I didn't have to read all my thought salad from the question, I could look up the code, go to the repository with an timedate of the question and see
what the hell I was babbling about
.Formatting and pseudo code in concrete language I was working on at a time to explain more
abstract
elements for the question.Help of good people in this topic. And some nice people who followed every change I had and upvoted it - therefore helping my case a lot.
My experience:
If this happened to you, you can't help yourself. If you try: you will just repeat same mistakes and often skip most important deleted questions (due to not remembering). You need help from the community, that you are (probably) currently angry at. Swallow that anger, and try to think about possibility that you (by extension me) are currently wrong, or misinformed by vocabulary,language barrier ... name your poison.
If you try to ask "how to fix the problem`", by still being angry, you will normally find an equal and opposite response to your action.
I still have a lots of question I need to rework, and to do so in future. This probably isn't it
for me. So in order to persuade other members in similar positions to actively seek help and become better contributors in community - I will try to update this questions if anything of social relevance occurs on this topic.
delete your own question with 3 votes or higher
badge. On other questions i was "trusted" and since that question i am not. And i have questions that propose ( show in code ) an dumb way to do something that was corrected in answer. I don't know what to edit there. I can edit last 2 attempts, but i don't see how that will help since warning wasn't from the future.