A week after I posted my question in META Stackoverflow, let me summarize what happened until then:
The question was reopened and I was able to post my answer. One hour later the question was closed again for the following reason: "The question needs more focused".
According to the previous link here is the definition of this cause:
Needs more focus - If your question has many valid answers (but no way to determine which, if any, are correct), then it probably
needs to be more focused to be successful in our format.
This question currently includes multiple questions in one. It should
focus on one problem only.
This can often be fixed by breaking the post into multiple questions,
or by focusing on a specific part of the problem.
Basically, there are two root cause scenarios:
Question has many valid answers
Multiple questions in one
The first one doesn't apply because based on the description of the question and the input data, there is only one possible output, i.e. the question is not ambiguous.
The second one, the question is very specific in the ask. The ask in the question can be summarized as follow: Find the time interval interceptions of the two input tables to calculate the monthly cost. It is true in the context of the financial sample, with simple data (a maximum of six columns on each input table and no more than 18
rows). You can mock data, but the problem remains the same. Is it really necessary for this case?
I tried to improve the original question, knowing upfront the problem, because I posted an answer from the same OP for a similar, but more specific scenario (not considering the monthly partial allocation of the resources). I also interacted with the OP through chat, where I suggested posting another question to solve a more generic case. The original question was posted under the UK locale and with data that doesn't capture all the scenarios.
I edit the question with my US locale (using $
currency and dates in MM/DD/YYYY
). Even though I didn't change the original intent of the question, based on the comments received I should have submitted the edit with the same locale and kept the same input data, then in my answer to use more data to consider additional scenarios with my own locale.
Here is the summary of the "casualties" of my META question:
24 negative votes for my META question (I understand the meaning of a negative vote in META). The original intention of my question was to find out if the cause of not being reviewed yet is due to a long queue or if the review was unattended. Now I understand the review process can take longer.
9 negatives votes for the edited question in SO
The question was closed again
3 negatives votes to the answer I posted and two positives.
The answer was accepted by the OP
One comment (after the question was reopened) suggested to use of a more specific product such as SmartSheet, which is a valid suggestion, but it is not a free product, nor an excel free plug-in.
Not a single comment or hint on why this question is considered with a lack of focus
Not a single comment or tip on why the answer was downvoted
Here are some other questions (not closed) related to Resource Management:
The truth is that people use Excel for basic resource management stuff and therefore it is expected to have questions related to this problem.
@Gimby, pointed out in the comments an interesting observation:
IMO Excel falls into that category of questions which are allowed in
begrudgingly because yeah okay there is some form of relationship with
programming. But it's not really programming, so good luck writing a
question which pass the test that questions about actual programming
problems get subjected to. You can scroll a little through the pages
of questions. I see more zero score and downvoted than actual upvoted
questions. Long story short... maybe Stack Overflow is not the right
castle for this type of question, even if on paper it passes the
rules.
So some Excel questions, even on paper pass all the rules, but people's perception is that it is not the case.
Now I understand better how to edit a question, and that is normal for a review process to take more than three days, but above all what I learned is that sometimes what Wikipedia says about Stackoverflow is true:
The site's culture has been criticized for being unfriendly...
None of the above "casualties" contributed to helping the OP to solve the problem or to improve the question, not a second answer was provided with a better solution under Excel that may be justified my answer was downvoted. No additional edits were submitted to improve further the question.
I understand people don't have to explain their votes/actions but certainly helps to understand how a question or an answer can be improved and in the end, it promotes better collaboration.
06/05/2020
, but in your version is5/3/2021
. Dave: changed from30/05/2020
to5/30/2020
. (which also means that you swapped order of day and month). Second table: Original salaries were given in £, but your data contains $. Salary values are also changed. Bob daily salary was 199, but is now 217.