I just failed this review, but I don't understand why. The question was shown without comments:
https://stackoverflow.com/review/first-questions/34632397
I selected to provide "Feedback", because the question itself includes an answer and no real question was asked. So my proposed action would be to ask what the question is.
What would the desired review action be?
The discussion seems to point towards habits of the r tag community. This leads to an interesting consideration for the audit system: are people expected to divine unwritten arcane "rules" when evaluating posts?
The same post without the upvotes would be considered bad under any other tag because it doesn't pose a question. The "system" determined it to be "good" because it got upvotes, but that simply acts as a feedback loop of objectively bad questions being allowed under r.
Very black and white: as a newbie reviewer I could (temporarily) lose my reviewing privileges because r is holding itself to low standards and there is no way for me to know that these arcane rules exist.
r
do not get to pretend that the rules that apply to everyone else, do not apply to you. I do believe that it is time for me to break my curation strike forr
specifically, and impose some order on a tag that has very obviously come to believe it is a law unto itself.Code example
." The question has now been changed to "I have been able to achieve foo by doing bar, however, it's not as performant as I'd like. What other methods can I use? This is my attempt doing barCode Example
." That is on-topic but the prior revision posted was not good as it was a Q&A in a Q; as written it should have been 2 posts.r
either flag it for mods or bring it up on meta. No one gets to point fingers and make baseless accusations."Find the first of the last 1's sequence"
, I read it as"how do I find the first of the last 1's sequence?"
. In the body of the post they say "verbose" meaning "not optimal".r
... has very obviously come to believe it is a law unto itself" wide-spread? I find that notion offensive (since I participate heavily in that tag), that's just me, but ... I also find it insensitive to the notion that the Stack community is full of "sub-cultures". There are many differences between groups of non-overlapping users, and on my infrequent jaunt into far-distant-tags (to me), I realize the expectations are often slightly different. Where is there any justification of this claim that r is more different (and in a bad way) than any other tag?