-30

You have closed my question https://stackoverflow.com/questions/77932777/style-conventions-for-const-enums.

But it is perfectly possible answer the question with facts and citations. For example, what does Microsoft recommend? What does Google? It was quite clear that this was the point of the post, I even gave examples that had been seen in the various style guides I'd read.

It was wrong to close this question - and you allowed somebody to not answer it, which when I called that out you then retaliated by closing my post. This is why people don't ask questions on this site, because you don't want them.

You will still not re-open it - you are not applying your OWN rules fairly.

Examples of existing posts:

What is the naming convention in Python for variables and functions?

Go naming conventions for const

I changed it in good faith, you still have said no. It is quite clear you just make it up as you go along.

39
  • 6
    so, either you're asking for 3rd party resources, or you're asking for opinions. Which one best fits your scenario? Sounds like the former, which is another close reason.
    – Kevin B
    Commented Feb 3 at 19:31
  • 7
    Right, but, how can someone provide that without providing 3rd party resources? Do you expect people to just objectively "know" what an entire company with tens of thousands of employees recommends? If there's a company-introduced recommendation, it's a 3rd party resource, you can just go read it,
    – Kevin B
    Commented Feb 3 at 19:33
  • 3
    You are asking for recommendations of corporations and each and every reader ("Are there conventions [...] that you, yourself enforce in your projects?"). The latter will necessarily be their own, personal opinion. How does that not make the question opinion-based? Commented Feb 3 at 19:34
  • 12
    "I am not sure why you had to close the question at all." Because it was off-topic as per the help center. I am not sure why that is surprising. Commented Feb 3 at 19:41
  • 11
    @Gigabit have you considered the way you approached this site puts people off from helping you?
    – VLAZ
    Commented Feb 3 at 19:42
  • 14
    @Gigabit Your comments make it appear that you have not considered that you might be wrong. Please carefully consider the feedback you're getting and that you might be wrong.
    – VLAZ
    Commented Feb 3 at 19:44
  • 4
    Even if I could (I cannot, and I'm not sure why you think otherwise) I see no reason to. There was no misconduct at all. The question was off-topic, so it was closed and the banner informed you why. Now that you edited it it is no longer off-topic due to this reason and being reopened. Commented Feb 3 at 19:44
  • 5
    @Gigabit "I am always right, anybody who ever does anything I don't like is wrong" is what you are projecting here, Do you really think that makes you sound reasonable?
    – VLAZ
    Commented Feb 3 at 19:47
  • 7
    No, I won't. You are very clearly not interested in the answers to those questions. If you were, there is an entire help centre and plenty of discussion what SO is or isn't about. You've ignored this. I posit you have asked your questions just to nitpick the answers to try and achieve some sort of perceived victory. You've already engaged with closed-minded and logically fallacious claims here. Declared yourself correct using circular reasoning. I have little reason to expect you are seeking honest engagement here. If that were the case, you'd have already questioned said circular reasoning.
    – VLAZ
    Commented Feb 3 at 19:52
  • 2
    "Now I've admitted where I was wrong, how about you think about how you and co moderate posts to attract people to actually want to post? Or do you just not care?" I do think about that, regularly. And then someone comes along and just smears everyone because they haven't read and understood the most basic rules of the site. Like here just explaining what is going on without having partaken in any negative action is enough to get a mouthful... Commented Feb 3 at 19:53
  • 13
    Your rant here is your opinion, it’s not shared by other people. “Do you just not care?” is a silly question to ask. Of course people who don’t agree that you’re right don’t care that what you want to happen isn’t happening. Why would they?
    – Clive
    Commented Feb 3 at 19:58
  • 6
    No one here has categorically ruled out moderation mistakes. But such mistakes happening doesn't mean any and all moderation must cease, especially when it is clearly following the rules. Commented Feb 3 at 20:02
  • 6
    @rene I'd prefer not to see this specific question generalized. While a question about "Are coding style convention questions off-topic?" could be useful, if it's not a duplicate, there's enough contention surrounding this specific question, and the other questions asked today, such that if the question "Are coding style convention questions off-topic?" is going to be asked, I rather see a new question posted that doesn't retain the context of this specific question.
    – Makyen Mod
    Commented Feb 3 at 22:32
  • 2
    "Why close questions rather than just asking the people to change them?" You can learn this by reading existing Meta posts. It is a fundamental part of how the site works. (It also does not prevent people from changing them, and in fact is a way of asking for the change: changing it allows for fixing the reason it was closed, which can convince others to reopen it.) Commented Feb 3 at 22:56
  • 3
    @rene I didn't mean the question shouldn't be improved. I meant I'd prefer it not be generalized. Your title is what I'd expect on something like a FAQ entry or a general discussion of the underlying issue, which then becomes a reference Q&A to be referred back to many times. The use of that title made me concerned that transitioning this question into something like those might be your intent. I don't feel that this question is an appropriate candidate for that process. If a reference question on the underlying topic is desired, I'd prefer a new question without this one's context/baggage.
    – Makyen Mod
    Commented Feb 4 at 15:53

1 Answer 1

6

I'm not dealing with the original revision. Currently the question reads (which was deleted after this revision):

What are the conventions recommended for typing consts (that act like enums) in TypeScript? Are there conventions enforced by the large companies or that Microsoft (the makers of TypeScript), have produced?

I believe questions about official conventions, or even officially recommended best practices, are on-topic. If the last line could be rephrased as

What are Credit:Philipxy the conventions that Microsoft (the makers of TypeScript) have regarding this?

I believe that it would be certainly on-topic—questions about official documentation/styles, especially in TypeScript, would certainly be on-topic.

If we take the exact quote per se,

Are there conventions enforced by the large companies or that Microsoft (the makers of TypeScript), have produced?

"Conventions enforced by Large companies" would certainly be opinion based. Large by whose standards? Why should we care about conventions enforced by them? But it is followed by a "or"—"that Microsoft (the makers of TypeScript), have produced?" The last one would be a question about official language spec. If there are two questions and one is off-topic, salvaging questions is a better way to handle that, rather than nuking everything from orbit.

As a corollary, if all the body of the question asks about one thing, but if there's a single line that asks about something off-topic, better to remove that line rather than nuking the post for that one line. Salvage, as much as possible, rather than nuke should be the default policy. I do not agree with the current deletion.

1
  • 1
    "Are there"--bad. "What are"--good.
    – philipxy
    Commented Feb 5 at 15:17

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged .