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Peter Cordes's user avatar
Peter Cordes's user avatar
Peter Cordes's user avatar
Peter Cordes
  • Member for 15 years
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The ambiguous [webrequest] tag is misused quite a bit
@Nanigashi: Rename would be much better, since we don't want webrequest to show up as an auto-completion that people could select without reading the mouseover; It would only change to .net-webrequest after posting, and low-effort posters might not even look at the tags again.
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Call for testers for an early access release of a Stack Overflow extension for GitHub Copilot
@TylerH: Agreed about question titles missing. With titles, an interesting one could catch your attention and make you realize there was an aspect of your problem you hadn't even thought to ask about. Or just that it looks interesting, and lead you to the SO post where you might vote or comment and interact with the person who's answer you've benefited from. With just author names, it seems a lot less likely that someone would bother to click any of the links unless they make a point of upvoting answers that helped them, and more likely to suck life out of the community.
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Republishing Stack Overflow content as videos on YouTube
yt-dlp is open source and currently works fine. github.com/yt-dlp/yt-dlp . But youtube doesn't make it easy to download videos unless you pay for premium; there's a download button on every youtube video page, and clicking it opens a sign-up-for-premium dialog.
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Answering by suggesting editing an open-source external library
As Andras Deak mentioned in comments under the question, a good long-term way to modify open-source libraries is to get your change accepted upstream so you don't have to manually merge or rebase your patch every new upstream release. This of course requires them to be useful to multiple people and developed in a way that upstream might want to accept. Using your own fork of the project before a pull-request is accepted upstream is a viable option, but if it doesn't get accepted you need a plan to either do something else or to maintain your own fork / patch.
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Can authors completely rewrite their Staging Ground posts?
There is no vote-to-delete option on staging-ground posts. Like Drew said, you're just completely making stuff up about how the staging ground works and engaging in wishful thinking about how you wish things worked.
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Can authors completely rewrite their Staging Ground posts?
I don't remember seeing a "delete" option on staging-ground posts. How do you suggest reviewers get an SG post deleted so it can't be edited anymore?
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Can authors completely rewrite their Staging Ground posts?
@dan1st: rate-limit as in question ban, like would a new user who's asked too many bad questions sometimes not be able to just make a new post instead. According to Drew Reese's answer, yes, question bans do apply to staging-ground posts, too, motivating this kind of thing. (But do bad staging-ground questions contribute to being question-banned as much as bad questions on the main site? They can't get downvoted on SG.)
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Can authors completely rewrite their Staging Ground posts?
Is there some rate-limit on staging ground posts? If an edit truly replaces the entire old question with an entire new one, wouldn't that be better as a new staging-ground post so there aren't stale comments that presumably don't apply to the new question? (That's not a showstopper problem, but still a downside to edit instead of delete and post new.)
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Reviewing in the Staging Ground: A practical guide
There are also questions I don't think are interesting or useful which I might even downvote, but don't fit any of the close reasons. I'm less sure about approving those from the SG. When those appear on main, I sometimes try to help the OP in comments if I think that's possible in a comment or two, even if I don't think the question has future value even if it is mostly answerable. IDK how to handle that on SG.
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Reviewing in the Staging Ground: A practical guide
if you think it's a good Stack Overflow question, - IMO, "good" is a much higher bar than "valid" / "I wouldn't vote to close in this state on the main site" which is what we should be using as a criterion for approving from the staging ground. In my book, a "good" question is one deserving an upvote, and those are much rarer.
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Edits that change the style/wording of questions
@Rup: Yes, you can @ notify someone who only edited. It won't auto-complete if they haven't commented, but they do get the notification.
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Is there a point to reviewing/accepting suggested edits of tags on a poorly rated duplicate?
@LWChris - a pending suggested edit blocks other suggested edits, but a high-rep user can make an edit themselves, automatically approving (or rejecting, their choice) the pending suggested edit. The buttons that come up are "improve edit", "reject and edit", etc. But if you just click "approve" and then later see something to edit, you're locked out until the review completes, which is really dumb. Similar problem to when you vote to close with a reason other than duplicate, then you can't dup-hammer. (Oh, VLAZ already mentioned "improve edit".)
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What can be done to combat the spam in discussions?
@ray: Much of the community still curates and moderates the site that way. The corporation that owns it doesn't understand (or seem to care much about) the community, so new site features and changes are usually either orthogonal to that goal or actively work against what the community wants. Only a few of the employees actually use the site and understand how badly things suck.
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Feedback Requested: How do you use the tagged questions page?
@JeanotZubler: Right, none of the tags I follow have firehose levels of activity; I'm active enough on SO to keep up with [assembly][cpu-architecture][simd] and similar tags, so I see every question. If I also wanted to look at higher activity tags without overwhelming the low-traffic tags, I could use a separate tab or click between two custom filters. (I don't want that; I have ADHD and can't not look at stuff, so I'd burn myself out with [c] or [optimization] in my feed.) Anyway, you could make one filter for all your really niche tags.
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Feedback Requested: How do you use the tagged questions page?
If you have multiple such tags that you check infrequently, you could do a search on all of them together to see questions that match any of those tags, and can sort by activity as a good way to curate / moderate without seeing the same question multiple times if it has multiple tags you follow. You can even save the search as a "custom filter" with a name to make it easy to get to if you don't leave it open in a tab.
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Feedback Requested: How do you use the tagged questions page?
@Siguza: I use SO with a search on multiple tags, so I don't have to flip through them separately, and so overlap doesn't lead to seeing the same question twice. So I see all activity on any question in any of the tags I follow.
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Is archiving the best solution for duplicates from the Staging Ground?
so that search engines get more targets to link to. - Not just more, but different. e.g. the same underlying problem manifesting in different ways, or being described with different words by people with different background experience and who encountered it in different contexts. The idea is to have different signposts leading the the same set of answers, not primarily out of sympathy for querents who didn't find a duplicate. If none of the existing duplicates of a question use the same terms to describe a problem and it's overall well asked, it could be a useful additional signpost.
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Is the voting culture on SO different than other SE sites?
@Minko_Minkov: If someone thinks a question should be closed, it's fairly normal for them to comment about why, with the intended audience being other potential close-voters, not just the person who posted the question. (Or to encourage OP to delete before more downvotes.) Some people will actively avoid helping in comments on questions they don't think should have been posted, because that encourages more low-quality questions by giving the poster what they wanted. I haven't looked at your questions and don't know how much if any of that applies to comments under your posts.
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