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404
  • Member for 10 years, 6 months
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Town hall - Collectives™ on Stack Overflow
back to original text, as "not that far ago" makes no sense, and there was no good reason to change it in the first place
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Regex question was closed as lacking details, but I think it was objective and clear
It's not an amazingly high quality question but also nothing wrong with it. But it's not a legit question in the regex tag because the issue is really about CASE statements, the fact regex is being used is completely incidental to the actual issue. And how CASE statements work is something with a million answers already, so it should be closed as a duplicate.
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Should the [cyclic] tag be removed?
I always cringe at the awful puns used on burninate requests, so this title is a breath of fresh air to me.
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How many times do questions go through a delete/undelete cycle by the same group of users?
"Since Stack Exchange is pushing for a data-driven development" This isn't something that involves development, rather just deciding whether to enforce a (new) rule, so I don't see the relevance.
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What makes this a bad answer?
Were the downvotes received during or after your several edits? Just wondering if someone downvoted it because they thought it duplicated one of the other answers in that question, before it was expanded upon further?
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A "be nice" review
Regardless of whether OP should have been directed to CR, if he'd asked that question there I think it would have been accepted with no issues as a legit question. I haven't used CR in a while, but a few years ago such a question would have been fine. I can understand how the OP feels, wants some general guidance but doesn't necessarily know where to start. You don't know what you don't know. Been there myself. So I would have directed him to CR.
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Accidentally created a new grammatical error when fixing another, edit rejected, should I try again?
I would have rejected it. You're not just correcting typos or blatant english errors, but completely restructuring what they've written. I write a certain way, and I wouldn't appreciate it if someone else modifies what I wrote just to fit their own concept of how a sentence should be structured. As long as it's easily understandable, I would leave it alone. That being said, I did once submit an edit on a wiki page to change a comma to a semicolon, which was technically correct, and it was rejected due to being superfluous.
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