I think retag-only is fine for a suggested edit, if it's adding a tag that would actually improve the post (and there's not gobs of other stuff wrong with the post).
Like a post tagged only "asp.net", but the question is really mostly about the C# code.
Adding C# could be a big improvement, as far as putting it in front of the right audience.
I’m developing an android application on mobile phone with https/SSL connection to apache web server. My apache configuration file requires mutual authentication: SSLVerifyClient require.
My mobile is connected to a Hardware Security Module in order to store securely both client key pair and cer...
The Internet always seems like a small place when you forget the answer to a question you knew you searched for before, you search again and find the top hit is your own question on Stack Exchange.
@BenjaminGruenbaum Yea... it is quite annoying.. There should be a monthly process that goes through posts and lets users know when posts have a rotted link. Would it even be feasible?
The broken links review will let users edit posts with, well, broken links, highlighting those links for them. I reviewed such a post once, can't find it now though. :(
I noticed that another user had a post on Stack Overflow whose link had 404d and he never knew about it until I let him know about it.
I know that there is a broken link review queue under development somewhere, but my request is for something different.
Is there a way for us to have a monthly ...
It would be really nice if SO scanned posted content and checked detected links, and then notified the user of bad or redirected links so they could verify links are still valid and/or fix them.
I'm looking for policy or guidance on the following situation. Someone just posted a new question Q1. I noticed that one of the existing answers to another question (Q2) already answers Q1 -- the answer to Q2 happens to be general enough that it answers not just Q2 but also Q1. However, Q1 is ...
I believe that there should be a script that would run on a monthly (or daily if possible) process that would let users know that a certain post (or posts) has a broken link in it and should be updated
There used to be a comment that popped up telling people that there was a dead link in their p...
Some people are a little rude with their comments though. Often they are phrased along the lines of "So, what exactly is wrong with trying <solution to problem>?".
Several of my questions have been downvoted because they were judged as "too simple" and thus misinterpreted as "not enough research effort". I'm learning by myself on my spare time and despite all the efforts I put on it, I'm not good enough and thus have been banned. I never post anything witho...
Consider the following events:
A relatively new user asks a question
The question gets 2-3 downvotes
The OP gets irritated by the downvotes and changes their question to something like "this site sucks"
In this case, is it appropriate to rollback the edit? Or should it be flagged for moderato...
could someone please help me out, why these guys get edits for a change that was done by me:
where nothing was changed? (mhitza)
where only my changes were accepted? (psxls)
Please don't get me wrong - i'm not interested in the reputation, but just curious why edits with no changes are even a...
I think it is one of those more specific questions not exactly answered in the FAQ. Kind of borderline, most other questions should be closed as a dupe of the FAQ.
If it's a specific support question, it should get a specific answer. If it's a general "how does it work" question, then it could usually be closed as a dupe of the FAQ.
It's about a specific instance, so it deserves a specific answer. It's like telling people to LMGTFY when you send them to the FAQ.
Another bad case is when they close questions of people who want to know what site to post to as a dupe of the SO/Programmers posting question. If it's not part of that domain, it shouldn't be closed a dupe of that question.
There seems to be more than a few computer science/programming Stack Exchange networks (is that the correct term?). Stack Overflow, being the first, has by far the most users, questions, and answers.
What is the reasoning for creating the others, and are there clear guidelines for which kinds o...
I still think that suggested edits question is a bad example of what you're describing. The OP even says, in the comments, that the FAQ answered his questions, @Lance.
When a question is solved, should the OP edit the post to include the working solution provided by one of the answers?
Here's an example:
Codeaddict gave me the correct answer for my question. I accepted his answer and I also upvoted a helpful comment.
Should I also update my question's code...
That doesn't address what happened. He didn't edit the code that was in his question, he added a section showing his final result based on the answer he had received.
So many examples on meta (for ex: meta.stackoverflow.com/q/74101/241700) I am not going to go through all of them. If you disagree, then meta post abt it :-)
When a question is solved, should the OP edit the post to include the working solution provided by one of the answers?
Here's an example:
Codeaddict gave me the correct answer for my question. I accepted his answer and I also upvoted a helpful comment.
Should I also update my question's code...
No, don't change your original question but some people add an "Edit" or "Update" section at the end of their answer. It's not strictly necessary but you can add the fixed code to the end of your question (clearly marked as an addendum/solution).
I got the Rosetta Stone software as a Christmas gift, and discovered that they have something similar to Stack Overflow badges (they call them "stamps"). I was then disappointed to discover that there's no leaderboard or anything like one (as far as I can find).
Today I've seen a user on Stackoverflow put a comment on a lot of users posts saying:
Please don't forget to add a '?' to questions! Some people do a search in the page for '?' and if none exists in the 'question' go directly to the next (actual) question in line.
The user posting this has ...
yep, and while I agree with him it's arbitrary, two-space has been the de-facto standard for a long time, even if it isn't used in the style manuals. Having said that I've noticed that I've been slowly switching over to one space, though I don't know if I'll ever make the complete change.
I noticed that after the black top bar was added I don't get the chat notifications anymore...
I can see them in chat.[sitename] page but I would like to get them in the main pages of the website.
I don't know if this a new feature or a bug, but can you add this back, please?