For development purposes, I'd like to get a rough estimate of the distribution of browser usage share, but everything I've been able to find just states overall market share. Is it possible to get browser share by OS? Thanks.
If a user ever types : "not working" in a question, some kind of notification should inform the user to explain it further, i.e what exactly is 'not working'. Just an idea.
firefox-3 (85)
firefox-5 (36)
firefox-6 (1)
firefox-8 (2)
but
firefox2 (12)
firefox3 (1)
firefox3.6 (40)
firefox3.6 (111)
firefox4 (203)
firefox6 (21)
and so on!
I propose to use well-used dashed-form for versions.
@MarcGravell - for the "exact duplicate" without a link "other" flags declined rather than disputed is presumably a more sensible outcome on the flag, which 10K users can't do anyway
@MarcGravell that's probably a good idea in the more general case too - warning users that their custom text hits a heuristic that will make it visible to 10K users takes the surprise out of having it visible to more than just mods, which I think is what the concern was in the original question about it
(which isn't quite an auto-reject, but makes the heuristics more obvious so if it really was said "in confidence" then it wouldn't get leaked without warning)
I can't get excited about that... now that we've fixed the false-positive, all we're "leaking" is that someone (not disclosed) thought it was a dup or should be migrated. Now, the only thing they can intend here is "please close it as dup or off-topic", which would be public anyway.
With the false-positive hole plugged, there is nothing private leaked.
I've just changed it so that "exact duplicate" (without an id or link) gets refused
It's sort of the opposite solution to plugging the hole - if you have "this hits a heuristic" you can push people towards the regular flags rather than the custom ones and the warning means you could still showing 10K users some of the more "creative ones" that might be fixable by someone with tag knowledge or enough time.
@MarcGravell there might be some flags where "exact duplicate" could legitimately appear in the text (off the top of my head an incorrect close on a low-traffic question might need moderator intervention to reopen)
The regex is : new Regex(@"^((exact|possible) )?dup(e|licate)( of|:)?( this)?( question)? (?<question>\S+)$", RegexOptions.Compiled | RegexOptions.IgnoreCase | RegexOptions.ExplicitCapture)
and note that the <question> group must parse either as a +ve integer, or be a url that is parsed to a standard SO question URL (in any of our usual variants).
so even "exact duplicate of evilusermustdie" would just get rejected
honest, I don't think there is any false-positive risk now
@MarcGravell I agree that looks like it killed the false positive risk. From your comment on the question on meta I thought you were concerned about the effect of increasing the false-negatives though
not sure how many of these sorts of flags there are, but it might be worth adding another wording to that regex - just spotted this flag: "Duplicate of another question --> stackoverflow.com/questions/318452/…" which would get overlooked by the new regex.
adding "another" as an alternative for "this" in that regex is easy. The ASCII "arrow" is more fiddly though
@mootinator I have a naive Bayesian classifier running on my local machine, it looks reasonable on a very small sample I labelled by hand. I can't see how to authenticate a user via api.stackoverflow.com (I was thinking about making adding training data public, but wanted to require that users have at least a bronze tag badge before they could contribute)