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I don't see how rewarding a poster that allows his code to become old should usurp any tendency o f the site, with all it's "editors" (you and I), to decide to punish him by retracting points from his ORIGINAL score; the score he receives for enlightening the community, and passing the censors (you and I, again), once his article/tiptrick/blog/project/etc squeezes through the moderation pipeline and ends up rattling around in new-CP-space.
Certain riding thoughts accompany this probably true scenario. One being that writers of ARTICLES know that their content is being downloaded. And I'll stop there because ... obviously they already have more knowledge about the point system than I do so further discussion would make my additions purely conjectural.
On that second thought then, there have been attempts by the authors of CP (not you and I, not members; whatever creature is running in the wheel at the time of it's appearance) to make light of the fact that much of the scoring is tallied in realtime and available at the touch of that coding wizard's paw, and I'd submit that you and I actually have little say at all when it comes to scores commensurate with identities and therefore shouldn't bother to care about such things.
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When your article was (rightly) deleted, any reputation points attaching to it were also deleted, hence the changes. I am not sure what you are so unhappy about, there is no point in leaving a non-article (i.e the one marked obsolete) cluttering up the site.
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Sorry Richard
I disagree 100% with your argumentation
(and honestly: sorry, seem you do not read carefully the message)
- The article was bookmarked. The bookmarks stay (at least) on the browser. now any bookmark is a broken link. (Error 404 is never a good thing)
- As I said: «If I had had the chance, my choice would have been to keep the old article and add a link to the new article» And the chance was not given to me. At all.
- When you buy handkerchiefs then, do you ask to be refunded when you throw them away after using them? (why should I lost my points after an article was deleted?)
- I wrote the article then is somehow I am the owner of that article (in the good and in the bad). Don't you think I have the right to participate in the decision to cancel it?
- If I had been aware that deleting an article means losing the relative points. I would never have deleted it. (this is cluttering the site !!!!)
I write some messages and participated to others, what I observed is a large percentage of people participating in the "chat" just to get "reputation points". I think that is a big limitation of this site!
Cheers
Vincenzo
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The decision to remove your article was taken by one of the site admins, after discussion with you:
Re: Obsolete article? - Article Writing Discussion Boards[^]
Based on Sean's comment, you did have the chance to participate in that discussion. But the eventual decision on whether or not to leave a non-article published on this site rests with the site owners.
Your suggestion about redirecting links from the old article to the new article has some merit, and is worth discussing in this forum. I suggest you concentrate on that, rather than complaining about your non-article being removed.
"These people looked deep within my soul and assigned me a number based on the order in which I joined."
- Homer
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CodeErgoSum wrote: I disagree 100% with your argumentation Well that is your free choice. But I doubt that the site is going to change the rules because one person disagrees with them.
CodeErgoSum wrote: now any bookmark is a broken link. (Error 404 is never a good thing) Well that holds true for any bookmark anywhere on the internet.
And if people wish to read your article it is easy enough to find, via the search facilitiy, or by going to your home page.
And out of all this we come back to the question: Why did you mark the article as obsolete rather than just updating it with whatever new information you wished to add? That would have resolved all your questions without any difficulty, and you would keep your reputation points.
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I Talked with the people of CodeProject: they wish to improve the voting system. Obviously, the site "is not going to change the rules because one person disagrees with them". But they are ready to have a positive confrontation and if the case...
«Well that holds true for any bookmark anywhere on the internet.»:
wrong.
«Well that holds true for any, not properly managed , bookmark anywhere on the internet.»:
That's correct!
«And if people wish to read your article it is easy enough to find, via the search facility, or by going to your home page.»
That could be a solution.
A "site centric" (ego-centric) solution.
I prefer a "custom centric" solution that makes easier the life of the user providing a direct link to the new article
«Why did you mark the article as obsolete rather than just updating it with whatever new information you wished to add? That would have resolved all your questions without any difficulty, and you would keep your reputation points.»
Why?
Just because Sean suggest to me to do that way.
Is that enough for you?
Let me finish saying that thinking more before speaking, this could have been the place where the community could have initiated a serious conversation that could possibly have led to some results
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CodeErgoSum wrote: Let me finish saying that thinking more before speaking, this could have been the place where the community could have initiated a serious conversation that could possibly have led to some results I did think; I was merely trying to explain why some things happened, and how they could be resolved.
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In the "Discussions" block on the home page, threads are prefixed with a count. For a while it puzzled me that the counts often appeared too low, but I finally twigged that the displayed count is the number of direct responses to the original post (indent level one). [edit] .. or maybe something else again ... [/edit]
Maybe the total thread length might be a more useful number to display.
Not a biggie, in fact barely above the noise level...
Cheers,
Peter
Software rusts. Simon Stephenson, ca 1994. So does this signature. me, 2012
modified 22-Jun-21 20:53pm.
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Both Chris and I have looked and didn't see a discrepancy. If you see it again, could you capture an image, or at least describe what you see and identify the message that is of concern.
Thanks
"Time flies like an arrow. Fruit flies like a banana."
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Actually, it appears to be a caching issue. I think I need to reduce the cache duration.
"Time flies like an arrow. Fruit flies like a banana."
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Hi. I've been trying to add ESP32, STM32 and ESP-IDF tags to submitted content, but they do not show up.
I've checked my reputation/privileges and it says I can add tags. After trying twice, here I am.
What am I missing? I simply go to the article I'm editing, to the tag heading, and as items in the comma delimited list I type ESP32, ESP-IDF and nothing happens when I submit. It's as though I never entered them.
So my question is, how do I add tags?
Real programmers use butterflies
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You should be able to add new tags. I will look into this.
"Time flies like an arrow. Fruit flies like a banana."
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You should be able to create new tags now. That was a tricky little bug.
"Time flies like an arrow. Fruit flies like a banana."
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Thank you. I'm going to go back and edit one of my big articles and I'll see if it sticks.
Real programmers use butterflies
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I tried it, and they didn't stick.
GFX Forever: The Complete Guide to GFX for IoT[^]
I tried to add ESP32 (an IoT SoC chip) and ESP-IDF (the ESP32 development framework/SDK) to my article and they didn't take.
Could it be cached?
Real programmers use butterflies
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It must be a problem with permissions now. I've got the creation and caching all sorted out, but as an Admin I have no problems with permissions. I'll dig back in.
In the meantime, I'll add the tags for you.
"Time flies like an arrow. Fruit flies like a banana."
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And of course, the tags didn't stick. It's going to be one of 'those' days.
"Time flies like an arrow. Fruit flies like a banana."
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I tracked it down. It seems that the ESP32 tag had been created in the past and then had been marked deleted. This caused a silent failure of the creation of the new tags. I added the other and then undeleted ESP32.
They are both showing on your article now but may get deleted again. I will be talking to Chris about tags shortly.
"Time flies like an arrow. Fruit flies like a banana."
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I was hoping that someone would fix the C++ pretty printing code.
In an ideal world, I would like to just embed plain C++ code in an article or answer:
<h1>include <stdlib.h></h1>
Currently; even pasting, and then choosing encode as HTML runs into problems:
<h1>include <stdlib.h></h1>
Yesterday I tried embedding some code in a reply, The Lounge, and as all can see, this did not work all that well.
Best regards
Espen Harlinn
Espen Harlinn
Senior Architect - Ulriken Consulting AS
The competent programmer is fully aware of the strictly limited size of his own skull; therefore he approaches the programming task in full humility, and among other things he avoids clever tricks like the plague.Edsger W.Dijkstra
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I think you're supposed to use <pre lang=c++>...</pre>.
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I was using:
<pre lang="C++">
</pre>
Espen Harlinn
Senior Architect - Ulriken Consulting AS
The competent programmer is fully aware of the strictly limited size of his own skull; therefore he approaches the programming task in full humility, and among other things he avoids clever tricks like the plague.Edsger W.Dijkstra
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Thanks for the report. This, and the 'fix' by @David-ONeil in his response, my help us understand a tricky issue.
"Time flies like an arrow. Fruit flies like a banana."
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This has something to do with Markdown, as it happened to me earlier today when posting some Python code. And I never have Use Markdown formatting ticked.
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That is my guess too … my gut feeling is that if markdown was disabled for anything between <pre ...> and </pre> then the problem will be solved.
Espen Harlinn
Senior Architect - Ulriken Consulting AS
The competent programmer is fully aware of the strictly limited size of his own skull; therefore he approaches the programming task in full humility, and among other things he avoids clever tricks like the plague.Edsger W.Dijkstra
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