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Looks like he thinks I'm trying "get" him, so guess I've wasted a bit of time
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I must admit, his tactic of deleting and recreating articles to get rid of unwanted low votes is a new one on me.
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Pete O'Hanlon wrote: I must admit, his tactic of deleting and recreating articles to get rid of unwanted low votes is a new one on me.
If it gets prevalent, somebody will probably step in and curb the practice ...
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Richard MacCutchan wrote: why Espen has singled this one out
The title "The new C++ operator && and why should you start using it" is OK, it's something I'd like to see more about.
When you write Right now I am trying to test those changes in CLang, you are implying that you know what you are talking about at an expert level. What Ladislav suggests ahould be implemented at the language level can, and the are many examples of this, easily be implemented at the library level.
Find the section starting with I call it Hurray stl vector<everything> trend.
Do you want destructors to be called on an object when a pointer to that object goes out of scope?
The functionality he is looking for here is already provided by shared_ptr.
We're also looking at a proposal for C++ dynamic arrays, by Lawrence Crowl and Matt Austern - which will proably get my vote.
It's highly unlikely that the language will be altered to provide for features that can reasonably be implemented at the library level.
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I agree with what you are saying, but I still feel that the best way to get the article improved is to enter into a discussion with the author. I have tried it today and he has made a minor change as a result.
Espen Harlinn wrote: When you write Right now I am trying to test those changes in CLang, you are implying that you know what you are talking about at an expert level. I guess anyone who posts an article is implying that they know what they are talking about, but the proof of that lies in the article itself. If it does not live up to its promise then it will be either voted into oblivion or ignored by the majority of readers.
One of these days I'm going to think of a really clever signature.
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Richard MacCutchan wrote: it will be either voted into oblivion
I would much rather see an article getting a huge number of upvotes, and it would be nice if that article was written by Ladislav.
Richard MacCutchan wrote: enter into a discussion with the author
I believe I tried just that when he posted his initial article.
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Hi,
So recently I've been noticing that posts in any forum that receive any vote value lower than 5 end up with the silver Low Vote colour. This must be a bug. It only used to be for values < 3, wasn't it? Now it's < 5. Interestingly, if a message has no votes, it just uses the normal, un-voted colour.
Ed
(P.s. I did search this forum to try and find something else highlighting this issue but didn't find anything.)
Edit: Example here at the moment: http://www.codeproject.com/Messages/4356216/Every-cloud-has-a-silver-lining.aspx[^]
Rating is 3.88 yet is has the silver low vote colour - this happens for 4 and 4.5 etc. Only absolute 5 seems to get the correct colour.
Or this one:
http://www.codeproject.com/Messages/4355262/So-coooool.aspx[^]
Rating 4.75 yet displayed in Silver.
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You need to adjust the 'noise' setting on the orange bar at the top of the forum. I suggest you change this to Medium.
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Erm...right... Okay so does the Noise setting set what value classes as a low vote then?
Sorry for my confusion I just didn't think I had changed any setting like this recently...perhaps I did without realising.
Anyway, thanks,
Ed
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Ed Nutting wrote: I just didn't think I had changed any setting like this recently...perhaps I did without realising
I doubt if you did that. My settings too got reset, like: "notify me if someone replies my message..." OR Show only publicly available posts
I guess some change triggered these for us. OK for now, so no issues.
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I wasn't sure where to put this so Site Bugs/Suggestions seemed like a likely place to get an answer. It's been "bugging" me for a while this one so here goes:
When reporting/approving an article, why when an article has had 5 reports and doesn't get published, does it not show all five member's names who reported it? It only seems to show the names of people who are Platinum in something (or some other selection system?). Can anyone explain what is actually happening and what the logic behind it is?
Thanks,
Ed
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No I know how the approvals work - something is published once 5 Editors approve it (not necessarily Platinum - look up the rankings).
What I was wondering was why, when an article is NOT approved, it puts a message at the top saying "This item was closed....by [Editors who reported names]", except that the editors name only usually include 2 or 3 members and only Platinum ones, yet to have been closed/rejected it must have had at least 5 reports. It seems very odd to me...
Thanks anyway,
Ed
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Quote: not necessarily Platinum - look up the rankings
How can you find out who approved your article?
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As far as I'm aware you can't - it's an anonymous approval system (which is good).
As per the bug I've reported, you can only find out which Platinum members rejected your article (should that be the case).
Ed
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Sometimes that's me swooping in to help the flow of the Articles Needing Approval queue. Usually in those cases I am also emailing the author on steps to take to improve, different arena for posting, etc.
Thanks,
Sean Ewington
The Code Project
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Some members (eg admins) have super secret squirrel ninja powers and can close articles with a single vote.
cheers,
Chris Maunder
The Code Project | Co-founder
Microsoft C++ MVP
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If a user marks all the notifications as read, would it be a good idea to automatically redirect him back to previous page?
"Bastards encourage idiots to use Oracle Forms, Web Forms, Access and a number of other dinky web publishing tolls.", Mycroft Holmes[ ^]
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I'd personally find that confusing. I'm on page 5, I hit "mark all as read" and I'm now on page 4, which could be a bunch of messages you've already looked at but don't wish to mark as read. I'd rather keep it predictable.
cheers,
Chris Maunder
The Code Project | Co-founder
Microsoft C++ MVP
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I have several articles with screenshots of older versions that are no longer relevant, some of the images will not let me delete them???
At first I thought it may be opera, but safari and ie do the same thing, so think it is a problem with code project...
There is no error, it just doesn't remove them.
Has anyone else experienced this, or know what is going wrong??
Thanks
Kris
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Just a thought, I could be wrong. I think a copy of the images reside here on the servers. Also, could you not just edit the article without the images?
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Yes... but there is an image limit of 10MB... so if you have many versions with different screenshots your space will run out!... also with heaps of images in the right pane it gets hard to manage them all...
Kris
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Which article?
cheers,
Chris Maunder
The Code Project | Co-founder
Microsoft C++ MVP
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I just deleted one of the duplicate "alert" images and it all went well.
cheers,
Chris Maunder
The Code Project | Co-founder
Microsoft C++ MVP
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