tracking problems
Erik Naggum
enag at ifi.uio.no
Sat May 4 03:10:43 AEST 1991
In comp.lang.c article <9169:May205:59:1791 at kramden.acf.nyu.edu>,
brnstnd at kramden.acf.nyu.edu (Dan Bernstein) writes:
In article <blah> somebody writes:
[ lots of stuff having nothing to do with C ]
Question: I know this article is inappropriate for comp.lang.c. But how
do I explain this to someone else? Is there some reasonably well-defined
quality of an article that always implies inappropriateness?
When someone asks what he's doing wrong with popen("who","r"), the
answer might be that he's mismanipulating some FILE pointers, or it
might be that he's misusing the output of the ``who'' command. How do
you explain that his question was appropriate for comp.lang.c in the
first case and comp.unix.questions in the second? Is the appropriate
newsgroup a function of the question or of the answer? In either case,
what's the function?
Followups by e-mail. Yes, I'm asking this seriously. I simply can't
figure out a good way to explain this ``appropriateness'' concept to
people. Please *don't* send me e-mail if you don't have constructive
suggestions.
By implication of your last sentence, I post. The best way to explain
the appropriateness concept is by example. Don't follow up to things
which are not appropriate to a newsgroup in that newsgroup, and the
stupid and ill-behaved posters may or may not go away. Your note, for
instance, is not appropriate to comp.lang.c. As a result, I simply
can't figure out how you think you could explain something to somebody
when you don't even have a clue to it yourself.
Note followup-to: alt.flame
--
[Erik Naggum] Professional Programmer <enag at ifi.uio.no>
Naggum Software Electronic Text <erik at naggum.uu.no>
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