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Thanks for approving
That's a good idea, though this might be a rare case. You never know, one day my affections for Love Potion #9, movies, and baba (actually I don't know what this is) might need to be stopped.
Thanks,
Sean Ewington
CodeProject
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Do you mean to have a bullet of cryptonite in the safe?
M.D.V.
If something has a solution... Why do we have to worry about?. If it has no solution... For what reason do we have to worry about?
Help me to understand what I'm saying, and I'll explain it better to you
Rating helpful answers is nice, but saying thanks can be even nicer.
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Even Superman gave Batman a kyrptonite glove Just in case ...
Thanks,
Sean Ewington
CodeProject
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Thanks a lot for your feedback. The subject I've created is closed.
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And the last question: I'm just began to modify my article today, but I want also keep the previous version and paste the link to the new revised article. Is that actually worthy to do??
modified 18-Jun-15 10:58am.
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If people really want to look at outdated versions of the article they can look at your revisions. It is best to keep your most current article revision live.
Thanks,
Sean Ewington
CodeProject
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And one more question if I can modify my article several times and every time submit it for the codeproject.com moderators approval??
modified 18-Jun-15 10:58am.
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I've moved all your posts to this Article Writing forum as these are related specifically to Articles, not site bugs or suggestions.
Until you reach a certain author reputation, yes, every article update goes through moderator approval.
Thanks,
Sean Ewington
CodeProject
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Hi. I've got one more question why my article was never added to the codeproject.com daily newsletter??
modified 18-Jun-15 10:57am.
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That's ... unusual. I wonder if your publish time was in a particular sweet spot that caused it to skip the newsletter.
In any case, I'll mark your next update as updated so it will show up in the next newsletter.
Thanks,
Sean Ewington
CodeProject
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Hi. Today 06-18-2015 my article was upvoted 2 times, but it happened to be actually downvoted. When I've noticed that my article was recently downvoted I first looked into this and seen that it was upvoted instead. I gained the first time 40 reputation points and 10 for the second voting, but the score the article was inspite lowered. So, I'm interested, what's happened with my article score, is that something wrong with the system or moderators, under some reason, purpously removed the up votes??
Now, I'm making changes to my article and about to publish the new revised version. Possibly, is that the reason for the article score is reduced ??
Waiting for your reply.
Thanks a lot. Arthur.
modified 18-Jun-15 10:57am.
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I believe this formula was modified slightly recently for very specific scenarios, but here is how we calculate rating:
Code Project Rating and Reputation FAQ[^]
So a member with a high reputation voting 4 is weighted more than a member with a low reputation voting 5, which could be why you see scores go down sometimes.
Thanks,
Sean Ewington
CodeProject
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But my article was NOT downvoted for the last time. There was only 1 vote of 4 a few days ago. So what's actually the reason for downvoting the article??
P.S. A minute age I tried to post this message, but it ended with an error as follows:
Items that need attention:
•Message is missing or has inconsistent data
Isn't that a similar reason ??
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Someone voted your article 4 today. 4 is not a downvote.
Thanks,
Sean Ewington
CodeProject
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1) Do you mean, when someone with the low reputation voted as 4, the score will be reduced even if it's not a downvote ??
2) When my article was voted as 4 the first time, the downvote was logged ??
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1) It really depends on what votes you receive and from whom. For example:
The rating of an item is R = Vt / Wt
If everyone has a weight of 1 then (Wt = N), and (R = Vt / N). Having differing weights, though, means that when a gold member (weight = 4) and bronze member (weight = 1) vote, the vote is weighted towards the gold:
Assume Gold votes 5 and Bronze votes 1:
Wt = 4 + 1 = 5
Vt = 4 x 5 + 1 x 1 = 21
R = 4.2
2) I am not sure where you are seeing a downvote logged. I can see the votes on your article, there are no votes below 4. Any vote above 4 is not a downvote. Going through your recent reputation there is no downvote event. You've only published one article with us and it has never been downvoted.
Thanks,
Sean Ewington
CodeProject
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Please look at the article's score chart under the "stars" in the article's page. It indicates that there was just one vote of 4.
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My chart shows two votes of 4. In addition, looking at the votes more closely (which you cannot see, unfortunately) there are definitely two votes of 4.
Thanks,
Sean Ewington
CodeProject
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There are two 4 votes. I hovered over the 4 and it clearly shows 2 votes at that level.
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But what weight, the members that voted as "4" have? I just would like to calculate the score by myself.
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That depends on their reputation. You aren't being cheated of votes, so don't worry about it. Ultimately, the reputation score means nothing.
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Which one "reputation points" do you exactly mean the member points or article score?
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