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On several occasions I've attempted to come back to an
idea I had annotated (or
was just following the discussion on) only to find the idea
missing. The sense of
loss is a bit eerie, made all the more so because the
Halfbakery isn't particularly
conducive to meta-discussion (e.g. "Hey, what
happened
to that one idea that
was there earlier today?"). I'm forced to simply accept the
loss and move on
without asking questions, leaving me feeling a bit like a
North Korean whose co-
worker has just disappeared without a trace.
I propose then a protocol for deleting ideas that addresses
this issue, but
requires no modification to the Halfbakery software itself.
Instead of deleting
ideas immediately, first delete all of the annotations, and
blank the description
text. Replace the summary line with something along the
lines of "Deleted by
[username] because xxx" (I assume here that moderators
can change an idea's
text rather than simply delete the idea). Finally, append
[deleted] to the idea
name. No further annotations should discuss the idea
substantively (and those
that attempt to should be deleted), but discussions of the
deletion and the
reasons for the deletion are acceptable.
The original poster is expected to cull soft deleted ideas
after a
reasonable period of time
has passed; long enough that everyone who was involved
in the discussion has
had a chance to be made aware of the development, but
not so long that
deleted ideas hang around cluttering things up unduly.
[link]
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I don't think I have ever been unable to find an idea in this way - the only ideas that have gone pfffffftttt are the ideas that I expected to go that way. |
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