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Is it the tty, the shell, or both that echos user input? is an "Advice" question that is literally just a regular question. There's nothing opinion-based about it. I think part of the problem in this experiment is that new users might interpret "Advice" to mean "Any Question."

Here's another factual question posted as "Advice": https://stackoverflow.com/q/79820910/18813094

Is it the tty, the shell, or both that echos user input? is an "Advice" question that is literally just a regular question. There's nothing opinion-based about it. I think part of the problem in this experiment is that new users might interpret "Advice" to mean "Any Question."

Is it the tty, the shell, or both that echos user input? is an "Advice" question that is literally just a regular question. There's nothing opinion-based about it. I think part of the problem in this experiment is that new users might interpret "Advice" to mean "Any Question."

Here's another factual question posted as "Advice": https://stackoverflow.com/q/79820910/18813094

make link more memorable. (could be inline for auto titling but it's deleted already)
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philipxy
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This is an "Advice" questionIs it the tty, the shell, or both that is literally just a regular question.echos user input? is an "Advice" question that is literally just a regular question. There's nothing opinion-based about it. I think part of the problem in this experiment is that new users might interpret "Advice" to mean "Any Question."

This is an "Advice" question that is literally just a regular question. There's nothing opinion-based about it. I think part of the problem in this experiment is that new users might interpret "Advice" to mean "Any Question."

Is it the tty, the shell, or both that echos user input? is an "Advice" question that is literally just a regular question. There's nothing opinion-based about it. I think part of the problem in this experiment is that new users might interpret "Advice" to mean "Any Question."

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This is an "Advice" question that is literally just a regular question. There's nothing opinion-based about it. I think part of the problem in this experiment is that new users might interpret "Advice" to mean "Any Question."