Hi! my question was linked with a question and marked as duplicate but it is not a duplicate.I have mentioned the reasons in edit. Kindly consider voting to reopen it:math.stackexchange.com/questions/4284359/…
How can a post be deleted?
By users:
The author can typically delete their own posts at will; for exceptions, see When can't I delete my own post? below. To delete a post, just use the delete link below it, on the left (only available from a browser, not the SE/SO app).
Moderators can delete an...
The timing requirement is about the duration between closure and deletion, not the age of the question. So, theoretically, if question #1 on the site were to be closed today, you would still have to wait two days before voting to delete (unless it had a score of -3 or less).
@islamm Because it makes no sense to add the axiom that a theory is inconsistent and then even to claim that the theory keeps consistent if it was consistent before.
By the way, does anyone know the purpose of limiting the number of comments a user can mark per day (something like an upvote for a comment) ? And moreover, this limit is ridicoulously small.
This is definitely not an answer: math.stackexchange.com/a/4286133/42969. I had already successfully flagged it as NAA, but for some reason it hasn't been deleted yet.
@XanderHenderson The affine-schemes tag could be appropriate, but the commutative-algebra tag is probably not among the best tags for the question. I think the main reason I rolled that back was the removal of the algebraic-geometry tag - if I were tagging from scratch, the most important tag would be algebraic-geometry, then schemes, then affine-schemes (though the latter two tags have much less traffic than the algebraic-geometry tag and frequently aren't applied even when they may be appropriate).
@James Please do not put meta information into the body of a question. You can use the comments below a question to argue for reopening, but a question post should consist of a question, and the information required to give context to that question.