Revert is a Supervisor-only tool. Supervisors can find help on how to use the tool in the Help Center.
If you are a Non-Supervisor and would like to have an answer reverted, please contact a Supervisor.
Yes, "revert" can be used as a noun in certain contexts to refer to someone who has returned to a previous state or condition. For example, "After quitting smoking for a year, he was a revert when he started again."
It means exactly that; DingoBot suspects that a long answer has either been deleted or changed significantly. It helps Supervisors spot vandalism, and then revert the answer in question.
Revert is a verb.
No, it is not grammatically correct to say, 'revert back to'. You would simply say 'revert', as in 'Can we revert to the previous subject?' Revert means to go back (to something), so saying 'revert back to' is saying the same thing twice, which is called tautology.
I had to revert back to my school textbook
revert, regress
test the first revert should be blank
The noun form of revert is "reversion."
1) Someone who is interested in them as a girl.2) Someone with a good sense of humor.3) Someone who doesn't revert to a primordial jerk when he is around other guys.
Contact a supervisor if you would like to revert your profile.
Reverts count as editing points.
RevertingYes, this is a supervisor tool. It is called Revert and a supervisor can revert a Q&A back to any revision of the answer with the single click of a button. Any time the answer to a Q&A is changed, even slightly, it saves the previous version in the revert listing. A popular question, or heavily debated question, could have as many as 40 or more revisions. A supervisor can revert to any of these versions of the answer.If you find a question that has been vandalized or blanked - and which previously had a good answer - please notify a supervisor and provide the URL to the question via the message boards or the Community Forum.You can find a list of supervisors via the Related Links.