active questions tagged meta-discussion - Stack Overflowmost recent 30 from stackoverflow.com2009-12-19T00:02:30Zhttp://stackoverflow.com/feeds/tag/meta-discussionhttp://www.creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.5/rdfhttp://stackoverflow.com/questions/292867/community-wiki-and-so-meta-discussion23"Community Wiki" and SO meta-discussion [closed]JPLemme2008-11-15T18:20:36Z2009-12-14T23:05:04Z
<p>As of 12:30 EST on November 15th, there were 30,658 registered users of Stack Overflow, of whom 1,458 had at least a 750 reputation and could therefore edit Community Wiki posts.</p>
<p>I suggest that if only 4.75% of the community can edit a wiki, it is neither "Community" nor "Wiki". The average technical question or answer seems to get one or two upvotes, and so a user who wants to become "trusted by the system" would have to post around 40 questions and/or answers before becoming "trusted". This can take longer if the user's expertise is in a niche, since people can't vote for questions and answers they don't read in the first place. The bar should be lowered to 250 points.</p>
<p>This would be a silly argument on slashdot, where karma only means your posts get a bonus point. But on SO you <em>need</em> reputation to take full advantage of the site. The intention of SO is to serve as a reliable repository of programming and programming-related knowledge, but the reputation system incents people to post frequently and quickly so they can "earn the system's trust". It also encourages people to add to the cacophony rather than to the community, because you only get points by having non-CW questions and answers. A quiet comment may add just as much value, but a whole new answer might result in 10 points and being able to take advantage of more of SO's features.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, a person with niche expertise who monitors, maintains, or adds valuable information to older questions contributes just as much to the site, but gets rewarded less for it. That's not very wiki.</p>
<p>Another point I'd like to make is that there is an aversion to discussing SO on SO, especially if it's for reputation points. Why? First of all, the user interface of this website is the balls. There are a few things that could be added or tweaked, but overall it's one of the best interfaces I've ever used. Second, this is where the SO community will see it. Uservoice is not nearly as popular and it has a lot of limitations (like needing to have votes to ask questions) that SO doesn't have. Third--and this is the important one--I think that participating in the community SHOULD earn reputation points. For all its warts, the people who have the most juice on Wikipedia are the ones who care most about <em>Wikipedia</em>; not the expert on banana slugs who keeps the Banana Slug article up-to-date.</p>
<p>I really like this site. I've been pleased to get quick answers to some programming questions. I've read some really solid advice about design and project management. And the other users are generally smart and nearly always friendly and helpful. I'm not whining about the site or complaining about it; I'm just trying to help it become what it was intended to be because I think it would be a net gain for us all.</p>
<p>And I'm not making this community wiki, either. I invested a lot of time in writing it, I believe in what I said, and if the SO community agrees with me then there's no better way for the system to indicate that it "trusts" me then to increase me authority on the site. (And if they disagree I'll lose points and authority; so the reward is balanced by the risks.)</p>
<p>[Note it's tagged appropriately so if you don't like these types of "questions", just filter out the tags.]</p>
<p><strong>EDIT: This "question" has received 13 net votes in the last 12 hours. My other questions (well, 4 out of 5 of them) are specific questions about programming issues and they haven't received more than 5 votes in the last month. This illustrates why there are so many soft questions (or "questions with broad appeal"), as well as points out that there are a lot more people on SO with an opinion about SO than there are people with an opinion about--say--XSLT.</strong> </p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/929925/whats-the-difference-between-the-tags-offtopic-and-not-programming-related1What's the difference between the tags "offtopic" and "not-programming-related" [closed]Kriem2009-05-30T15:21:23Z2009-11-24T16:47:42Z
<p>How do I know what type of question to tag the former or the latter?</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1568201/how-would-you-motivate-your-colleagues-to-join-stackoverflow0How would you motivate your colleagues to join StackOverflow? [closed]Pieter Breed2009-10-14T18:41:02Z2009-10-14T18:42:29Z
<p>I look at StackOverflow as two things. </p>
<ol>
<li>A way to give back as I have received</li>
<li>A way to learn</li>
</ol>
<p>The people in my office range across skill levels all the way from the top to the bottom but I am one of two people who participate on this site. I venture to guess that this is similar at other offices too, the brightest people still are not participating and I would like be able to learn from them too.</p>
<p>So. How would you motivate your colleagues to join StackOverflow to get them to participate in this process?</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1245191/where-can-i-find-a-prime-forum-for-gtk-c-type-questions0where can I find a prime forum for gtk+ (c++) type questions? Andrei 2009-08-07T14:48:02Z2009-08-07T14:52:16Z
<p>I am sorry if it defeats the purpose of this forum, but I see very limited GTK activity here and would like get heavily involved in it. What is the prime forum(s) where GTK is discussed. I use it primarily with c/c++.</p>
<p>thx</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1240164/great-questions-and-answers-in-stackoverflow0Great questions and answers in StackOverflow [closed]Rui Craveiro2009-08-06T16:55:02Z2009-08-06T16:55:02Z
<p>How to make a great question or answer in StackOverlow?
Here go a few ideas:
- Ask something funny.
- Ask something philosophical.
- Ask something controversial.</p>
<p>Seems like the most voted questions and answers are not the best ones, but the most popular ones. In many cases, popularity seems more related to how much audience you can get and not on how good the question or answer really is. Maybe having a percentage of upvotes vs downvotes could add some fairness.</p>
<p>Am I too uptight or lacking in humor? What do you think?</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1104908/how-was-stack-overflow-launched0How was Stack Overflow launched? [closed]unknown (google)2009-07-09T16:13:32Z2009-07-09T16:15:08Z
<p>My understanding is that the launch of Stack Overflow was brilliant from both a business perspective and a technical perspective.</p>
<p>Having recently discovered the site, I was not present at the launch and the Spolsky blog and podcast don't seem to do the launch justice.</p>
<p>Can you summarize and explain the aspects of the SO launch that were brilliant? Which of these aspects can be copied by other startups?</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/888649/other-programming-resources0Other programming resources [closed]Brian Postow2009-05-20T15:31:52Z2009-05-20T15:49:14Z
<p>Well, I've asked the same question here 2-3 times in 2-3 different ways and gotten no response. So, where else should I look? </p>
<p>More generally, what other online resources do you use (beyond SO and Google) when trying to figure something out?</p>
<p>I'm particularly interested in Mac and C/C++, but I'll leave it open.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/767283/how-can-i-share-programming-ideas-and-thoughts-with-the-so-community3How can I share programming ideas and thoughts with the SO community?Liran Orevi2009-04-20T07:47:33Z2009-04-22T10:36:11Z
<p>SO is great, but sometimes I want to share my programming thoughts with the community members, not really to ask a question. what can I do? </p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/586174/what-is-a-sanity-suite5What is a Sanity Suite?furtelwart2009-02-25T14:26:28Z2009-03-30T13:55:59Z
<p>I read an article about Test Driven Datamigration (<a href="http://www.zuehlke.com/fileadmin/pdf/fachartikel/132%5Fos%5Fmap%5Ftest%5Fdatenmigration.pdf" rel="nofollow">German, PDF</a>) and they mentioned a Sanity Suite. It is not well explained and there's no definition.</p>
<p>Is there a definition or is it a spongy word?</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/134520/integrate-stackoverflow-into-ides10Integrate StackOverflow into IDEs?Thorsten792008-09-25T16:57:40Z2009-03-23T22:47:29Z
<p>Okay, this is just a crazy idea I have. StackOverflow looks very structured and integrable into development applications. So would it be possible, even useful, to have a StackOverflow plugin for, say, Eclipse? </p>
<p>Which features of StackOverflow would you like to have directly integrated into your IDE so you can use it "natively" without changing to a browser?</p>
<p>EDIT: I'm thinking about ways of deeper integration than just using the web page inside the IDE. Like when you use a certain Java class and have a problem, answers from SO might flare up. There would probably be cases where something like this is annoying, but others may be very helpful.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/493002/whats-your-all-time-creativity-problem1What's your all-time creativity problem?furtelwart2009-01-29T19:17:08Z2009-02-14T16:02:40Z
<p>Hi folks!</p>
<p>Sometimes, you stumble with programming. Sometimes, it's a lack of creativity, sometimes, you need a new solution.</p>
<p>But there are a lot of situations, you stick in, everytime they occure.</p>
<p>For myself, it's when I have to create the interface between model and viewer. I designed my data structure very well and drew a GUI prototype, but the missing link won't be written.</p>
<p>What are your personal barricades in developing projects?</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/79501/is-it-okay-to-answer-a-stackoverflow-question-with-a-link3Is it okay to answer a stackoverflow question with a link? [closed]Michael Wolfenden2008-09-17T03:00:20Z2009-02-07T18:32:07Z
<p>Just wondering what the etiquette for posting links should be.</p>
<p>Let’s say you find a post or some code online that perfectly answers a question, should you post a link to that post, or copy the contents of that post attributing the original author.</p>
<p>Obviously the problem with the first solution is if in the future, that post no longer exists then all the knowledge within it is lost.</p>
<p>Thoughts?</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/358486/why-do-you-post-to-stack-overflow7Why do you post to stack overflow? [closed]gotgenes2008-12-11T05:01:03Z2009-01-28T18:39:05Z
<p>I'm interested in your answer to this question: Why do you post to Stack Overflow?</p>
<p>In other words, what drives you to contribute here? Is it an aspiration for recognition of expertise? Is it a need to bring a social aspect to your personal programming endeavors?</p>
<p>Just as important, what underlies your choice to answer questions on Stack Overflow instead of doing another activity, particularly, instead of programming?</p>
<p>It's worth taking a moment to marvel at the existence of the Stack Overflow community, a community that exists because of the decisions of many individuals to participate. I'm interested in <em>your</em> decision to participate.</p>
<p>I look forward to reading your answer!</p>
<p>Chris</p>
<p>[Note: The motivation behind this question sits <a href="http://igotgenes.blogspot.com/2008/12/whats-in-it-for-programmer.html" rel="nofollow">on my blog</a>.]</p>
<p>[<em>Edit note: Thanks to <a href="http://stackoverflow.com/users/15614/kent-fredric">Kent Fredric</a> for his helpful suggestions on rephrasing the original question.</em>]</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/410521/what-is-the-nbl-next-big-language-according-to-stack-overflow3What is the NBL (Next Big Language) according to Stack Overflow? [closed]Josh Smeaton2009-01-04T05:47:34Z2009-01-06T19:09:34Z
<p>The question is fairly simple. What language do you think the majority of projects will use over the next 10 or so years? </p>
<p>I only ask the question as I was searching through the tags of stack overflow to see which languages seem to attract the most attention. Of interesting note - to me at least - is that Ruby didn't 'score' too well as far as questions here go. </p>
<p>The (very very basic) list I've come up with is the following:</p>
<pre><code>approx 1350 - ruby
approx 1140 - rails
approx 2400 - python
approx 400 - django
approx 13000 - .NET
approx 7000 - Java
approx 600 - Perl
approx 2850 - Javascript
approx 2600 - PHP
</code></pre>
<p>Note that I've included two frameworks (not languages), Django and Ruby. Note that some of the numbers in each of the frameworks are doubles of their parent language. I'm aware that .NET is a framework in and of itself, but for the sake of ease - I'm including it as a 'language'.</p>
<p>I'm a recently graduated student keeping an eye out for programming positions and I've noted that .NET is in extremely high demand. </p>
<p>I'm personally interested in Python/Django - but there are very few jobs out there for a grad developer using python. </p>
<p>Should I abandon the Python trail and get a better grasp on .NET? What's the NBL?</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/86835/arent-questions-about-best-going-to-end-up-having-answers-reflecting-only-popu2Aren't questions about "best" going to end up having answers reflecting only popularity? [closed]Lot1052008-09-17T19:42:00Z2009-01-04T07:44:05Z
<p>..which is not the same thing at all.</p>
<p>e.g. "what's the best book?" - people will vote up the books they've read. This might be useful but won't answer the (possibly unanswerable) question "what's the best book".</p>
<p>Does this even matter?</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/283043/whats-the-incentive-to-answer-old-inactive-questions4What's the incentive to answer old/inactive questions? [closed]chazomaticus2008-11-12T04:30:31Z2008-11-13T02:38:41Z
<p>I find myself going back through old questions periodically, and I occasionally come across questions on which I feel I can share some insight.</p>
<p>My question is: why bother? If the question is old and inactive, especially if it already has a number of responses, it's unlikely that anyone will notice one more response way down at the bottom, much less take the time to read it and vote on it. I feel like my voice would be entirely lost in the din.</p>
<p>It seems like there should always be incentive to answer if you think you have something to offer, more incentive than just "so it's there in case anyone wants to wade through old questions reading every single answer to weed out the good but late ones from the mediocre but timely ones".</p>
<p>Or am I missing something?</p>
<p><hr /></p>
<p>I guess this question wasn't "programming-related" enough, despite being upvoted a number of times in its brief life.</p>
<p>I still want to know if others feel like there's an incentive other than just "to say it, in case" or "in case someone upvotes it far in the future".</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/234956/which-answer-do-i-accept-if-i-have-multiple-correct-answers4Which answer do I accept if I have multiple correct answers? [closed]Dan Goldstein2008-10-24T19:27:38Z2008-10-24T20:12:29Z
<p>I asked a question that turned out to have multiple correct answers. How do I pick between them to determine which to accept?</p>
<p>Edit: All of the answers were different. They were not the same answer given multiple times. <a href="http://stackoverflow.com/questions/234906/whats-the-purpose-of-the-nop-opcode">Here is the question.</a></p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/202506/when-you-accept-an-answer-should-you-also-vote-it-up12When you accept an answer should you also vote it up? [closed]Owen2008-10-14T19:32:04Z2008-10-14T20:01:04Z
<p>By accepting an answer you're obviously already saying that it was useful. Should an additional up-vote be reserved for answers that are particularly useful, or do people always tend to use the two in unison (or the contrary)?</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/170237/why-is-coding-so-slow14Why is coding so slow?Peter Parker2008-10-04T12:15:28Z2008-10-05T04:11:37Z
<p>Is it only me, or is coding getting slower and slower, until a product("a project") is finished?</p>
<p>This question came to me as I saw the <a href="http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157319/do-you-have-a-hobby-development-project">"Write a program in 30 minutes"</a>: </p>
<p>I thought it is impossible to write a <em>decent</em> piece of code which runs smoothly.</p>
<p>As I am getting older I see on all projects, even simple ones a lot of additional work, to get them into a state where everybody can use them. So you need a lot of error-catching, UI-Design, even texts, so your app can communicate with endusers.
Back in the old days(around 1985) it was possible to build something usable in some weeks, maybe months. Today You will spend at least a <strong>man-year</strong> for developing an robust application which performs a nontrivial task.</p>
<p>Of course, the complexity has increased, but I am just worried about <strong>the scaling of application complexity regarding to development time</strong>.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/150816/what-has-stackoverflow-taught-you1What has stackoverflow taught you? [closed]Rich Bradshaw2008-09-29T21:35:33Z2008-09-29T22:34:39Z
<p>For me, it's been that there is no "true" language, as well as realising that I know more than a small amount of people, and less than a large amount of people!</p>
<p>I've learnt the benefits of OO, and that .NET isn't as evil as I'd thought.</p>
<p>I've learnt that there are people on the internet who don't try to argue every point, and that it is possible to build a community without a significant number of trolls and "first!" type people.</p>
<p>How about you?</p>