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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!

I've learnt the benefits of OO, and that .NET isn't as evil as I'd thought.

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.

How about you?

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That some people hunt karma :) – Oskar Sep 29 '08 at 21:37
First! (obligatory) – Joel Coehoorn Sep 29 '08 at 21:37
is "learnt" really a word? – shsteimer Sep 29 '08 at 22:09
I dindt know this question had a correct answer! Wow i guess i need to learn what thee guy in green learned! – mattlant Sep 29 '08 at 22:15
This question is meta discussion, subjective, has no single universal answer, requires or begets extended discussion, is not a programming question, etc, etc. READ THE FAQ. unless it's voted up significantly (suggesting the community enjoys this noise) then I'm closing as NOT A PROGRAMMING QUESTION – Adam Davis Sep 29 '08 at 22:17
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closed as not programming related by Adam Davis Nov 3 '08 at 14:23

22 Answers

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I've learnt that user voted stuff doesn't have to suck so much that it makes my brain hurt. No offence intended, but sites like Digg really give me a dim view of Internet democracy.

I've also learnt that there is a huge amount of smart people ready to help those who aren't as smart or knowledgeable without yelling at them about how stupid they are; there is an insane amount of helpful comments on this site.

It's also given me a lot of insight as to how many technologies are available out there. I've come across a lot of useful resources just browsing the questions here. In fact it also seems to be living up to most of the creator's expectations. I was getting so sick of expert sex change occurring in all my Google searches (well, I usually have a -site:experts-exchange operator in my searches, but I digress), and now I have a useful resource to search before I hit Google.

I've learnt that heaps of people will answer a question before I've finished reseaching, writing code, and writing an explanation. I learn in the process anyway, but fail to get points. But I've learnt how fun it can be to race towards an explanation.

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That there are a damn lot of people who are far better than I am at programming. Humbling, but probably worth the experience.

Thanks guys! You're very helpful to those who want to learn!

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I was once told that if you ever stop feeling like the village idiot, it's time to move on to a place with smarter people... I think I'll be staying a while. – James Schek Sep 29 '08 at 21:45
Hallowed are the Aweverflow! There are indeed heaps of really smart people here. – Vincent Sep 29 '08 at 22:21
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I didn't learn such big points. But every here and then, I see some very elegant solution or some feature I didn't know about, and these are the things that make it such an entertaining and rich experience and encourage me even to read question and answers where I thought I already knew that.

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I've learnt that nobody reads the FAQ even if you put it on top of every page in red.

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You ever were in the Lounge, Coding Horror or Subtle Bugs forum on codeproject.com? Scary with that large red text :D – OregonGhost Sep 29 '08 at 21:40
It's too bad the real FAQ is the "unofficial" FAQ which is just a pile of unorganized questions. – James Schek Sep 29 '08 at 21:42
PLEASE! PRETTY PLEASE! PRETTY PLEASE with sugar on top! End this thing called unofficial FAQ!!! :) – Myrrdyn Sep 29 '08 at 21:42
I refuse to read that thing. What will the site let me do? How will the community react? That's all that matters. The FAQ should be "how does it work?" not "how should I use it?". – Eric Z Beard Sep 29 '08 at 21:44
@Eric: But that's just it - this site has a specific purpose and thus the "how" is important. People will disagree, but it remains true. SO is not meant to be a discussion board, but questions like this one try to turn it into just that, against the original intent of the creators. – Jason Bunting Sep 29 '08 at 21:47
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I learned that a lot of people here think with their heart rather than their brain.

Besides that, i have actially learned a lot of great optimization tips for visual studio and what other people use with it. Thats the biggest thing for me so far. I am always looking for ways to be more productive.

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That I should stop spending time on here, and get back to work.

But seriously, it has shown me that a lot of people, and ideas can work together on problems, and that we can arrive at a solution either together, or not at all. And that no one person has ALL the answers!

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Humility. There are many things to "grok" out there and many people better than you...

But you can always be "useful" to someone, sharing part of your walk of life...

After all, learning is truly a (never ending, never fading) lifelong achievement!

Thanks!

And now, lets continue keeping trolls at bay!!!

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To be specific in my questions and answers.

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That giving vague subjective off-topic non-content self-referencing rambling meta non-answers will invariably cost you points.

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... or maybe it wont. [Three up votes?? Are you kidding me?] :P – Mostlyharmless Sep 29 '08 at 21:52
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That finding a way of puffing up developers' egos is a great way to create a site which has a lot of activity very quickly.

More seriously, it's shown me that a site being slick and responsive can make all the difference. This is the first web forum software (of a kind) I've seen which I could turn to without too much sorrow if newsgroups go the way of all flesh.

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Alternative ways to do things. New ways to do things.

Stack Overflow has been a fantastic learning tool for me. It's like sitting in a big room with a bunch of great developers, and you yell "Hey, how do I do X?", and everybody chimes in.

We might not always agree, but at least we'll know about the options.

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Great comparison, with the big room :) – OregonGhost Sep 29 '08 at 21:54
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I've learned that all the good discussion forum ideas weren't used up. The more I think about stackoverflow's feature set the more brilliant I think the creators are for coming up with this.

I just wish they'd hurry up and start licensing it to all the other forums I participate in since it would make them 100 times more useful.

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I've learnt that not all answers that I give are accepted widely, even if I'm sure that they are correct (because I implemented them and they work for, let's say, seven years or so).

You too have to "sell" them correctly, be precise in your answer, don't be too verbose. Your answer lives too short to be overprecise (and thats a good thing!).

That is one thing I will try to get into my skull and use at work. Don't try to teach (as in my answer at) unloading-classes-in-java.

Message understood (hopefully).

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Answer fast or somebody else gets the votes.

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I've learnt it is very possible to build a large community in a small amount of time, and that there are some people who are willing to help you with questions that may sound stupid to them without being hostile about it or calling you stupid. I've learned that I'm not as stupid on some subjects as I previously thought I was, I also learned that tutorials and books arent the only place you can learn things, the few days I've participated in this, I have learned alot of stuff! Thanks stackoverflow.com ^_^

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Oh, and that's easier to get votes by answering subjective questions than by answering technical ones.

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I've learned that is IS possible to bring together Ruby, Python, JavaScript, .net, Java and pretty much all other developers and actually have them behave like intelligent humans, having great discussions, willingness to look beyond their horizon and improve instead of having stupid flamewars.

Oh yeah, and I also learned that Database Versioning and Deployment between Test and Live is pretty much unsolved or not nearly as mature as deployment solutions for the applications itself.

And last but not least, I learned that you can use the names of STDs as Codenames for Applications :-)

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That I can procrastinate and learn something at the same time!

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And that by splitting three points into three posts, you are three times more likely to get votes. (Actually, that's a corollary from a finding about the mechanisms of publishing scientific papers.)

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That it's especially hard to set up and define a community so it meets its intended purpose without stepping on people's toes.

Or, in other words, even if you setup a site with specific rules and guidelines, people will come in and piss all over it just to see what you do, and try to make it their own.

This can be a good thing, if you don't mind the new collective 'vision,' but I've also learned that it only take a few proactive individuals to significantly alter other people's perceptions and effect unwanted change.

-Adam

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How to ask better questions.

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If you ever think you know it all, you only need to go to a place like this to realize how little you know :)

SO has been valuable time saver for me, because instead of spending hours digging through documentation I can post a quick question, and odds are someone has done it before.

I do my best to return what I know to the community as a thanks for this great service :)

That said, there are some who want to spoil it for all of us, so I have learned that SO is not perfect :)

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