12:04 AM
"there is no hourly running service" True, but I was wondering if it could be taken away the same way it got rewarded when the system detected that the earlier answer got deleted. — Ann Zen 34 secs ago
Though I sense sarcasm in your comment @Phil, I edited the answer because I did intend to write that ;) — richardec 56 secs ago
The question (now) asks specifically about Stack websites. The majority of this answer deals in non-Stack sites. You’ll want to update it. Note that Programmers (now called Software Engineering) doesn’t arrive questions of recommendations, best practices, or industry standards. The original site was launched as an experiment to see if that was workable in Stack’s QA format, and the experiment’s results determined the answer was no. So the charter/mandate of the site was changed, and the name along with it. The shower answer to the OP is “nowhere on Stack Exchange”. — Dan Bron 1 min ago
@n.1.8e9-where's-my-sharem. FYI, there's a userscript and userstyles (CSS only) in the announcement responses — Phil 51 secs ago
12:40 AM
just some help in remembering who I want to vote for in the next election - write a post it? — Marco Bonelli 1 min ago
How do you know who is going to nominate themselves in the next election? How does this “user voting” then turn into a ranking that you still have to do in the election? What if all candidates are “voted” positively? What if a user is voted negatively and nominates themselves years later — isn’t it likely that they changed their behavior in the meantime? — Sebastian Simon 50 secs ago
@OlegValter Here you go Oleg: Total approved edits with "grammer" over time by month. Apparently March of 2018 was an exceptionally bad month for grammar, it 1,205 misspellings (the most so far) lol — zcoop98 39 secs ago
As far I know, badge giving scripts only rarely take away badges (like a tag badge is taken away if the tag is removed or becomes incapable to provide tag badges). — peterh 22 secs ago
softwareeengineering.stackexchange.com might worth a try, although they are too strongly bound by their own hardly comprehensible rules, so the risk will be huge. — peterh 23 secs ago
Posting crap is not trolling, not rude and not spam. It is simply descructive behavior, but it does not fall into any of these categories. — peterh 44 secs ago
1:25 AM
2:00 AM
The answer is still the same, even if the circumstances are slightly unusual: "Regular badges, once earned, are not taken away (at least not automatically)." — John Montgomery 36 secs ago
“Why is the top question page terms and layout inconsistent with stackoverflow.com/questions?” — Because
/questions
hasn’t been converted to the new layout yet. — Sebastian Simon 15 secs ago2:15 AM
2:59 AM
@Lundin They're planning to make it consistent by making that one look like this one! — Joseph Sible-Reinstate Monica 1 min ago
............Today! :D But seriously, if the bounty is high enough, it probably won't matter much. — Hovercraft Full Of Eels 1 min ago
@cigien In one of your most recent comments you used italic, which is less noticeable. Why did you bother doing that if you think people don't notice? — Kelly Bundy 17 secs ago
3:15 AM
I'm not claiming that emphasis is never useful. I'm just saying that in this case, a user who has failed to provide an MRE probably needs to read the entire contents of the link. It's not clear to me that emphasizing up front exactly how the user has failed to provide an MRE is going to be particularly useful. Additionally, for a feature-request, you need to account for the dev time involved to implement it, and at least currently, the dev team has much more pressing concerns IMO. This shouldn't be an issue for you to do when writing a comment; there are a number of userscripts that'll help. — cigien 55 secs ago
@cigien In cases where I'd use this, e.g., when they have a reproducible example but it's just not minimal (the perhaps most frequent case, which is why I focused on that most), then I disagree that they need to read the entire page. And I think it could help make them actually read the part I want them to read. I can only speak for myself, but if someone points me to some page saying "read this", I'm much less motivated to actually do it and try to figure out what part is relevant than when they point it out. Especially when I start reading and notice it all appears to be irrelevant. — Kelly Bundy 27 secs ago
3:42 AM
I'd bet bountied questions receive most attention from potential answerers soon after they're posted, and from voters close to when the bounty period expires - so, middle of the week, probably. — CertainPerformance just now
4:04 AM
Sam, I think it would be good idea to edit post to be either "what is the best day to put bounty based on my absolutely unclear and opinionated criteria" or "I'm trying to get this very specific statistic about bounties but I only could get so far - please help me to move forward with my SEDE". Right now the question is neither here nor there and unlikely to bring consistent feedback/answers. — Alexei Levenkov 1 min ago
4:50 AM
Just because the folks who are upset are louder doesn't mean the people who like or are neutral towards things don't exist. — BSMP 49 secs ago
5:22 AM
"Hiring software engineers is quite a profitable business" For the 5 years I worked for SO, that was definitely not true at all. — rossipedia 1 min ago
5:40 AM
5:57 AM
Oh, I meant, does the suggestor name not appear at all in the history, or does it appear? Two consecutive edits seem to suggest it should appear, but you answered "overwrites the editor name" with "yes". — justhalf 54 secs ago
6:19 AM
It is so incredibly hostile. The day someone creates a site that is beautifully laid out like stackoverflow, and where people are removed for being hostile, and where people want to help... Is the day that same someone gets rich. Like really rich. I would do it but I know jack all about marketing. — Triangle4 8 secs ago
Do you really, absolutely positively, want the large number of question arriving at the last minute? Trying to grab a bounty at the last moment is not exactly a clear quality criteria. — MisterMiyagi 34 secs ago
7:24 AM
"I've noticed that the time when bountied questions receive the most attention is on the last day that the bounty is active." might be true, but it's just because bountied questions are sorted by the earliest deadline date. — Andrew T. 42 secs ago
Possibly related/duplicate: What are the most and least active day period on Stackoverflow? — Andrew T. 25 secs ago
@OlegValter just to add to that - UX is not objective. There are some objective criteria but it's not possible to just say "A and B are objectively the best, we'll just change the UI to use that, regardless of what it was before". There is user re-education and/or user expectation to be taken into account as well. Even if A and B are better but radically different to before, the user experience would suffer. — VLAZ 1 min ago
"but still, it wasn't really soliciting user approbation, but rather announcing a planned change." yes, "announcing" in a place where the audience is... I guess probably more than the 170 people they tested with, but still a tiny fraction of users, realistically speaking. — Karl Knechtel 22 secs ago
@OlegValter I have added more context and clarified my post. I don't use any interface tweak, just the regular interface SO exposes to the world and yesterday changes impacted my UX. I am a bit surprised by the amount of close votes. As many user here I am not a native speaker and I try to do my best. I really think this question deserve to be addressed instead of being closed. — jlandercy 17 secs ago
The final coda also makes it too broad. The only question I can see more or less on-topic would be the last one, if fleshed out. — yivi 27 secs ago
8:17 AM
Or maybe it was a different user the one making the downvotes. Correlation != Causation. — yivi 19 secs ago
8:37 AM
9:32 AM
That's the additional pointing-out that I'd like to avoid. Good point about the rest, though. — Kelly Bundy 56 secs ago
9:44 AM
It seems that Super User is removed from the Closed question post notice for reason. However, edit link still stands and people keep editing their completely off topic question hoping they will be reopened. At least, offering edit should be removed, too. I would probably add notice that question might be on topic on some other SE site, offering link to list of sites, with a warning that OP must read the site's help center first before posting in order to find whether question is appropriate there or not. — Dalija Prasnikar 55 secs ago
The pattern regarding these js libraries seems to be that
.js
is appended. Maybe merge the tags, then rename the remaining one to [dexie.js]
? — Lino 7 secs ago10:20 AM
software.codidact.com is more lenient than the SE sites in this regard - for example program design questions are on-topic. Though questions still have to be specific there. — Lundin 57 secs ago
10:32 AM
Well, if this is the worst thing that's happened with me taking a break from handling flags, I think we're doing OK. :-) — Cody Gray ♦ 1 min ago
Thanks for pointing to the other question. There, I found the link github.com/highlightjs/highlight.js/blob/main/… in the (currently) accepted answer, which is the list I had hoped for. — NerdOnTour 1 min ago
@Braiam Well I know that, but I'm just pointing out that even though I know it, it's confusing to read, and for people that don't know it it will be especially confusing. — Clonkex 20 secs ago
Possible type: trailing instead of training. (I just stumbled over it for the second time, so I suggest an edit. Can't minor-edit myself.) — NerdOnTour 53 secs ago
Thank you for the reply and clarification, I understand your concerns. I think the appeal of the platform is that it's not recruitment focused, strange though it sounds I almost feel like the low engagement numbers are a good thing. It means there's a community around a common problem, with extra tools provided when useful, one of those being a job portal that (in my experience) has a smaller selection of higher quality job adverts than other sites. Unfortunately, I also understand that from a business perspective, with cost of development, that's probably not a good business case. — alwaysmpe 27 secs ago
It's... better. But the new design proves one thing: more horizontal space needed. — Gimby 53 secs ago
I suppose what's lacking within the industry is more a "specialized job board", I'm a bit of a niche software engineer/data science/HPC person anyway, and a lot of jobs aren't relevant to me. — alwaysmpe 15 secs ago
11:19 AM
Related/partial dupe: The backlog of reviews in the First questions review queue is increasing: "In addition to the above changes, when there are a lot of items in the queue, the max number of reviews per day per user has been doubled for First questions, from 40 to ---80--- 60 (we originally moved it to 80, which led to the queue size decreasing at a rate that was a bit high, so moving it down to 60)." — Andrew T. 23 secs ago
11:40 AM
This... seems like a way to really do the worst job that you can do when doing an election. It is probably better to just not participate in the election process at all. — Gimby 22 secs ago
12:19 PM
I don't think this question should have been migrated as every site is like this. The wording "StackOverflow communities" is unfortunate I guess; the more proper wording would be "Stack Exchange communities". — Laurel 13 secs ago
The link is already available on Stack Overflow as well as any other site. There's a small button "View all" — Dharman 16 secs ago
There is a duplicate on MSE, and the answer there helps: use the "network profile" option at the top of the page, then go to "accounts". (Yes it's a bit annoying.) — Laurel 1 min ago
12:37 PM
@Dharman, now I put some more effort to check. Yes, I now see an Account subsection with a view all link, not directly under the profile tab, but on the activity tab. The effort to find it is really not much, but is a little bit not as intuitive as finding it where one would expect. — Udo E. 47 secs ago
If you make your communities invisible, more will be visible :) meta.stackexchange.com/questions/312317/… — samcarter_is_at_topanswers.xyz 1 min ago
1:19 PM
the Q&A, jobs and develoepr story can exists togheter because all of them connect people in some way, connection is important for the community — Leo 34 secs ago
@peterh: Recommendations are off-topic on Software Engineering as well. In fact, SE.SE even uses the exact same pre-defined close vote as Stack Overflow. Software recommendations can be asked on Software Recommendations, unsurprisingly, and hardware recommendations on Hardware Recommendations. Questions about best practices can be asked on SE.SE, IFF the querent provides a precise, unambiguous, objectively measurable definition of "best" … otherwise, they are just asking for opinions, since what is "best" is a matter of opinion. — Jörg W Mittag 23 secs ago
1:37 PM
Be more useful for me if you could use a shortcut as the url in a link with your own text, e.g.
Take a look at [How to create a Minimal, Reproducible Example](mre).
— khelwood 48 secs ago1:50 PM
Yes it's all the process of gathering statistics. Without statistics you can't pinpoint an actual solution. It's all fun and games to propose solutions and pretend it'll end world hunger but it is then left up to the actual engineers to deal with butterfly effects and fallout. — Gimby 40 secs ago
Sad indeed! I moved over to thefullstack.network looks like that will be my new home — Philban 42 secs ago
Yeah M$ already own LinkedIn, they don't care about any particular vertical. There's a new platform I found a few weeks back which looks promising on the dev story and jobs front (its only for devs from what I can see not sure about Testers etc) thefullstack.network — MetaCoder 8 secs ago
Yeah agreed. There's a new platform I found a few weeks back which looks promising on the dev story and jobs front (its only for devs from what I can see not sure about Testers etc) thefullstack.network — MetaCoder 58 secs ago
I agree I got my first gig off here a few years back...sad....although a new platform I found a few weeks back which looks promising on the dev story and jobs front (its only for devs from what I can see not sure about Testers etc) thefullstack.network — MetaCoder 1 min ago
I agree although I haven't really used it (didn't feel confident just yet) although I did find a new platform I found a few weeks back which looks promising on the dev story and jobs front (its only for devs from what I can see not sure about Testers etc) thefullstack.network — MetaCoder 55 secs ago
I can relate to people writing it as "grammer" for two reasons: 1) that's what it sounds like when spoken. 2) the spellchecker doesn't mark it as wrong, at least not for me. Heck even "fix speling" passes the spellcheck for me, probably because it is a Dutch word. We can't have nice things. — Gimby 8 secs ago
Well you can pretty much reason that for yourself. I wouldn't pick Friday because that is a common day for people to have a parttime day and I wouldn't pick the weekend because that is student time. So Monday-Wednesday would be my bet. Why not Thursday? Because Friday is a common day-off so Thursday is crunch day, not enough time for answering questions on SO :) (Note: I do assume most people do SO stuff during work hours, that's me projecting). — Gimby 58 secs ago
Note that none of those solutions is practical for actually dealing with the size of the queue, since none target the drivel of meh questions we get every day. Reverting the queue to the single click action on the other hand had demonstrated to make reviewing less annoying. — Braiam 1 min ago
Perhaps your "The number of answers" section should be another answer so that we can upvote that, now that the watched marker issue has been fixed. — Andrew Morton 15 secs ago
@Gimby Propose solution with explaination of how it can improve does force engineers to use it. Those questions aren't accepted or refused, and SO can refuse question to don't have "butterfly effect" of bad proposal. Also, Braiam, they are "long-term" solution and not only to reduce the amount of review right now (but not increase it so much) — Elikill58 1 min ago
An answer that only recommends filing a bug report sounds more like a comment to me. Demonstrating that the behaviour worked in version X but not in version Y, or isolating the circumstances in which the buggy behaviour occurs might be more like answer. — snakecharmerb 29 secs ago
@MetaCoder: That's not even close to being similar to Stack Exchange... Not by a long shot. — Cerbrus 47 secs ago
@MetaCoder then what does that have to do with any of this going on on SE? Nothing at all. You're just advertising a different platform. — Cerbrus 17 secs ago
@jlandercy hm? I am not a part of the debate whether it should be closed :) Just provided some feedback re: how UX can be assessed objectively (and I strongly believe that both UI and UX can be objectively measured in terms of how effectively it allows a user to achieve the stated goal of a feature) — Oleg Valter 47 secs ago
@VLAZ that has an objective criterion too :) How much effort and time is needed to reeducate users - granted, it is hard to measure precisely, but still possible. — Oleg Valter 49 secs ago
"Propose solution with explaination of how it can improve does force engineers to use it." - mmmm no, not in the slightest. Fact of the matter is that SO does not have to listen to anything posted on meta and the proof keeps building that they really do not look at feature requests anymore (perhaps if there wouldn't be so many of them...). Whatever changes are done to the site come from a higher order now. If you've found a good one they'll fix a bug though. — Gimby 1 min ago
@Gimby nah, reason #1 would lead to editors spelling "grammar" as "gremmer" :) Oh, wait... — Oleg Valter 1 min ago
@OlegValter What grinds my gears the most is that the first hit only has (excessive) formatting changes, no gremmer fixs. — Gimby 51 secs ago
@Gimby for the sake of our collective sanity I urge everyone to not actually open those edits :) Sigh, this discussion is somewhat bittersweet. — Oleg Valter 19 secs ago
3:32 PM
Agreed. The system really ought to detect the most common user errors, especially if the result is hidden content. The same goes for content enclosed in
<>
(often hidden as an unknown HTML tag). 10 years can pass before it is discovered by an editor. — Peter Mortensen 38 secs agoTrue... "anotatoin an fixed gremmer" and "gremmer mastakes" made me laugh :D — The Amateur Coder 1 min ago
For years the requests for a dark mode were rejected simply because they did not want to maintain multiple stylesets for the site. We actually did get one eventually. Do you really think they will want to maintain an old style UI light/dark and a new style UI light/dark? I'd be willing to put a good bet on "heck no". — Gimby 51 secs ago
eh, this design is being done literally for the purpose of not needing to maintain a dozen different layouts. the old layout being old doesn't mean it wouldn't take work to keep it. — Kevin B 54 secs ago
Stack overflow jobs is a really good space.. I haven't even had enough time using it and before that it's leaving. I believe SO can definitely create a creative job space and it doesn't need to go :( — Akhila 17 secs ago
"industry standards" - that one puzzles me. What industry, exactly? Software engineering pretty much cuts through every industry in existence and what you do in A does not apply to B. — Gimby 45 secs ago
4:32 PM
I've been using SO as my online resume for years. I don't know if there is any way we can prevent this decision. — 137 20 secs ago
My experience with being contacted by recruiters via SO mimics yours of being contacted by drive-by recruiters on linkedin. — Kevin B 13 secs ago
4:47 PM
this is interesting, if you think about console output like "quoting the code" i guess :) — Eliran Malka 1 min ago
5:02 PM
5:34 PM
@KevinB fair, I've only used stack overflow jobs twice (one of which led to my current job), so my sample size isn't great, but I've never had messages from recruiters unless I've set my profile to looking for jobs. LinkedIn I got those once or twice a week until I disabled my account. I wouldn't bother trying to inflate my profile score here to help my job search, you're right that's silly, and not really the point I was trying to make. — alwaysmpe 1 min ago
I agree that the remaining one should be
[dexie.js]
since on their website, Dexie.js stylizes itself as "Dexie.js"
— Samathingamajig 30 secs agoIs your question how do we measure the impact of UX changes? I think that's answerable. In terms of whether it's subjective. That's on topic for the discussion tag: " tag for questions that may not necessarily have a clear-cut right or wrong answer and often subjective. " I think this is perfectly on topic for such a tag." — JeffUK 58 secs ago
6:14 PM
I would extend quoting and citing the relevant information from the confirmation of the bug report is also important. — Security Hound 53 secs ago
6:55 PM
You could just "follow" posts that you've flagged if you think an edit to that post would make you reevaluate your flag. — cigien 52 secs ago
7:20 PM
Generic bot attempts to solve this particular issue by pinging you when posts you've flagged have been edited. — Henry Ecker 1 min ago
Don't forget @cigien that < 3k users also use flags to indicate what become closure reasons after 3k reputation. Edits that invalidate flags (in my experience) happen much more commonly when flagging questions for "Needs Improvement" as compared with NAA and VLQ flags on answers. — Henry Ecker 1 min ago
I think one issue overlooked is that recruiters don't want to jump through the additional hoops unless they're some level of desperate: so despite the postings being higher quality, the companies themselves often are not. It was useful when my career was getting started, but there hasn't been a single posting I would even consider engaging with in the past ~8 years of occasionally browsing. — Collin Dauphinee 30 secs ago
I would even be willing to pay a small annual subscription fee for the convenience of not having to maintain some HTML/CSS or Word document and hosting it somewhere publicly available. — Collin Dauphinee 19 secs ago
I flag far to many contributions daily to be notified when they are edited, so I can retract a single flag, out of dozens of flags. Sounds like you should follow those contributions you feel can be improved. A single decline flag out of dozens daily is fine with me. — Security Hound 48 secs ago
7:59 PM
@HenryEcker Oh, that's a good point. I completely forgot about flagging for closure. I'm still not sure it's needed too often, but it certainly increases the number. — cigien 8 secs ago
8:27 PM
Does this answer your question? How does a new user get started on Stack Overflow? — John Montgomery 34 secs ago
Voting and commenting don't gain you any reputation, all of the things that can give you reputation (questions, answers, and suggesting edits) are things you can do immediately. — John Montgomery 40 secs ago
@JohnMontgomery Thank you for the information although I fail to see why asking questions would cause you to gain "reputation" my bad for calling it respect earlier. — James Womack 20 secs ago
@Dharman with all the demeaning attitude form some of the individuals, with enough rep to comment, it might as well be reddit. — James Womack 1 min ago
9:35 PM
What do you mean demeaning attitude? Why are you comparing it to Reddit? The minimum reputation required for comments is to ensure that you know what comments are for and you don't use them to post "thanks" or "did you solve this problem yet". Please read through the help page before you start contributing on Stack Overflow. — Dharman 41 secs ago
There are very good reasons that low-rep users aren't allowed to do those things - you need to have experience with the site in order to know how to use those things well. The fact that you tried to create "respect", "stupid", and "poor" tags is actually a perfect illustration of why you're not allowed to create tags yet: those are not appropriate tags by any stretch of the imagination. — EJoshuaS - Reinstate Monica 1 min ago
Your answer was almost "so good" except for the argument that it's easier to grab a scroll bar to navigate a long string. If I have to scroll right and left to read the whole thing, that's a lot of effort that must be done just to maintain usability. Additional effort should be reserved for increasing usability, not maintaining it. — Edwin Buck 1 min ago
@DanBron Your commentary is spot-on. I remember back when some of these items were acceptable, and there were a few stellar examples of great utility that did fit into "recommendations, best practices, and industry standards." However there were far too many questions that duplicated them, or were far too specific to have a general ability to reuse in a different context. Finally, upvoted answers became wrong over time, and there was no real way to age them into obsolescence without a complete rework of voting rules, which would break the social contracts inherit for Stack Overflow. — Edwin Buck 55 secs ago
@jlandercy "Value" is a slippery word. If you want to get closer to an answer, ask about the metrics Stack Overflow uses to guide UX design. That might open the door a little bit; but, a lot of years have passed since the original evangelists of StackOverflow were heavily active and vocal. In any case, "value" isn't going to get you far, as it is semi-judgmental in it's defense. — Edwin Buck 1 min ago
10:32 PM
@Cerbrus upvotes include compensation for downvotes when you visit a SE site without clicking on the vote count. It seems perfectly fine to me... — code 15 secs ago
11:17 PM
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