01:34
@Wallace You had a typo in the formatting of this post, where the header row was in the space where the language identifier should go. — wjandrea 40 secs ago
01:57
I'm getting
HTTP Error 403: Forbidden
when I try a read_html
on Stack Overflow. Is that a new thing or is it just me? Maybe Stack is blocking scraping? I tried HTTP too, FWIW. — wjandrea 32 secs ago02:34
03:28
My personal rule: If I can cut/paste their title into google, unmodified, and find the answer in the first 2-3 links, I do take offense at their failure to do research. They clearly knew what to look for and how to phrase it. If I have to modify the title, such as removing words that got in the way, then I'll chalk it up to a learning experience. — Cort Ammon 26 secs ago
2 hours later…
05:48
I agree here; it seems this experiment is rigged, given no hard control parameters are defined in the post. After the experiment they can cook up as many statistics as they want and cherry pick those that show "increasing participation" making this experiment a success, and only show statistics that do not show fraud to validate that this is indeed a good decision. This entire experiment appears to be just for show with a foregone conclusion. — Adriaan 17 secs ago
1 hour later…
07:04
Just as a comment. I would have tested such a strong change from merit-based voting privileges to everyone is equal and can vote on a smaller site first. Preferably one that volunteers for it. Even if you would decide that the house got on fire and you undo the changes, the damage done might already be lasting. Also I don't understand the secrecy about the start date. The test group will eventually find out what privileges they have, but for a real live experiment, you want them to find out as soon as they have the ability, don't you? — NoDataDumpNoContribution 59 secs ago
For at least a year now, it feels like 90% of meta posts that come from the company get received strongly negative. Can one say that the divide between the company and the meta community probably never was greater (except maybe at the end of 2019). — NoDataDumpNoContribution 24 secs ago
I believe regardless it would be good to just close that loophole, including for the association bonus - no immediate deletion if a user has voted more than once. — Redz 11 secs ago
07:38
@JimGarrison no, I got what you meant. I was actually doubling down on that. Not only users are put down by a decrease in quality, they are also constantly triggered by announcement like this one. I think it is pretty evident that whatever "fall in engagement" they detected is more likely to be caused by established user burndown than by "oh, no, I need 15 rep to vote!" Furthermore, new "wanna-be" users failing their onboarding and not turning into regular is not a "fall in engagement" since those weren't yet engaged in the first place. They should be talking about "fall in new accounts" — SPArcheon 19 secs ago
08:15
Voting to close as unclear, because I can't understand how there is anything wrong with the described result - I certainly can't understand how it could be called "completely unreadable". — Karl Knechtel 21 secs ago
If you are asking why these questions were closed the way they were, or how to improve them - then why is the title "Where do Apple development related questions belong?"? At best, that doesn't seem to have anything to do with what you're trying to find out; at worst, it comes across as if you think you are being treated poorly because of your choice of development platform rather than anything to do with the questions (I can assure you this is not the case). — Karl Knechtel 20 secs ago
4 hours later…
12:28
Downvotes aren't hostile. You need to fix your perception or find a site that suits you more. Sorry for being too honest, I hope this doesn't offend you too. — Largato 59 secs ago
12:48
Ask yourself, How would this information help future visitors solve similar problems? The key information in any answer is the answer itself, not how much time it would take X person to complete it. — Hovercraft Full Of Eels 6 secs ago
13:14
"Normally I would charge 40*4=$160 for a solution like this" - 4 dollars per hour for 40 hours? Some expert *scoffs* /s — Nick is tired just now
The data on SO is available for everyone though public licensing. Selling it to Google is kind of like selling distant stars out there in the universe to dumb millionaires - selling what you don't own to dummies who don't realize that you don't own it in the first place. — Lundin 46 secs ago
@Nickistired: Probably 4h*40$, which would match the "I spend half a day" sentence. — BDL 36 secs ago
@Lundin some data involving (even anonymised) details on voting isn't freely available. "How many upvotes were cast in mumps tag by users under 99 rep points who joined site less than a year ago and visited it more than 17 times since joining" — gnat 47 secs ago
Well you managed to get 200+ users down-voting this proposal so... mission accomplished...? I was going to post an answer but I can't even be bothered trying to act like I care about the site any longer. Is there a way a can trade in my rep for a coffee mug or something? — Lundin 25 secs ago
What does that matter if you can't use the actual post content to train an AI with anyway? If some AI starts quoting SO posts without attribution, then I believe that's a license infringement? — Lundin 16 secs ago
The handy thing with having the question is community wiki is that they discourage some rep-hunting newbie from stumbling in on a high traffic canonical duplicate and posting some low quality crap answer just to farm rep. They can still post, but they will get no rep for it. — Lundin 48 secs ago
I've also petitioned for some of my questions to be converted to community wiki when I don't want any attribution for them. As in, when I want to use them myself for dupe hammer targets without being partial into giving my post more attention. Example - this is currently the 17th most frequent question under the C tag and a large part of the reason why is because I've repeatedly used and promoted the question myself, even though I wrote the original revision. — Lundin 13 secs ago
@Adriaan none of the posts mentioned in the OP have been made CW for reputation denial — blackgreen ♦ 5 secs ago
I think the easiest is to reason as if you were writing an article for Wikipedia. Whatever you wouldn't put in there, you shouldn't put in a Stack Overflow answer either. I would go as far as to not even ever refer to yourself to be honest. Rather than "I would do the following", I would write "A possible way to do it is" or a variant thereof. We're providing knowledge, not counselling. Perhaps if you avoid putting yourself in the text, it is easier for you to contain the amount of oversharing you want to do? I wouldn't know, I know nothing of your.... speciality. — Gimby 29 secs ago
@CortAmmon do make sure to do the search in an anonymous browser window though, otherwise you see personalized search results which may vary greatly from what someone else sees :) — Gimby 7 secs ago
"A down-vote, at its fundamental level is an insult." - an unresearched, incomplete, misspelled, entry-level question to a problem which is exhaustively documented on the internet on sites which can easily be found by copypasting the title of the question into google is, at its fundamental level, an insult. Downvotes are one tool to deal with this insulting content and get rid of it. — l4mpi 56 secs ago
RE: The latest examples [...] should probably not have been made community-wiki — the questions have been made CW because this is literally what is recommended in the reminder text of the relevant mod action popup (I wrongly recalled it was automatic). Making the question CW together with an answer lock makes technical sense because it allows low-rep users to edit the posts, as mentioned in the edit wiki privilege, linked also in the lock banner at the top of the question. This is, at least according to the current system, a valid use case. — blackgreen ♦ 34 secs ago
@Nickistired You jest, but even $40/hr is definitely not "SQL expert with decades of experience" territory. More like $200/hr. $40/hr is like 1-5 years of experience, as a salary's hourly rate, not a contract rate. — TylerH 43 secs ago
@Lundin They won't lose rep either then though. So... it actually kind of protects people who do hit & run posting for rep farming purposes. I can't imagine that it causes much discouragement, because I can't imagine that such people pay attention enough to know they won't be making theoretical internet dollars. — Gimby 9 secs ago
@BartMcEndree And just in case you are concerned (if you are new to Meta), the downvotes on your question do not mean "this is a bad question", they mean "we think the answer is no, this is not appropriate" (voting on Meta is confusing and works differently from the main SO site). — TylerH 17 secs ago
That is a surprising response on the mod flag because it's demonstrably false. It's not a frequent occurrence, but mods have and do mark posts as CW. — TylerH 5 secs ago
One example of a question converted to a CW post by a moderator just a few months ago: December 2023 — TylerH 48 secs ago
I actually understood "... there were varying perspectives, which included dissenting views." as some feedback dissenting from other feedback. Its not just understated but misleading. — 463035818_is_not_an_ai 49 secs ago
@Lundin For something like that, a second-tier protection feature would be better suited. Change the current protection to "spam protection" and add a second one requiring 100 score in one of the question tags or 1000 reputation called "answer protection" (or some similar thresholds). Marking the question a CW post is a rather nuclear response for that small issue. — TylerH 15 secs ago
@Lundin - I'm not convinced that even their coffee mug would work. I guess I'll wait for a blog post to tell me how I'm wrong and the new coffee mug is the right direction — Sayse 8 secs ago
The questions tagged with the old libraries will automatically be rewritten to be about the new library? — Gimby 15 secs ago
That's a well-written argument, that explains why having feedback on down-voting would be a bad idea. Except: we've seen the alternative. People down-vote, when there is no reason to down-vote. "In the vast majority of cases, nothing needs to be clarified. " Extraordinarily false; to the point of deafness. — Ian Boyd 29 secs ago
@DanMašek "How do I access that version of this site that you seem to have access to? " Visit the homepage. — Ian Boyd 22 secs ago
"I also don't understand this one-sided hatred of downvotes (negative feedback). " Because of what it leads to. People down-vote questions that have no reason to be down-voted. That causes others to see the down-votes, and also down-vote. And then the votes to close come in, because the question is down-voted. The problem with down-votes is what it leads to: the world being worse-off. — Ian Boyd 56 secs ago
What do you mean? These are 3 versions of the same library. They are all "Marker Clusterer" libraries and all for Google Maps. There is also leaflet.markercluster for Leaflet, which is a separate thing and which should stay separated. — MrUpsidown 25 secs ago
Is the problem in C++ code? If not, then generally it's considered irrelevant. — vandench 5 secs ago
@IanBoyd you realize the exact same argument can be made for upvotes? Personally, I've seen bad content upvoted way more often than I've seen good (not just "not absolute trash") content downvoted; and lots of people upvote questions that have no reason to be upvoted, or in the worst case have no reason not be moved to the garbage bin with extreme prejudice. This leads to the site being overloaded with garbage, frustrates experts, dilutes SO search results with trash, and leads to the site being worse-off - for everyone, not just for people asking bad questions. — l4mpi 19 secs ago
Then you'll generally find people will remove the C++ tag. An similar example I found recently was a question tagged with Vulkan, but the problem was entirely within STL. Someone with experience in STL wouldn't need to know anything about Vulkan to solve the problem, and someone's Vulkan experience wouldn't provide anything of value to solving the problem. — vandench 49 secs ago
I've never seen up-votes lead to a question being un-deleted or re-opened. It just doesn't happen. "This leads to the site being overloaded with garbage" Except not; There's a question on the homepage right now that people are down-voted, and closed, and it should not have been. I was about to answer it, but instead i will edit his question and put the answer in his question for him, because we're trying to be helpful, rather than stackoverflow users. — Ian Boyd 46 secs ago
15:08
I think we should thank you for conveying our concerns correctly to those in charge so the company could re-assess the earlier decision and allowing those in charge to make a better decision. — rene 17 secs ago
I think @SpencerG has been here too long for that last post to be an example of hazing gone too far, and I thought we weren't doing April Fools this year? But more importantly: thanks for rethinking this. I think it's apparent from our end that there was a lot of momentum behind this project and it had to have been so difficult to stop it. I'm sure that involved a lot of internal discussion and we won't ever be able to properly credit the people who spoke up loudest for the concerns of the community, but thanks to both those who made the case and those that heard them! — Bryan Krause 32 secs ago
"But it looks to me like your most recent question, for example, is not even about that. It is purely about how to configure a build tool, such that it invokes the compiler in the right way. A generic C++ expert gains nothing from that expertise when attempting to answer the question; therefore, it is not a C++ question." - As a person with some expertise in C/C++ on Linux, I would say that the tool (Bazel) is irrelevant to the problem: it is NOT the consumer library which is needed to be recompiled, it is object file which needs that. How should I tag my expertise without
c++
? — Tsyvarev 55 secs ago"If it's failing before link time, then you purely have a C++ question and not a question about building a project - we don't care about what you were doing when you noticed the error; we care about what the error is and what causes it." - Compiler errors could be caused by not adding include directories, macro definitions, compiler switches (e.g.
--std=c11
). All these things are added by the build tool, not by the C++ code. So why do you think that compiler errors require c++
tag but linker errors like "undefined reference" don't require it? — Tsyvarev 10 secs agoWouw! This is the best Meta post I've seen in a while, actually feels like we're getting heard as a community. Thank you SpencerG and the rest of the team for listening and communication your actions. — 0stone0 11 secs ago
15:38
@KevinB Frankly, there are a bunch of activities that are gated behind reputation that make no sense. Like, what harm is there in letting people see the vote counts? I think half of the "privileges" should be things everyone can do regardless of reputation and moderators should be able to suspend a user's access to that particular feature if the user abuses it (like they can with chat and review queues). If you're nasty in comments, you don't get to write comments for a while. If you're vandalizing posts with edits, you get a time out from editing. — ColleenV 17 secs ago
15:52
I fully agree with the fact that this experiment should not be resumed. At least not without the community's permission. — Fastnlight 41 secs ago
16:03
Do you understand the logical conclusion of your argument @KevinB ? Anything that a developer touches becomes on topic irrespective of the use that the developer has of the tool: including coffee machines. You are even removing the "primarily used by developers" which is still too wide. The topic scope needs to be narrower for the sanity of the site, not ever encompassing. I recommend reading "programming on a boat" to understand why your argument is dangerous: because it will inevitably lead towards that result. — Braiam 45 secs ago
Because if a compiler error is caused by a missing include directory then that's a typo. If it's caused by getting a macro wrong, and there's an underlying actual issue with understanding how macros work, that's a C++ question because the preprocessor is part of the language. Undefined references, on the other hand, can be caused either way. There's exactly one actual C++ question about them, which is the beginner conceptual question about why they happen, what the One Definition Rule is and why it's necessary. And there's a thorough canonical duplicate for that. — Karl Knechtel 7 secs ago
There have been many suggestions from the community and moderators on alternative ideas; many have received a lot of votes here or over on Meta Stack Exchange. If Stack Overflow still want to pursue something like this, why not create a post (ideally on Meta Stack Exchange) asking for constructive ideas for what could be implemented; we even have this useful voting mechanic which will show you what answers are welcomed by the community, while you (Stack Overflow) can acknowledge the feasibility and build time/requires in the comments of the answers to your question. — Thom A 48 secs ago
16:23
Thanks for all of the quick feedback. For context, I live in a country with free healthcare so I often get services I don't directly pay for. When I leave the hospital I get an itemized bill for all my care. I see the total cost but I pay $0. It is nice to know exactly what my care cost the government and my taxes indirectly. It gives me pause next time I drive too fast. — Bart McEndree 52 secs ago
@Braiam yes, i do. I don't see a problem with useful content that is possibly useful to developers existing here. — Kevin B 6 secs ago
"Because if a compiler error is caused by a missing include directory then that's a typo." - Missed include directory could be caused by misunderstanding of a build tool, which defines its own model of dependencies between libraries/executables created in a project. That model is not a part of C++ standard, so solely C++ expertise won't be sufficient to solve the problem. The same is about linker errors. E.g. in CMake a mis-order of libraries (which could cause "undefined reference" error) is normally solved by adding dependencies between libraries, not by manually adjusting that order. — Tsyvarev 26 secs ago
While I'm not privvy to any internal SO processes, I would wager a guess that convincing management not to push through with the experiment regardless of the overwhelmingly negative feedback (as was done with some past incentives) took quite some work from the CMs and other empoyees in the trenches. If that hunch is correct, thanks to everyone who helped stop this. Now, let's hope the experiment will not be re-introduced on SO until it was changed enough to meet with the approval of the mods and community at large. — l4mpi 28 secs ago
This is valid as long as the same question would not equally apply to building code for another language. Right now, as I read the example question that I investigated, my impression is that there is not yet a reason that the question is language-specific, nor even compiler-specific. It appears that the substance of it may be as simple as "how do I instruct Bazel to pass a custom command-line option to the compiler?", or perhaps "why doesn't [attempt X] accomplish [the preceding]?". — Karl Knechtel 26 secs ago
@Lundin There's nothing wrong with pointing people to your own question as the duplicate target. You should be awarded with reputation points for writing a suitable duplicate target. That's what this site is all about. Posts like that should not be made community wiki. — Dharman ♦ 38 secs ago
17:06
I totally agree, I cannot fathom why SO wouldn't want to listen to the moderators in the first place. — Cow 19 secs ago
@TylerH The flag response input is very short so a more accurate explanation would be difficult to fit in. But it's not completely untrue. I disagree with many of the recent occurrences, which I believe were made in error by my fellow mods. So as a general guideline, it's true that mods do not turn questions into community wiki. But it's also not never as some exceptions do exist. — Dharman ♦ 1 min ago
'It appears that the substance of it may be as simple as "how do I instruct Bazel to pass a custom command-line option to the compiler?"' - A funny thing that only expert (in Bazel and, probably, in some languages) could perform such generalization. What is wrong in having language-specific tag until the question will be generalized by an expert? — Tsyvarev 36 secs ago
17:26
@Dharman Sure, I don't expect anything as length and detailed as what you put in the answer. But something like "We only mark questions as community wiki in extreme/extenuating circumstances. See stackoverflow.blog/2011/08/19/the-future-of-community-wiki" would be just about as short and also more accurate :-) — TylerH 24 secs ago
17:44
The thing is, your bill doesn't look like that because the hospital wants you to feel like a lazy freeloader. It looks like that because the government wants you to feel like your country is a good place to live. The hospital is acting according to externally imposed regulation. There are also regulations here for writing answers, which are based on entirely different principles. We aren't trying to make people feel like the Internet saves (or costs, on the answer side) them money. We're trying to make them feel like they're sharing useful and interesting information and building a library. — Karl Knechtel 15 secs ago
"What is wrong in having language-specific tag until the question will be generalized by an expert?" Probably nothing. But for that to work, there needs to be a culture of removing the tag once it's known to be irrelevant. Just like how there's nothing wrong with proactively stating, say, which version of Python is in use, but that information should only be left in when it's actually relevant to the problem. — Karl Knechtel 48 secs ago
To be frank but quite understated, the initial claim "Many of these changes are a result of your feedback." was head-turning. I struggled with writing an answer, and eventually abandoned the idea, because it seemed too difficult to avoid violating Code of Conduct while giving an accurate and detailed explanation of my takeaway. — Karl Knechtel 26 secs ago
"only after the general disagreement from the community on Meta, and not after all the moderators told you how terrible of an idea this is." - not just that, but all the obvious reasons to expect general disagreement from the community based on several previous rounds of feedback on related topics. Or, you know, the "general disagreement from the community on Meta" that they already got network-wide, 6-8 months ago. — Karl Knechtel just now
18:19
we’d like to work with moderators and other community members on evaluating alternative options for how to set new users up for success and how we can enhance the tooling to address concerns. How about (re-)boosting Staging Ground? — Vickel 35 secs ago
18:33
@Vickel Staging Ground is coming back: meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/429606/… — SpencerG ♦ 58 secs ago
I'd love to see the SOCorp definition of "healthy community", I think everyone would agree that new constructive input is part of that but there was no way this experiment would have fostered that without better material to explain what a valid up/downvote should be. — Sayse 23 secs ago
Disagree. The experiment should be resumed, but in a controlled environment with clear goals and unambiguous before-and-after metrics. And it's going to be freaking hard to pull that off. — user4581301 34 secs ago
^100%. Before anything else, what Stack Overflow is, a repository of high-quality answers to questions, needs to be made clear to all existing and new users. And it also needs to be clear to most users what makes a good answer, and a lot of that depends on the language. For example, in C, "Oh hey, man, I got rid of the compiler error by casting the function pointer." is really easy, looks like it works at the start, but is a horrible <expletive deleted>ing idea that may or may not blow up quickly enough for anyone applying the answer to notice or care. — user4581301 42 secs ago
^100%. Before anything else, what Stack Overflow is, a repository of high-quality answers to questions, needs to be made clear to all existing and new users. And it also needs to be clear to most users what makes a good answer, and a lot of that depends on the language. For example, in C, "Oh hey, man, I got rid of the compiler error by casting the function pointer." is really easy, looks like it works at the start, but is a horrible <expletive deleted>ing idea that probably won't blow up quickly enough for anyone applying the answer to notice in time to revert the upvote. — user4581301 11 secs ago
If a user is suspended, they are unable to comment. I cannot confirm this, but mods will probably suspend a user if a user is misusing comments. — Fastnlight just now
how do you simultaneously support experiments like this and hope that this one does not get resumed? — starball 6 secs ago
I confirm what @Fastnlight says: persistent misuse of comments may lead to a suspension (most likely after a warning to knock it off). — Ryan M ♦ 10 secs ago
19:43
"A 3D graph would be awesome" Are you sure about that? In most cases, 3D graphs are actually not that useful IMO as stuff is just occluding/hard to see/interpret — dan1st might be happy again 25 secs ago
20:42
I've never understood the "entire code base" point here. I've seen plenty of "can someone help me"-type questions where the problem is only with a single function, but either there are multiple problems with it or OP hasn't explained what they're stuck on, so an answer to that might be as little as a single line of code to get the function to fit their requirements, but ultimately the question's still not useful. Is there a whole class of problematic questions I'm missing? I'm mostly active on the Python tag, if that makes a difference. — wjandrea 52 secs ago
21:02
Hard agree. The only thing I would add is that it's often useful to visualize the data in table format without having to load it, so in addition to the constructor data, I would include the output from
print(df)
or print(df.to_markdown())
, whichever looks better. — wjandrea 23 secs ago21:22
nit/petition to change "shouldn't be asked: duplicates" to "shouldn't be asked: duplicates which make poor and/or non-unique signposts"? (a mouthful :P, but I think an important one?) — starball 10 secs ago
"but I don't really think that's worth the time at this point" do you just mean the diamonds in the trash part, or the whole thing on taking out the trash? could you reword to make that bit a little more clear? I'm guessing just the "diamonds in the trash part", but I want to be sure. — starball 43 secs ago
21:40
"If reputation doesn't give privileges, does it matter" - of course! it's social clout, and that motivates people, and can give a degree of support to how much you can trust what that person writes in an answer in a related tag (people have suggested somehow showing rep in user card based on tag rep rather than total rep). — starball 23 secs ago
@starball An experiment like this should be different than this one, otherwise it is not another experiment, it's just running the same experiment again. When you have an idea, and you want to test it, let's say a hamburger recipe that you learned that is loved by New Yorkers, your idea might be to sell hamburgers to all people around the globe. If your experiment involves placing a restaurant in an international airport terminal, If people from Argentina, Belgium, Canada, Denmark, or Zimbabwe tell you that they don't like it, don't keep selling the same hamburger in the same place. — Wicket 6 secs ago
related to edit privileges, shameless plug: For edit-suggestors with a streak of N approvals, only require one approval for their next suggested edit, and journeyman geek's Opining a successful-edit-count-based two tier suggested edit system. — starball 59 secs ago
22:15
I absolutely love the energy of this answer. Ambitious projects can be awesome – but they have to be targeted correctly. The "ambitious goal" of the original proposal was to... vote more. Woo. Yes, curation is positive & crucial & without votes SE wouldn't exist, but is that really a good entry point when we have a backlog of millions of questions? Why not take a crack at that, or something equally as material/ tangible first? I would be so excited to see the power of a big project that the community actually believed in and felt comfortable getting behind. It'd be refreshing, frankly. — zcoop98 34 secs ago
@wjandrea Think "Can someone help me make an ecommerce site". Basically encapsulating the "too broad" close reason. — BradleyDotNET 51 secs ago
22:51
@chivracq it's corporate-speak. It means key performance indicators, the metrics a company looks at to determine if things are going well. — terdon 8 secs ago
Dammit Cat, this sort of post is just one small part of why you are so sorely missed. What's "MM" though? Can't be million, is that billions? — terdon 59 secs ago
@E_net4 I think Konrad Rudolph and ingotangjingle's message is quite clear: you can list as many low quality questions as you may but that doesn't devoid OP's stance that a lot of questions are indeed swiftly closed without careful evaluation or due to bias, which in this case, from daily frustration of low quality questions. Martin James's response is pretty much closer to throwing a baby tantrum and deflecting OP's viewpoint rather than a constructive response, and imo itself a classic example of low quality response, consider that it is from a user with high reputation. — M Ciel 50 secs ago
@chivracq Key Performance Indicators are, with soulless corporations and government types, the one thing that matters. Occationally its useful leverage — Journeyman Geek 9 secs ago
23:38
It has since been undeleted. Having taken the points made here into consideration, I'd welcome you to think about specifically what you want the question to be about, and try to edit it to meet standards. At any rate, the golden rule here is that content is not personalized, and content curation is not personal. — Karl Knechtel just now
23:50
@starball Tried to clarify the first two. I was being a bit glib... how much true value can be in 0-score questions with no answers and 2+ comments? — Catija 19 secs ago
If the conversation turned unproductive, you are encouraged to report any comment, that legitimately should be deleted but it’s often best to hit the eject button yourself and simply stop interacting. — Security Hound 38 secs ago
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