...also, is Reverse a dictionary in python to key : list of values? different enough to leave standalone? It asks for multiple values with the same key to be converted to a list. As @wim said 8 years ago on the first question "Are the values unique? Are the values hashable?"
@smci To be clear, it was perfectly fine for you to respond to Code-Apprentice's R->Python question, and it was fine to have the discussion in here. If I had objections I would have said so at the time. OTOH, discussions like that in here during on-peak times don't work so well, so there are advantages for all parties in taking it to a separate room. And it would not be a private room, only mods can create those.
The questions on the main feed are extra-extra low quality today, holy cow
"Why can't I read from a file that's opened for writing", "why didn't my list of OrderedDicts magically turn into a list of strings because I expected it to", etc
There was yet again a question posted in a wrong language. Since there are several checks already in place, perhaps it would be worthwhile to require that a question title on English-speaking Stack Overflow must contain several letters [a-zA-Z] in the title In this case all characters were either...
It seems that YouTube has finally stopped getting itself stuck in a Coldplay loop when I don't tend to it. Now I've got Imagine Dragons as the default and life is much better.
@AnttiHaapala I just deleted that Cyrillic question. Maybe I should've waited...
@Aran-Fey Imagine what it'd be like if SO were split into a Beginners site and an Advanced site, eg as proposed here: meta.stackexchange.com/q/334490/334566 The Beginners site would rapidly descend into a pile of garbage, with the blind leading the blind. Sure, there'd still be the occasional gem, but they'd be hard to find among all the rubbish.
It also relies on people being able to decide which category their question belongs in. Before now I've seen things like [ADVANCED] in question titles that can be fixed in a couple of lines
Do you think a platform where helpdesk-type questions aren't allowed would be maintainable? How many questions would be posted there a day? Would it be enough to keep users around?
If there's nothing to do, nobody's gonna be active there
I think a low-quality area is necessary just to maintain a large enough user base for the high-quality area
@Aran-Fey Maybe they would be happier, but would they be learning correct useful stuff? OTOH, there is a benefit to learning stuff from people who are only a little more advanced than yourself: it can be easier for the teacher to relate to the pupil's mindset & what they're likely to understand, and what language features & algorithms the pupil is probably familiar with.
@ReblochonMasque :) There's no law against importing all the existing content from SO, and maybe filtering it through a ML system that separates the wheat from the chaff. But even if we had such a site, who's going to pay for it & maintain it?
Well, the thing is, oftentimes when beginners have their question closed they don't learn anything useful either. Even if it's closed as dupe they're often unable to apply the answers to their own problem. So in a way, they might benefit more from lower-quality answers that are written specifically for them
On the current SO that's not really possible - we want to have generic questions and answers that can help a broad audience. But if we're gonna have a low-quality area, there'd be nothing wrong with writing answers that only help one specific person
@Aran-Fey Fair enough. Eg, that "how do I print my list of cards in 4 rows" question a day or so ago that smci was trying to hammer as a dupe: his target shows how to print a dict in rows. The OP may not have learned anything about dicts yet, so that target would be useless for them.
@roganjosh That's another reason why I'd require questions in the advanced section to be self-answered. High rep doesn't guarantee good question-asking skills. But people who know enough about the topic to write an answer will most likely also be able to write a good question
I'm not really following. You're saying you'd rather have higher quality standards and better tools for dealing with garbage than separate SO into 2 sections?
@roganjosh It's not going to happen. For some people, with certain cultural backgrounds, it's ingrained behaviour, and if you try to explain why it's wrong, they just don't get it.
It's bad enough on SO. On Physics, we commonly get questions that are crappy phone photos of an exercise from a textbook / assignment booklet, with zero text, apart from a title. And half the time the titles are useless stuff like "Please answer my question". One of those yesterday even told us to hurry because they needed the answer in under 5 hours. :facepalm:
@Aran-Fey Yes. There are many nervous but reasonable situations in life like giving a presentation. Nobody would say that the pressure around giving a presentation was cruel. Why should questions be given any different reception?
@Aran-Fey I am saying that dividing SO will kill it. I suppose some kind of beginners' area could work, but I gather the mentoring experiment a while ago didn't pan out so well.
Well, I don't disagree with having high quality standards. The goal behind my suggestion was to establish a knowledge repository, because if we're honest, SO is a pretty bad one. If you pay attention while googling, you'll notice that a lot of the questions you'll come across are... bad. So the self-answered section was intended to be that knowledge repository for people who come here from google. Whether the quality standards for the other questions should be lowered or not is a separate issue
@PM2Ring Would it really kill SO if self-answered questions would have a section of their own? I very much doubt that
@Aran-Fey Oh, ok. But does it even need a separate section? Why not just some way to quickly find those great Q&As, eg a platinum tag? What if someone else wants to contribute an answer that's even better than the OP's?
True, sometimes people will post rather trivial self-answered questions because they think they're useful. There would have to be some kind of review system that questions have to go through before they can be submitted there.
And that particular question doesn't look like a good fit to me. I think it's too specific to be useful
My question is unlikely to be useful to anyone. If anything, you guys are welcome to delete it. But from my perspective at the time, it was a complex issue
@PM2Ring People would be able to submit their own answers in addition to the OP's self-answer. And I think it'd be good for the questions in that section to always be written specifically for the purpose of being there, rather than someone else coming along and slapping a "this is a good question" sticker on an existing question. A lot of these "good questions" need a makeover with a chainsaw. Just look at some of the canonical duplicate targets we use.
IMO there is a noticeable quality difference between self-answered questions and other questions, because the former are 1) written by people with knowledge and 2) written for the exact purpose of being applicable to a wide audience
Originally, the aim of SO was to build a repository of goid questions & great answers. There have been a lot of comments in the last year or so, especially since the whole Welcoming Wagon thing, that the knowledge repository is now basically complete and so the SE company is trying to push us towards a help-desk model, where we answer every newbie's RTFM question. Maybe that's true, to an extent.
Some IT knowledge has a long shelf life, but a lot of it gets outdated rather quickly, so ongoing curation is vital. Still, it is getting hard to ask a good new question, and I can't imagine that getting easier over the next 5 years.
@AnttiHaapala Maybe it has. I know that it's getting harder to find good dupe targets, due to the amount of low quality stuff you have to wade through. And if it's hard for gold badgers to find the good stuff, it must be almost impossible for the newbies who aren't good coders, and are still coming to grips with the language, and who aren't familiar with the body of knowledge on SO, or how SO works.
I'm not into sports. I did play rugby union for a year in school, though, to please my step-dad. It was not a happy time for me...
I guess my point is that (assuming SE doesn't implode) something has to change in how SO operates, otherwise the knowledge in the repository will degrade into uselessness. Maybe ML can be used to help separate the good stuff from the rubbish. Maybe an SO-powered AI could answer simple beginner questions, and help newbies with more advanced problems to get their questions into a shape that will make them acceptable to the human experts that want to answer them.
The goal of creating the library has long been accomplished. I can't point to a particular moment in time where we passed it, but Robert Harvey's answer captures the artifact pretty well.
What we need to do now is maintain it and set our expectations for what that looks like accordingly. In the...
Read that ^ vs library
> The goal of creating the library has long been accomplished.
> It means finally getting a handle on things that have been kicked down the road for probably too long. How we empower people to deprecate information, for instance. Have you ever seen an old accepted answer with hundreds of votes that was great in 2008 but actively harmful today? Yeah, we have to deal with building tools and having discussions around specifically how we'll deal with that.
this... 10000 times
> We have to identify and mark differently true canonical questions. We need to put more sanity around the question merge process and let trusted users with certain tag badges use those tools. We need to do almost everything related to duplicates better than we currently do.
how to make these come first in the google search?!
the problem with Tim Post is that he often writes stuff that makes sense, then sometimes stuff that make no sense and then I see the company to have no action towards those goals.
@Shog9 Just throwing a random idea out, could it make sense to add a "library" flag to questions? Questions could be "nominated" to get the flag set, in a sort of reverse-closure process, and it could be also be used to keep non-library questions out of google.
Maybe I misunderstood? There is no library tag on SO - isn't the post suggesting to add a library 'flag' so good questions/answers pairs can be identified and curated as part of what we want to keep for the future?
@wim right, I just didn't write a setup.py in a while. poetry be thanked.
@Aran-Fey I think I'd expect an exception, and maybe a flag that allows running an expensive check that would return the right answer and not consume the iterator.
Alright, but we can't hold your hand for every trivial little problem. If you haven't figured out that functions need to be called, you need to read a tutorial.
@PM2Ring Right. Clearly I knew it was only me and CA here. I wouldn't have bothered if the conversation was interrupted by/interrupting other people, which it wasn't. I would not bother with such a conversation in a private room; there was enough in it to be useful future reference for anyone else trying to replicate numerical results from another (foreign) package.