Some, in my experience, even willfully disregard what they know to be the case about how the site is supposed to work because of idiosyncratic personal obsessions, like a fixation over the amount of "effort" that the asker put in, a misconstruction of their own role as a teacher/educator/tutor, and so on.
@KarlKnechtel What you're supposed to do is post an answer to the question. In that answer, you can explain how it's related to another similar problem, and even include a link to that Q&A. Thus, you avoid repeating too much (although you must still give a simple, self-contained, direct answer to the question), but can still "connect the dots", referencing the other Q&A.
They'll show up in the "Linked questions" list in the sidebar for both questions, which can also be enumerated using the normal search tools for any given question.
In other words, what you need to do is learn to stop worrying and love some duplication. If they're exact duplicates, you close them. If they're only similar or overlapping, then you need to answer them and connect the dots, but leave breadcrumbs to enable yourself and future researchers to find the other related Q&A.
I thought SO wanted to be a knowledge repository? Or was that just my imagination? If the goal is just Q&A, that certainly explains the low quality of... everything
I can absolutely see why people would do that, though. Most questions we get aren't knowledge repository material, but the community still accepts them instead of closing them. So why play by the rules when nobody else does?
I use it to find the nearest colour in a palette. The colours are in LUV space, so the components are floats, with the U & V components possibly negative.
@Aran-Fey What does "knowledge repository material" mean? I feel like you might be interpreting "knowledge repository" as having a minimum difficulty bar, but it doesn't.
If questions are unsuitable, then, yes, they should be closed. Whether other people "play by the rules" is totally irrelevant to your individual actions/choices.
Not difficulty, usefulness. For instance, if the question is "Why doesn't my tkinter calculator work", how is anyone else going to benefit from the "knowledge" in the answers?
Ah, "debug my code" questions. Yeah, those are definitely the least useful types of questions that we get here. I have no idea why people actively seek to encourage those at the expense of other types (e.g., by demanding that "how-to" questions show an "attempt" [i.e., wrong code that needs to be debugged and will necessarily be highly specific to a single individual's ill-informed attempt]).
They're on-topic because we are inclusive of the "long tail".
@Aran-Fey I admit I had to read it several times. Unfortunately, scipy docs tend to be like that. But the KD Tree stuff is actually not that hard to use, after you've played with it a bit.
@CodyGray It's irrelevant as long as it's a small minority, but arguably we're at (or rather, past) the point where SO has become a sinking ship. IMO there is so much trash on here, and so much new trash coming in, that trying to clean it up is wasted effort. The reality is that SO has become a help desk
@Aran-Fey I don't follow. There's no maximum number of questions. The ship doesn't sink just because there are too many less-than-useful questions asked or answered.
It doesn't "become" a help desk. It either is or it isn't.
What makes the ship sink are all the low-quality questions that show up on google and pollute your search results. How many SO questions do you click on before you find a useful one?
Answers to "debug my code" questions can be useful to others if they illustrate & explain principles & techniques that are more generally applicable. But the code / task in the question needs to be of sufficient quality. It has to serve as a typical example of the stuff the answer is explaining. If you have a brilliant answer, but you have to illustrate it with a crappy question, that's less likely to benefit future readers.
Anecdotally, when looking for actual help, I almost never come across any posts that need moderating. I can count on one hand the number I've pulled up a Q&A when looking for an answer and needed to close the question, delete the question, or even delete an answer (unless it was maybe a brand-new NAA that still had some pending flags; that happens once in a while).
I do often delete old, obsolete comments, or those that should have never been left in the first place (like please accept my answer kind of things), but meh, that's not really turning us into a garbage dump.
Whether this reflects the fact that I'm much better than the average user at searching, or the fact that the C, C++, assembly, and/or Linux-related tags on SO tend to have higher-than-average quality, I couldn't say.
Yes, there's a ton of dreck in the Python tag. But take a look at JavaScript sometime. Admittedly, some of the JS problems are due to the pace that the environment evolves, and stuff like jQuery. OTOH, that kinda simplifies things: if a JS answer is more than a few years old, it's likely to contain at least some things that are now obsolete, or at least not considered good practice these days.
It probably also has to do with the topics you need help with. Experienced programmers tend to ask better questions, and difficult topics tend to have fewer duplicates than common questions. I've lost count of how many times I thought "there has to be a duplicate for this question", but I couldn't find (a good) one among all the junk
I get quite frustrated with the fact that experienced programmers don't close things they think are low-quality as duplicates, but instead close them for other reasons. Why didn't you just take the few seconds to go look for the duplicate?! How can you criticize other people for being lazy when you are just as lazy yourself?
I close a large number of questions as duplicates, and it only happens once in a great while where I "know" there must be a duplicate out there but can't find it. And it only happens in languages that I don't really know, where presumably I am just not using the correct keywords.
I don't know if it's because people just haven't discovered that the only way to search is by using Google site search?
yeah, I honestly don't know why more people don't close as duplicates, for most common things it takes at most a couple minutes, usually done within half
There's no indirection via "unclear" or "needs focus", when what is really unclear or needs focus is why the several dozen existing Q&A didn't solve the problem.
@Aran-Fey That would be an argument against asking it (which wasn't their decision), not an argument against closing it as a duplicate.
One of the best things is when you dupe-close a question and the OP enthusiastically thanks you for find them such an excellent answer. It doesn't happen often, but it does happen.
While we are still on the topic of moderation, some answers really are just bad and should be nuked imo, like this one that I flagged but got denied - there's literally no citation on why that is
A large number of duplicates doesn't actually cause any problems, as long as they're all closed as duplicates. The only thing it does is irritate people who worry about non-problems.
@metatoaster You flagged it as "not an answer". It attempts to answer the question, so the flag was invalid. It says that the problem happens on a ChromeBook, and that there is no good workaround, save from the obvious implied one: use a different computer. Now, that may well be wrong, but moderators don't delete answers because they are wrong, certainly not in response to NAA flags.
@CodyGray I disagree with that. There aren't nearly enough people who bother fixing/cleaning up old questions. The roomba is the MVP in that regard. And too many duplicates of the same question is a problem - nobody wants to get 10 google results that all point to the same place
I can guarantee you that the moderator who handled the NAA flag did not go up and read the question, note the name "win32crypt" in the stack trace, decide the asker is probably using Windows, and evaluate the answer in that regard. If you wanted that to happen, you'd have needed to use a custom flag.
In the abstract, if a problem only occurred in one specific context, and there was no known workaround for it, wouldn't that be a useful answer to have to a question about that problem?
@metatoaster Stack Overflow has no citation requirement. Not sure where you got that idea? All answers are "hearsay". In particular, they are anecdotal.
@metatoaster That would be an argument as to why the answer is wrong. (I also think it must be.) A user would be expected to post that kind of counter-argument underneath the answer as a comment, and, optionally, use that as a basis for downvoting the answer as wrong/useless.
The community can deal with bad content. Mods can't be expected to make judgements on the technical merits of an answer. But if the answer is blatantly not an answer, or it's written so badly that it's virtually incomprehensible, then mods can kill it.
But, the thing is, the rose-colored glasses are misleading. Since the beginning of Stack Overflow, there have been many answers posted to questions that were absolutely crap. In fact, I'd wager you saw a much higher percentage of answers like the one you linked in the early days than you do now.
And considering that there are more answers posted now than back then, that means that the ratio of quality to non-quality has gone up. That's an accomplishment.
As for imports, like this one from today... which should be solved by properly packing the software, but I am too tired of these to bother moderating them
Even in a language as simple as Python, that's quite possible
For a really cheap example - you should use context managers for handling files. Plenty of useful answers wouldn't do that. Is it incorrect not to? Not really, but it goes against established practice. Pile 10 of these kind of things into an answer and you'll still have something working, just completely different to anything an expert would write in practice
In other words, not writing idiomatic code could be seen as harmful IMO, because 9 times out of 10 the newbie is just going to cargo cult it
I think every emotion about SO is just amplified for the python tag because we have 16% of all questions being thrown at us and so many of the askers are being manipulated by media to tell them that they could be the next AI genius if they just pay £1200 £30 for this simple course
Time to clean up the star board
It seems I can't clear stuff that doesn't fit on my 13" screen :( Time to fire up ol' faithful
@roganjosh This so much. The amount of hidden footguns is crazy. Works in principle for just a narrow case (so gets an upvote by inexperienced people) but is a liability for in general.
Case in point: most advise on sys.path. Sure you can muck around with the innards of the import machinery…
@Aran-Fey They're reduced the top rate price from the ridiculous £1000+ but it's still the same if you search "udemy data science" (links are too long) or this
although, it's a bit unintuitive when it comes to exporting your code, because you have to click, in order, the "Generate support module" and "Generate python gui" buttons.
if you do it in reverse order, thinking "it must be in the order that it is displayed" then it kind of does not work? at least I think it didn't in the other order...
@Aran-Fey yeah, I guess it would be better if you could switch to grid or pack but I guess it is what it is. Works for me in any cases :P
Ahh, the old double bluff. You've met me before, sir!
I can see the utility in the JS frameworks, it just seems too much of a faff to get everything integrated with the backend when I need to move fast most of the time. Probably I'd be better backing it with node but then people would moan because it's not python/R
One of the HNQs gave me a laugh before (on mobile atm). "In R booleans can have 3 different values"... I feel justified in my stance at work to outright refuse to learn the language. But introduce something that isn't R/Python? That's pitchfork fodder
@CodyGray Unfortunately, this happens frequently for me. And then sometimes when I do find something, I also find evidence that a huge forest of questions have not been appropriately closed. And then sometimes while I am looking for duplicates, I find several things that superficially look like a dupe target, but which then turn out to be themselves duplicates of totally different things.
which is actually how I ended up making the PCD room in the first place: because I fell into rabbit holes that pointed out multiple canonicals were either missing or in terrible shape.
of note: stackoverflow.com/questions/4362586/… complete garbage question even now, and look through the revision history; it was originally even worse - much worse. And that has over two million views and a couple dozen dupes, plus an answer from me from a decade ago when I was "young" and naive.
@KarlKnechtel I'm a pretty good duplicate finder and corpus researcher. I'll be reading and possibly participating when I feel I have something to contribute.
@KarlKnechtel that's a scary wiki due to sheer size. I don't have 20k here so editing wikis isn't a priority for me (having to submit a suggestion on something so sizeable is a pain). But I feel the wiki is overall amazingly good.
My priority would be having some established members lending authority when a canonical (that's been in bad shape for years) needs an overhaul and one guy doing it alone might not be well understood.
E.g. I've been curating the PyCharm tag for about 2 years (daily closures and lots of edits). The most revelant posts about installing and using libraries are confusing, need some clean-up, and probably a pristine community-wiki among the answers.
@bad_coder I don't use an IDE and know essentially nothing of PyCharm, but please feel free to contribute specifics in my room. There is no particular organizational structure at the moment.
@nico considering it's Saturday and I'm stuck writing code it's not all bad.
@KarlKnechtel really?! One on of those mythical Python devs that don't use an IDE? Truly amazing... I think Chepner also said he only uses Vi or Emacs...
I don't rely on any particular integration; I don't need my tools to streamline that much of the actual work of producing the code (text), because thinking is the bottleneck.
Most of my projects are tools for manipulating binary data and/or doing format conversions.
@sahasrara62 yeah, I guess it kind of became a popular choice, maybe because knowing vi/vim/emacs is considered by some as "productivity" incarnate, or a sign of such at least
@KarlKnechtel oh, gotcha. Does it have autocompletion or just plain editor? I'm trying to find a Geany replacement for when I want to hop to a less-configurable editor.
closest I found was Thonny but it kind of crash depending on my usecases
@KarlKnechtel I feel like most things that have autocomplete for python have at least one bug or missing features. Pycharm miss a lot of stuff when it autocomplete methods, decorators, etc. Same for pretty much everything else. I think Jedi also sometimes doesn't work for certain things.
@NordineLotfi mm. my vim config needs some kind of tweak, too, I guess: it keeps wrongly re-indenting the current line of code when I type out a dict literal
I admit I can work without autocomplete, but sometimes when prototyping or trying to find what something has (eg: available functions, etc) I like to use autocomplete a lot. But I don't like when autocomplete work using heuristic/neural network. Just want simple completion based on python local files/import
@KarlKnechtel I don't think I ever saw you on vi.se now that I think about it. I spent time there for quite a bit asking vimscript related questions. Maybe you might be interested? ;)
@sahasrara62 I think I probably might have one or two usecases for that, at least I once did before. One thing you can use that for is if you want to use variable as string argument, so that you don't need to quote them when passing them to a function
so for example, function_test(string_without_quotes)
idk if it is suitable, but seems like a waste of time in early stage of any project, just like type hints where time is more important than writing this
@0x263A having different settings for different environment and keeping setting related to apps and global one different is a god way to manage everything