"Of course I understand my problem: I need to do XYZ in this language I know almost nothing about. I just don't understand anything about how to solve it, that's why I'm here!"
@Shog9 ok, phew.
But the "minimal understanding of the problem" bit is... weird.
the types of questions I observed being closed (with the old reasons) tended to look more like this: I've been given this spec: <spec goes here> Please implement it for me.
Except often less polite, and missing the spec.
IOW, someone posting their homework in verbatim
homework slash a job they'd been given
I'm actually less concerned about the example given in SoftwareMonkey's post, simply because he didn't ask for code.
But yeah; I think it's tripping folks up because they assume "minimal understanding" means something other than what it says. I did a little straw-poll in a mod chatroom the other day, and the common interpretation was, "asker is being lazy"
@Shog9 ... dang, now I wish I could revisit it. It's been deleted though.
@Shog9 "Minimal understanding" is really unclear though.
Anyone who can ask a question could say they have a minimal understanding. They understood enough to ask the question. Even if they know absolutely nothing else, that is still minimal.
@Shog9 well, yeah, but you demonstrate it by asking it. Minimal means "barely adequate", etc. I'd say a newbie who has no idea about how to do AJAX, asking: "how on earth can I make this ajax request", could count as having a "barely adequate" understanding of their problem by virtue of understanding what an AJAX request is. It could still be closed as just being a simple request for code with nothing added though.
> Questions should not just request code and leave it at that. We expect askers to demonstrate that they've invested time solving the problem themselves by showing what has been attempted, and by clearly stating why it didn't work - and that they are not just outsourcing their work to StackOverflow users.
so... If I go to my co-worker and say, "Hey, I need to sort strings in a dropdown list according to how often they've been used recently - I know you've done this sort of thing before, wanna show me how?"
I'll probably get it.
But if I say, "I've been assigned the task of implementing a MRU list for our options page - but I really want to catch up on episodes of Breaking Bad instead; please write it for me (here's the spec document)"
That ain't gonna go over so well.
And this is what I've observed on SO (obviously with a slightly different context and phrasing)
I don't see the difference between those two questions other than one is: "I need to do a MRU list. How can I do this?" and the other is "I need to do a MRU list. Do this for me".
so maybe people just don't want askers to be jerks and deputise their work, and want them to be active learners rather than people who just don't want to spend time doing stuff.
@JonathanHobbs it's subtle. That's the problem. The distinction I'm drawing is that the former implies I know how to create and populate a dropdown, store and retrieve the options that will apply in it, etc. - all I'm really after is a routine that sorts a list of value pairs by one of the values.
@Shog9 The "What have you tried?" thing really is something I've noticed. Entirely depending on the people who see your question first, you'll either be downvoted with comments like "What have you tried?" or you'll be upvoted and get answers (actually, in the other case you'll get answers too)
I could be even more specific about that, but then you're getting into X/Y territory where I'm making some assumptions as to the ideal implementation based on how I think the sort is going to work - since I know other folks have done this already, I'd prefer to defer to their experience in the matter.
There's a sweet spot that allows fairly challenging questions from folks who know what they're doing and are looking for answers from peers, but sets a seemingly higher bar for folks who don't know what they're doing, or at least seem to indicate otherwise in how they're asking.
@Shog9 And the being a troubleshooting tool thing is, I think, a reason why rep is strangely hard to obtain in SO compared to other SE sites I've used: there is almost always very little value in actually reading other peoples' questions. The problem is highly specific to their strange situation, and the answers aren't much use for learning very often, just solutions to their problem. Contrast to RPG.SE and Boardgames.SE where most topics are fascinating resources for learning.
@JonathanHobbs Right. I might actually want to sit down and write a few lines to sort an MRU list, just to keep me in practice. It's a simple enough task, but one you see folks getting wrong regularly enough to know there's a small opportunity for error. Should the asker be shut down, my opportunity squelched, just because the asker didn't dump a bunch of worthless / irrelevant code into the question?
Ironically, by trying to hammer down "lazy askers", we can end up creating a situation where the safest questions to answer are so specific to the asker's implementation that they're difficult for anyone else to re-use.
@Shog9 I... think the "What have you tried?" thing should maybe be done away with. Really.
Some of the time I see it, it's on a question where the user says: "I'm trying to do this but it didn't work [and no detail about how]. How do I do this?"
Sometimes however it's just on a pretty good question that didn't provide some code.
In the former case though, a better question is to just ask them in what way what they did didn't work.
But SO users appear to have a lot of different and contrasting ideologies jostling about, so it's hard to know what the best practice is.
"What have you tried?" comments are good.
Usually.
ChrisF's take on the matter
The Establishment's take on the matter
Statistics
The usage of "what you tried" is growing (v2)
In Q1 of 2012 - 0.0134 such comments per question (~1.33%)
In Q2 of 2012 - 0.0167 such comments per question (~1...
Hi, strange, I failed at an audit question apparently when I put "No action needed" in there, and I seem to have been banned for seven days for that only failure. I cannot recall any other. Is this supposed to work like this? Also, I think the question was a border line. I think it was still OK, and I did read it. Probably half of the people would say this, and the other half that. Is it OK to propose removing bogus audit questions on meta?
it is silly that personally different opinions for a question can lead to seven days bans for a person who otherwise might do great job (not referring to me, but in general!). I think the audit questions should be way more straight-forward to decide what to do as opposed to personal opinion about border lines.
he wanted to get a reference implementation for an algorithm, and he provided all the input needed for that.
so I fail to see why it is not valid. If I had seen the question, and known the answer, I would have even replied to be honest.
(I just asked a few friends using SO, and they have the same opinion fwiw)
anyway, I will be back to contributing to SO in 7 days. I do not feel like being around, when I am limited about basic contributing option due to a differing opinion about a silly audit task.
actually, most of the OPs ask for example how to do something because they do not know.
That is perfectly fine and valid.
Anyway, I am clearly not a person who wanted to get a badge, and I read it carefully, and then considered it. My personal opinion still stands alongside a few friends, at least.
if it is worth giving seven days ban, then let it be. I will withdraw my contribution for seven days.
(fwiw, I would have even downvoted the close proposal of the thread)
but different opinion should not lead to ban at all.
audit questions should way more straight-forward, and not based on personal opinion, but technical facts.
That question is not at all a specific programming problem. It's broad and lacking in any understanding of what they're doing. That's probably about as straight-forward as you can get as far as audits go without just throwing out some spam from Sumer...
asking for a Java reference implementation about a specific algorithm?
That are several thousands of those around if not more.
answered, upvoted, and all that. I am very sorry to see there are such audit questions which may lead to ban for significant contributors, but with slightly different opinion in certain cases than the "banning team".
He has a perfect understanding what he would like to get and he even wrote that.
He would like to get a reference implementation. That is, any is fine.
I honestly fail to see how this one out of the many can be considered bad ** universally **, and lead to valued contributors banned.
I mean, it is not about whether "stfuf" is correctly spelled, i.e. factual. It is based heavily on personal opinions, and an audit question should stay away from that.
and his intention seems quite clear to me, and it makes perfect sense, and as I said, I am not the only established user on SO who would think the same.
in fact, many newcomers look for binary search algorithm implementations to see some reference, and this thread would have been invaluable resource for that.
is meta the right place to propose removing/replacing audit questions which I personally think silly?
Hello. I was curious, as I am eligible for the generalist badge, why it wasn't awarded to me when the script ran? The generalist list shows that one was awarded only 56 minutes ago, and I have had the credit for it for two passes now.
I should post on Meta asking why all of the Stack Overflow policies and algorithms are completely broken, and appear to be designed to inconvenience me personally.
Because that's really starting to get on my nerves.
@jadarnel27: perhaps, this site is not for you if everything bothers you here.
@animuson: the second is pretty odd as it talks about dinosaurus......
I wonder how I ended up accepting that..... That is clearly a mistake. I do not even understand how that happened.
as for the first, I was lenient, maybe.
at any rate, this is too strict, and IMO harmful for the site to ban to due to personal tastes.
(it is not like you are banned in a community, irc, etc when you have a different opinion and you raise it)
since disagreements simply happen.
as for 2), that was factual, I agree about that.
but looking for a reference implementation of an algorithm in Java with all the details provided for the questions, etc, is simply not factually bad thread.
I feel strongly that the current SO website would be much more effective if it was completely different than how it is now.
Problems include:
Closing eyes or adjusting monitor orientation causes site to disappear from view.
No useful information about paint.
Everything should be different.
I...
is there a way to see who approved or rejected a tag wiki edit?
Anonymous
6:19 AM
@LaszloPapp Yes. Find the suggestion in the "activity" tab of your profile, and click on the "suggested edit" link. In the case of your most recent suggested edit, that would take you here.
Anonymous
(That doesn't include the wiki body itself, so you'd need to go to your profile and find that suggestion as well if you were interested.)
I was wondering if it made sense to create a "qtcore" tag on SO similarly to other module tags, like qtnetwork, qtsql, qtgui, etc.. and probably the existing class tags. The drawback of new tags as I see, we already have many qt tags around due to the class tags, and there is an upper limit for tags which is I believe 5 (?). What do you think about this?
Ah, like that. I misunderstood. Hmm. On the one hand I don't see the direct need for a qtablewidget tag. On the other hand, that's where the issue most likely is. Grouping that under its module might not be all that intuitive if you don't have a somewhat in-depth knowledge of Qt.
I have read several questions over the past weeks, and a couple of issues are related to at least 2-3 classes, and it is getting a zoo to keep tracking each of them.
I believe general consensus usually is that we don't necessarily need to keep the number of tags low if they add something of value ...... where "something of value" is of course up for debate
What is the stance over class-specific tags in questions? Clearly — for example — it would be best to have cocoa (an API/Framework) than nsarray (a class defined within).
The real question is, should class-specific tags be removed? APIs have hundreds of class names. Considering many Framework &...
Retagging for retaggings sake isn't really a great thing - not just because it bumps, but because most questions have bigger issues. If it is small scale and for a good reason, sure.
@Oded While searching for some info I came across a few very old SO threads (one even as old as 2008). In those threads, I found some answers which were not really answers.
Question is should I still flag them for removal (or) should I leave it as such because they are so old?
Different badges run at different intervals. Some are multiple times per day. Some or not even on a daily basis afaik. Don't know what the details are for them specifically.
Heheh, yeah, he was pretty good last night...about four hours or so between waking up. And he usually only cries when he's hungry, so that's not too bad.
@jadarnel27 \o/
Apparently one of my coworkers got married last weekend, but I forgot because I haven't been in the office in...a long time.