I have a feeling that certain programmer communities are more prone to downvote than others.
Is there a statistic I can look at to verify this hypothesis?
For example, do Haskellers vote down more than Pythonistas?
I have a feeling that certain programmer communities are more prone to downvote than others.
Is there a statistic I can look at to verify this hypothesis?
For example, do Haskellers vote down more than Pythonistas?
The hypothesis can be (partly) verified with this version of the query mentioned in a comment by Hans Passant, which was adjusted to cover all tags with 25000+ questions. Here are the positions among the 189 included tags, as well as the answer downvote/upvote ratios, for the tags mentioned in this discussion :
Following user000001's suggestion, here is the corresponding query for questions, as well as sample results for the same tags:
D/U
is greater than 1 for all tags
Oct 30, 2016 at 19:47
if-statement
, for-loop
being at the top indicate questions from complete beginners i.e., it is consistent with the unsurprising observation: "people new to programming ask worse questions"
I have a feeling that certain programmer communities are more prone to down-vote than others.
That may be well true. Some tags have more engaged users than others. Though it's completely unclear what you want to deviate with such statistics. I don't see a goal.
basic
, python
) and some languages are less inviting for beginners (such as haskell
).... at least this is my prior assumption
Oct 30, 2016 at 10:47
D/U
correlates with the level of proficiency
Oct 30, 2016 at 10:56
I think that the down-vote rate is a measurement of a community's tolerance to questions
that doesn't take into account at all that the quality of questions, and the quantity of low quality questions, will vary massively per tag. In some tags, it's just the experts answering each others questions; in others, it's everyone and their dog. I don't think you will learn anything useful from this statistic.