I am a beginner my self, so I can't answer many questions myself. I would like to know where to find the easiest questions so I can answer.
|
|
Jeff and Popular are both addressing the issue from the Fastest Gun In The West perspective with try to get some answers in and and they usually do it faster and/or better than everyone else. Both raise very good points but there's another way to find questions than surfing the newest questions: surf the old questions. If you start about fifteen pages into the "unanswered questions" list, you'll find there are plenty of questions with only one or two answers -- and the answers on that list have no upvotes, so they might not be very good. If you've populated your "favorite tags" list with technologies you're familiar with, it'll be easy to skim through the list looking for highlighted questions with no answers or few answers, and find ones that you might be able to improve drastically. You might also find that the answers aren't good answers, and ought to be downvoted or flagged as Not An Answer -- or the questions are unanswered because they are bad questions and need to be flagged as Very Low Quality, Not a Real Question, etc. |
|||||||
|
|
@PopularDemand is right, getting started can be tough. I got comfortable with StackOverflow by starting in a technology I was comfortable with and then moving to a less-frequented tag for a library or plugin belonging to the technology. For example, say you're comfortable with jquery. That's a pretty popular tag with lots of experts. Starting out there might be pretty intimidating. Instead, start out in tags like jquery-validate or jqueryui (this strategy applies to most every major tag out there). There are several advantages of "working up to" a tag like this:
Basically, find a nice corner of StackOverflow and make it your own. |
||||
|