I find the grace period can lend itself to some unscrupulous behavior on popular tags. I've often seen an earlier, minimalist answer be updated within the first 5 minutes, and incorporate something mentioned in a later answer (also in its first 5 minutes, obviously) or expanded upon immensely. It's like they wanted to be "first to post" but didn't want to wait the amount of time it would take them to craft a genuine answer. (While that is the scenario where this applies most often, I don't think my request should only apply when the question is brand new. Especially if it makes the feature more complicated to implement.)

I propose that you shouldn't be willing to hit "Post Your Answer" until you think it is a valid first draft of your answer, and that very first version should be a maintained part of the answer's version history. If I post an answer and then 10 seconds later start editing it, and edit it multiple times, that should be a new grace period, and the initial answer I posted stays intact.

This kind of behavior (especially when it's intentional) is hard to detect because you have to be on the page to see the change happen.

In short:

I actually question the value of the grace period. Once you've hit the answer button for the first time, a new grace period should start, and further edits should be tracked separately from the initial submission (with their own 5-minute grace period cycles, same as today). This should eliminate garbage "first post!" answers that are edited later on purpose.

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A bit more context around this question can be found in the comments on this one. – James Allardice Jun 28 '12 at 14:55
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Of all the suggestions to "fix" the FGITW, this is the only one I can agree with. There should be a record of the first edition posted. – dmckee Jun 28 '12 at 15:01
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I agree with this. Bumping shouldn't be a concern in the first 5 minutes, but if it is, it should just not occur for edits in first 5 minutes; that's separate from maintaining version history. At minimum, make the first version visible to mods even if it's not visible to others. – Matthew Read Jun 28 '12 at 15:07
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Does it matter if the end result is a high quality answer? The goal of the system as a whole is to produce good answers, not to force posters to get there in "the one true way". – Oded Jun 28 '12 at 15:16
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I don't believe keeping the first draft would change this behaviour one whit. Regardless, a number of high rep user, myself included, do this on a regular basis (start off with a basic, good answer and immediately expand on it). – Oded Jun 28 '12 at 15:19
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@AaronBertrand One more thing I've seen going horribly wrong, is people flagging the placeholder answer as not an answer, moderator arriving after the full answer has been posted, and, since there aren't any evidence that the answer was not an answer initially, dismissing a valid (imho) flag. This has happened to me on ProgSE as a user (almost all of my declined flags) and as a moderator. – Yannis Jun 28 '12 at 15:21
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Based on the upvotes I feel like I'm just not getting it, but this still seems broken. 1) Foo posts an answer. 2) Foo edits the answer -- new revision. 3) Bar posts an answer. 4) Foo copies Bar's answer within 5 minutes of their edit, and the revision gets merged – Michael Mrozek Jun 28 '12 at 15:27
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@Oded OF course high rep user--myself included--build incremental answers. Indeed that is a positive behavior, and this suggestion will just leave a minor trail of breadcrumbs indicating that this happened. No problem there. – dmckee Jun 28 '12 at 15:36
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Note that downvotes still work well here; if a user is FGITW'ing an answer, and you don't like the way they are approaching it, just downvote the answer. That's what I do. – Robert Harvey Jun 28 '12 at 15:40
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@RobertHarvey - When you DV an inadequate "stub" answer such as "answer coming" that then gets edited into shape within the 5 minute grace period what do you do then? If you leave the DV intact then surely someone will counter act the seemingly harsh down vote on an apparently fine answer thus in fact rewarding the behaviour. – Martin Smith Jun 28 '12 at 16:10
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@MartinSmith: I wouldn't remove a downvote on a "stub" answer, even if they actually answer the question later. Answers gaming the system are not useful. – sixlettervariables Jun 28 '12 at 16:40
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@sbi: Considering the original "answer" was, "hey I've got some code somewhere, I'll look it up." I don't see that as something we'd encourage. If it were a comment instead I wouldn't have paid it any attention. – sixlettervariables Jun 28 '12 at 16:59
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I'd like this to apply to the question, as well as answers. Sometimes I (or others) have added perfectly good answers, but then the question has been changed within the grace period, making answers look foolish without any indication of what's happened. – Jon Skeet Jun 28 '12 at 19:03
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@Lamak: I'm saying that if I write an answer to a question and then the question changes significantly, it can make the answer look like it's talking nonsense. – Jon Skeet Jun 28 '12 at 20:32
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In case someone hasn't noticed, this question's title has been changed (not by the OP) after submission. – ypercube Jun 28 '12 at 21:53
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8 Answers

Your question sounds like the primary use case of this would be to start arguments about who stole content from whom leading to lots of angry comments and downvote wars.

It's very common for several people to come up with essentially the same answer at the same time. In popular tags it happens basically every single time an easy/common question is posted. That doesn't mean that all those people are copying each others answers, no matter if they edited their posts.

I don't see how the additional revision would lead to better answers, but I see flame wars by people who are convinced that nobody else could have come up on their own with that great answer they posted and everybody else must be copying them. But how much can you really say from a revision history that says 12:00:00: "You should use X" and then 12:00:15: "You should use X because Y. See reference Z and here is code how to do it... etc long explanation". You still have a 5min edit time window.

If someone else also posted that reason Y or reference Z you still can't tell who copied from whom. And most probably they just came up with it independently anyway, since there are only so many reasons/references that apply to a given question.

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Yep, exactly. This proposal attempts to fix a "social problem" which ought not to be there in the first case by changing technical semantics which are there for a reason. – sbi Jun 28 '12 at 22:39
Though maybe the question emphasizes otherwise, I'd above all say it's nice to keep track of those FGITW placeholder answers that are really meant to get into "the first slot". (And also to explain the downvotes those answers might get, but seem out of place 5 minutes later.) – Arjan Jun 29 '12 at 5:13
@Arjan: But do you really want to keep track of that? Why? Isn't it that what you actually want, is to discourage the FGITW approach? – sbi Jun 29 '12 at 10:36
Indeed, I do want to discourage that @sbi. And I don't see many disadvantages of not having a grace period for the very first revision. And I don't have any other solution. (Though I recall Jeff writing FGITW is not an issue anymore, I feel differently.) – Arjan Jun 29 '12 at 10:54
@Arjan: I have added my thought about that to my answer just half an hour ago. Have you seen this? – sbi Jun 29 '12 at 11:08
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Actually, I believe this would do the opposite. It would prevent the "you stole my answer" arguments altogether, as people wouldn't be tempted to hijack other answerers. Plus, it would eliminate all the paranoia since one could just go look at the revision history. This is a win win. – jmort253 Dec 31 '12 at 7:29

One idea would be to limit the edits in the grace period to small fixes below a certain character count. This would still allow to fix small typos and bad grammar that inevitably creeps into some posts, but would prevent the gaming of the feature you want to get rid of.

I'm not convinced yet that the grace period should actually be removed, but if it is I would strongly suggest to have some exception for very minor edits. Else the revision history gets easily cluttered with very small edits.

Another factor you need to take into account is that this means that the auto-communitywikification threshold will be easier to hit, because edits that previusly were merged would now count as multiple edits.

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If someone makes a bunch of minor edits within the grace period, I'm suggesting those count as a single edit, just like they do today if they start after the 5 minutes has expired. This will not clutter the revision history except that there will be one more entry in some cases. – Aaron Bertrand Jun 28 '12 at 15:13
@Aaron: That we already have. What you want instead, however, is that the very first edit (the one that creates the answer) is to be treated differently from all later edits (which all come with that 5mins grace period). – sbi Jun 29 '12 at 10:35
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I actually really, really like the idea of only allowing very minor edits during the grace period. It's very frustrating to see a new question, post a nice, thought-out answer, and emerge from it to find that 10 one-line answers have all popped up in the mean time (so that those users can start getting upvotes immediately, then just edit their post as time allows). – Jeff Dec 26 '12 at 13:23

I actually question the value of the grace period. Once you've hit the answer button, any further edits should be tracked separately from the initial submission. This should eliminate garbage "first post" answers that are edited later on purpose.

I only see why someone could consider this problem when others do that, if that someone is mostly concerned with their rep. That's fine for their personal concerns, but the site in itself shouldn't be concerned with this, the site's concern should be to produce great answers.

If a first, suboptimal answer, followed by incremental edits, leads to a great answer — what does it matter whether this incremental progress was recorded for the first 5mins or not?

IOW: I see no reason to change anything.


As an outcome of the comment discussion below, let me take up the cudgels for the current state:

The feature where changes are coalesced is there for a reason: I do not want to see individually every typo-fixing change some author does, when I look at what changed. I want to see those changes coalesced, because it's much easier to look at them that way.

If you make me look at every typo someone fixes in their answer/question individually, the very next thing I will ask for here is a feature where I can compare rev X to rev Y, where Y != X+1, because otherwise it's impossible to get an overview of what someone changed in half a dozen quick edits.

And, FWIW, I see no reason to be logically inconsistent in that regard between the first edit (the one that creates the answer/question), and the following ones. To the contrary, since a question or an answer is changing a lot more in the beginning, when the author sees all their little mistakes and inconsistencies, and when commentators point out even more of them. The beginning of an answer/question is exactly when coalescing is needed most.

So please leave this as it is. It is a helpful UX feature that would be missed. Or if you indeed must change this, then please at the least give me the option to look at the coalesced changes.


Now, if there is indeed a problem with users stealing other users' answers, and if this indeed makes those other users angry to the point where it damages the sites goal to produce outstanding answers, then let us tackle this. Allowing to view the changes uncoalesced at least for mods would probably do.

Also, if many users indeed see it as a problem that other users sneak in dummy answers first, in order to be the FGITW, then let's tackle the FGITW problem. Let's just remove the FGIW badge, or at least, change it so that it honors answers that gain 10 upvotes without being edited once (which, IMO, leaves the badge's spirit, while encouraging the exact opposite behavior).

Pushing people to aim more for the site's goal (producing outstanding answers), rather than their personal goal (accumulating outstanding rep), is a good thing.

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If someone writing good content is driven off by people stealing it and getting the credit, there won't be as many great answers (I doubt this happens often, but it's certainly plausible) – Michael Mrozek Jun 28 '12 at 15:46
@MichaelMrozek: Stealing is orthogonal to this. – sbi Jun 28 '12 at 15:51
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@sbi How? It's the whole motivation for the request – Michael Mrozek Jun 28 '12 at 15:53
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The motivation of the request is two-fold: (1) thwarting plagiarism, or at least taking a step toward making it less attractive (2) avoiding duplicate answers. This isn't about rep. I have 40K on SO, do you really think I care about 10 points that someone got because they copied my answer? Nope. I care that there are two identical answers and one was not original. The TIMESTAMP issue I mention here is because of the extra attention an answer gets because it is earlier - even though it's earlier version was crap. – Aaron Bertrand Jun 28 '12 at 15:57
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@Aaron: I have deleted many answers of mine because someone else's was better. Or I have helped them to get improved by pointing at missing facts in comments. I lost interest in the rep game the moment I hit 10k. Now, my foremost concern is with getting good answers. I don't care how they come into existence. – sbi Jun 28 '12 at 16:04
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@sbi Even if it was plagiarism? And if the current system makes that easier to hide? – Aaron Bertrand Jun 28 '12 at 16:15
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I do not believe that the end justifies the means. I do not believe that dishonesty should be rewarded. – Remou Jun 28 '12 at 16:29
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-1 not good enough – JonH Jun 28 '12 at 17:19
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@JonH: I am glad you explained yourself so exhaustive that I can so well relate to your opinion. – sbi Jun 28 '12 at 22:40
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If someone takes the time to write an outstanding answer, taking care to test and get references, asking only acknowledgement (not rep) for this work, only to have that answer appended to the first answer, I do not think it will encourage that person to supply an outstanding answer the next time. It is against human nature to be completely selfless in the face of complete selfishness. – Remou Jun 29 '12 at 10:34
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@sbi if you would please read over all of my comments on this page, you will realize that I do not want to track every single edit. And I will insist again that this is not about rep. – Aaron Bertrand Jun 29 '12 at 10:58
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sbi I don't need to explain myself. Downvotes on meta mean "I don't agree with you."...and after reading your post I simply don't agree with you. You find plagirism ok, I don't. – JonH Jun 29 '12 at 11:45
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@sbi also, for clarity, nowhere did I ask you to compile anything. I asked you to convince me how this proposal would make your SO experience worse. You've added a lot of words to your answer, but you still haven't convinced me. Partly because it's mostly based on arguing against things that neither the proposal nor I have suggested will happen (the nonsense about reading every minor edit). Even if that were what I were after (I'll repeat again, it's not), what % of your SO time is really spent reviewing answer edits? Be honest. – Aaron Bertrand Jun 29 '12 at 12:04
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@Aaron: What is that now, a you-haven't-read-my-comments bitch fest? I have read every single one of your dozens of comments in this fred. I am not going to re-read them again, trying to think which of them you might consider a reply to my compiled argument. If you have something to say relating to my argument, just say so. HAND. – sbi Jun 29 '12 at 12:13
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sbi - I think the updated title clarifies what this is really requesting. "Make first draft of a new answer part of the permanent revision history" - He's just suggesting that whatever you put as your initial answer be your first revision, always. Edits during the 5 minute interval following that are rolled up into one revision, as usual. Subsequent edits would also behave as they do now. It's just that there would be a permement record of your original answer. I hope this clears up some of the confusion =) – jadarnel27 Jun 29 '12 at 12:32
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This defeats the purpose of a grace period.

Trust me, you don't want to see the dozens of little corrections that occur to me in the first five minutes after I hit "Post" on an answer.

If you happen to be sitting and watching the page, you'll get real-time notifications of any edits I make in that time; otherwise, who cares? I would hope you don't want to discourage folks from improving their answers.

I actually question the value of the grace period. Once you've hit the answer button, any further edits should be tracked separately from the initial submission.

gnat helpfully linked the grace-period tag, whose wiki contains this quote:

right after you post something you'll always notice some goofy mistake that you made, like immediately. This happens to me nine times out of ten I'll post and think "oh, I should have talked about this" or "I missed that word," so you immediately go in and edit. At a certain threshold these are not treated as real edits, they're treated as just going back in time to pretend that it is the post you originally made. It doesn't kick off the whole auditing trail of you having edited it 50 times.

That's the value. Softening those ignoseconds a bit. There are other ways of doing this - but on SO, it's a grace period.

This should eliminate garbage "first post" answers that are edited later on purpose.

Uh, no. It would just add another revision to them. If someone's starting multiple edits 10 seconds after they post, then obviously they know they're not done. Surely you don't think they'll be shamed into leaving garbage on the site when previously they would have improved it, or honestly believe that voters routinely vote on the first revision in preference to the one actually displayed on the page.

Folks write quick answers and then fix them up. That's been true for four+ years on SO, and in general it's not a bad thing. Even if a change like this would work to discourage that, I'm honestly not sure why you'd want to.

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-1 as far as I can tell this is just a straw man argument. Feature request is about "fixing" a single, very first snapshot of the post ("the initial answer"), not all and every change done in grace-period. This makes just one notification and one edit more compared to what we have now, not the imaginary "dozens of little corrections" – gnat Feb 20 at 8:52
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There's nothing to "fix". The purpose of the "grace period" is to provide a window in which to make corrections without creating a new revision. The "fix" is to create a new revision on the first edit. That's not fixing anything, it's just throwing away the entire concept because of... What, exactly? Paranoia? Jealousy? – Shog9 Feb 20 at 8:57
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I think because of part is sufficiently specified in the question, isn't it: "I've often seen an earlier, minimalist answer be updated within the first 5 minutes, and incorporate something mentioned in a later answer (also in its first 5 minutes, obviously) or expanded upon immensely..." To me, this issue looks worth having "one new revision", particularly taking into account it doesn't ask for maintaining the history of "dozens of little corrections". Don't get me wrong, I generally wouldn't mind declining this request but on the grounds more solid than these stated here – gnat Feb 20 at 9:27
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I never said I wanted to see the dozens of corrections in the first five minutes. Please read closer. – Aaron Bertrand Feb 20 at 9:27
@gnat: "In short: I actually question the value of the grace period. Once you've hit the answer button, any further edits should be tracked separately from the initial submission." The value of the grace period is exactly this - not bothering to call out or track quick corrections to the initial submission. – Shog9 Feb 20 at 9:37
No, @Aaron, you apparently want folks to post perfection. Which is... unrealistic. – Shog9 Feb 20 at 9:38
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Again, no, that's not what I want. I'm not sure where the comprehension problem is but I'm not going to invest time trying to clear it up. – Aaron Bertrand Feb 20 at 9:46
Nice revision comment! :) – hims056 Feb 20 at 9:53
@AaronBertrand regarding comprehension problem, as far as I can tell in short... part of your post looks like somehow overriding what is stated in title and in the opening part. This makes concrete feature request vulnerable to mis-interpretations. I would consider re-wording "in short" into something like "as a general note," and wrapping this part in <sub></sub> to achieve clearer separation of request and accompanying considerations – gnat Feb 20 at 10:49
I do agree with you as I'm one that almost always uses the grace period, just too much imperfection in my though process and typing. – Lance Roberts Feb 20 at 15:23
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@LanceRoberts I tend to heavily use grace period too, but I am also ready to accept responsibility / consequences of publishing incomplete answer, are you? – gnat Mar 21 at 6:25

While tracking even the first edit is nice (doesn't hurt the initial purpose of the grace period), how would it impact the behavior of those who continually edit? If their answer is good, then why would any sane moderator delete/rollback the answer?

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Continuous edits would still benefit from the 5-minute grace period that starts once they perform their first edit. What I'm trying to discourage is people posting a simple answer like @Yannis did below, then come back after they've done research on it. I'm not sure whether the motivation is similar to the "first post!" mentality, or if they're after the enlightened badge, or just after rep based on time and hope people won't notice that they changed their answer based on other answers/research/etc. within the grace period. – Aaron Bertrand Jun 28 '12 at 15:12
@AaronBertrand For the record, the full version of my answer was very close to Mad Scientist's, since he got to the actual answer first, no point in having a dupe answer. – Yannis Jun 28 '12 at 15:16
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No one's asking for deletes/rollbacks. This is about accountability so people can't copy other's code and say "I didn't copy, I posted first, see!" Unlike most FGITW this does not discourage answering quickly, it just holds you accountable for posting "Wait lemme just reserve this timestamp" stuff – Ben Brocka Jun 28 '12 at 15:18
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Ditto what @Ben said - I'm not asking about rollbacks/deletes. I'm just asking for the initial answer to be a permanent record. – Aaron Bertrand Jun 28 '12 at 15:19
@BenBrocka Ah, understood. Thanks for explaining. – SomeKittens Jun 28 '12 at 15:42

So what? FGITW often amounts to 'put up a skeleton, then fill in.' How is keeping more history going to modulate this behavior? If the skeleton gets an upvote, it gets an upvote. Unless the full version is worse, there's nothing wrong with that. If the later submission is better, and gets upvotes, it gets upvotes.

If there is a FGITW problem, posting an unrecorded skeleton has nothing to do with it.

The whining complaint about FGITW amounts to the idea that voters and OPs see 'eh' fast posts, and then don't return to read superior content posted later after more effort or reflection. I don't believe it. But even if you do believe it, this won't help.

The other claim here is that this is an anti-plagiarism change, as it makes it harder for people to get away with copying. It is not. I don't care if some initial version is a copy if the eventual, long-lived, version is not.

If the eventual version copies other people, it will be there to see, without any additional edit history. If only the ephemeral initial version cribs, then so what? At worse, the person managed to grab an upvote or two from the FUITW (fastest upvoter in the west).

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This is only a problem for the first 0-10 minutes. Posts remain for years, at the end, the best answers will shine

Also, is not bad to have multiple similar answers, a lot of times I understand something that was already anwered but better reworded by other user.

Also, as sth said, it often happens in easy questions very regularly. And doesn't mean they stole the answers

I think is something that wouldn't hurt, but would't help too much either.

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The original purpose for the grace period was because a certain number of edits by the OP would cause the post to become Community Wiki (currently 10 as per the FAQ). Since a lot of us make mistakes and/or remember more information to put in, they put some slack in the system to help us out.

What I think would help that this question brings up, is for all of those edits to show in the history, even if they don't count for CW flipping. You could also disable rollback for those edits within the grace period.

I understand this will be a little complicated based on the probable database/engine design, but it would cover a lot of the concerns.

Another simpler alternative would be to just disable CW flipping for editing. Then you wouldn't need a grace period at all. CW has changed a lot, so it doesn't really seem necessary at this point.

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So far as I recall, the grace period predates the CW autoconversion; heck, the concept predates SO itself by quite a bit. Heck, there's a grace period for comments as well... – Shog9 Feb 20 at 9:11
My memory was that CW autoconversion was there almost from the start, if not the start, but my memory is quite imperfect. I remember when the grace period came along, but don't have a clear memory on when the CW autoconversion was happening. – Lance Roberts Feb 20 at 15:22

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