I'm on SO pretty much every day researching something to do with programming, and over the last month or two, I find I'm growing frustrated and a little disgusted at how many interesting questions have been closed as "not a good fit" or "too subjective".

I think there is a confusion between "subjective" and "calls for judgement". To me one of the most valuable things about SO is the tremendous breadth and depth of experience of the members, and experience translates into smart decisions and advice, and that advice cannot always be asked for, or expressed in terms of, bald facts and data. It's going to be 'subjective'.

I don't think SO should be Wikipedia. I think that if I could ask a question to a group of skilled programmers sitting around a table at lunch, and get interesting, valuable answers, then I don't care whether the question or the answers are 'subjective', I think that question should equally well be fair game for Stack Overflow.

I would like to see a mechanism whereby people who vote to close a question lose reputation when somebody expresses interest in that question or its responses.

How can I, or can I, influence this aspect of SO?

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Post on meta. Then you will a.) Get reasons why this is a bad idea or b.) It will be implemented into the site. – Doorknob Feb 14 at 2:46
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I'm dropping the [feature-request] tag because even though you have a sentence that asks for a rep drop under certain circumstances, I feel like the rest of your question makes for a good, constructive discussion and I'd rather focus on that first. If the outcome of this discussion is some sort of technical solution, it's likely best posted separately and with more details. – Anna Lear Feb 14 at 2:46
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Your question would be aided by some examples: what do you consider a "subjective" question, vs. one that "calls for judgement"? – Michael Petrotta Feb 14 at 2:55
People can reasonably disagree--that's what makes some things subjective, even if those subjective opinions are well-informed, lucid, and relevant. IMO SO's purpose isn't to, say, discuss relative merits of two frameworks. I'm opposed to the proposed mechanism because interest in a question is subjective, and nobody should be punished because someone disagrees with their opinion on a question. – Dave Newton Feb 14 at 3:03
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I don't get this. If you use SO for research then you'll have, ballpark numbers, 3 million questions to look at are on topic and not closed and at least 2 million good answers. If you keep running into closed ones then you are just using the wrong site to do your research. Fix that by finding another site, not trying to change this one. – Uphill Luge Feb 14 at 3:41
Concerning "I would like to see a mechanism whereby people who vote to close a question lose reputation when somebody expresses interest in that question or its responses." see meta.stackoverflow.com/q/167404 from just today (or yesterday depending on your timezone) and meta.stackoverflow.com/q/9817 from long ago. – dmckee Feb 14 at 4:20
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Also related would be the blog post Good Subjective, Bad Subjective. – dmckee Feb 14 at 4:22
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To those of you who patiently explained and linked, thank you. Anna especially, thanks. – Spike0xff Feb 15 at 18:13

3 Answers

I think that if I could ask a question to a group of skilled programmers sitting around a table at lunch, and get interesting, valuable answers, then I don't care whether the question or the answers are 'subjective', I think that question should equally well be fair game for Stack Overflow...

Assuming it's like group sitting around "table at lunch" is exactly where you are mistaken.

To find out why, consider studying Shirky's article A Group Is Its Own Worst Enemy. The article is fantastic, it could profoundly teach the reader about the difference between a lunch group and large community, but for the sake of brevity I'll just quote the key point relevant to mistake in your assumption:

human interaction... doesn't blow up like a balloon


Simply put, when there's a handful of colleagues in a group, a subjective conversation can go like this: first person asks a question, second answers it, third one answers from a different perspective, fourth sparks a joke, fifth adds a side note... and that's all. In a setting like this, you get a reasonably limited amount of information, an amount your brain can handle... you've got something you can learn from.

At Stack Overflow, you better think of something like 1000 guys sitting around the... world.

In such an environment, your subjective conversation will probably go like this: first person asks a (subjective) question, second answers it (so far so good huh?), twenty more add answers from different perspectives, fifty more attempt all imaginable kinds of jokes, hundred more add all imaginable kinds of side notes... and so on and so on, over and over again, until your brain explodes.

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Wow, that "A Group is Its Own Worst Enemy" article is excellent, I can't thank you enough. One note - some supposedly 'subjective' conversations (on SO) go that way, but some don't, it's not a law. I understand though; To avoid drowning in bathwater, we have to throw out a few babies. – Spike0xff Feb 15 at 18:49
@Spike0xff these thanks would better go to MichaelT: his rather heavy promotion of this article at Whiteboard made me curious enough to invest efforts into studying it. I think you got it right with the reasoning about avoiding "drowning in bathwater" – gnat Feb 15 at 19:10

I think that if I could ask a question to a group of skilled programmers sitting around a table at lunch, and get interesting, valuable answers, then I don't care whether the question or the answers are 'subjective',

That's fine. We care.

We care because subjective discussions will destroy this site. We care because subjective discussion is exactly why many of us are on this site instead of on many of the thousands of programming forums on the Internet.

Stack Overflow is not intended to be everything for everyone. You come here to ask objective, practical questions that have real, objective answers. If you want to have a subjective discussion about some programming issue, that's wonderful.

Don't do it here just because there happen to be a lot of smart people here. You'd be subverting the very reason why those smart people are here.

What you're asking is no different from wanting to read a book at a movie theater; what you want is at odds with why the place exists.

I would like to see a mechanism whereby people who vote to close a question lose reputation when somebody expresses interest in that question or its responses.

This is one of the most ridiculous suggestions I've ever seen someone seriously suggest for this site. The potential for abuse of this is so massive that nobody would ever close anything again.

How can I, or can I, influence this aspect of SO?

This is one of the founding aspects of SO. You can no more influence this than a fish can change the flow of the river. The anti-subjective bias is not merely part of the community, it is at the very core of why Stack Overflow was invented.

Again, it's like being annoyed that movie patrons ask you to turn off your reading light at the theater. You're not going to get them to change their views either.

SO is lenient in some respects to different opinions. This is not one of those cases.

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"This is one of the most ridiculous suggestions I've ever seen someone seriously suggest for this site."OK, I get it, I misunderstood SO. – Spike0xff Feb 15 at 17:45
Ironically, I picked this as the best answer, although @gnat - thanks, very informative. The hostility underlying this answer puzzles me though, and it exemplifies why, for me, SO increasingly feels like a bad neighborhood. I go there when I need something, but I'm not going to hang around any longer than I have to. Yes, I know, that just proves I'm not the right kind of people. – Spike0xff Feb 15 at 18:25

I don't think SO should be Wikipedia. I think that if I could ask a question to a group of skilled programmers sitting around a table at lunch, and get interesting, valuable answers, then I don't care whether the question or the answers are 'subjective', I think that question should equally well be fair game for Stack Overflow.

Some questions aren't really answerable questions, they are discussions.

Stack Exchange is a Q/A network, not a discussion board.


Interestingly, a Wikipedia type site seems to me the exact format you are wanting - because you can have more discussion of pros/cons to different things which is more applicable to an article than an "answer."

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