From "6 Simple Tips to Get Stackoverflow Reputation Fast" at codexon.com:

  1. Be the First to Answer. Even at the cost of quality.

  2. Use Downvotes and Comments Strategically

  3. Use obnoxious in-your-face formatting and lists.

  4. Be Aware of the 200 rep/day Limit

  5. Edit, But Don’t Edit Too Much

  6. Associate your other accounts

Courtesy of our pal codexon. Agree? Disagree? Walnuts? Cantaloupe?

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29  
How in the world do you downvote strategically...? – user1166877 Oct 18 '12 at 15:05
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By downvoting other answerers who are competing with your answer. If you do that when you would not have done (had you not answered the question), then that is strategic. – Phil H Oct 31 '12 at 11:35
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More importantly, down voting answers costs you rep. So using too frequently isn't going to help your score. – HaemEternal Jan 21 at 13:19
@michael bounties and accepted answers are immune, see stackoverflow.com/faq#reputation and read it closely – Jeff Atwood Feb 12 at 18:58
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106 favs for this question shows how many are desperate for reps on this forum :P – nawfal Feb 22 at 22:25
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Being Jeff Atwood or Jon Skeet probably helps too! – Richard Cook Mar 1 at 8:22
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+1 for showing what streategies should be recognized by other users reading your posts ;) – tohecz Mar 5 at 10:24
How can we vote up or down if we just signed up? Having 1 rep point is a rather limited palette on which to add more. – mijopabe Mar 20 at 17:57
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Why there is a day limit rep?? – Georges Picavez Mar 27 at 13:44

28 Answers

up vote 336 down vote accepted

I don't know about you but here's my strategy.

  1. Post quality answers. This should be numbered 1 2 and 3. But a good answer will more often than not trump a fast answer. Though there are cases where it does not.

  2. Monitor the frontpage and the new questions list. Learn their cache time and refresh accordingly.

  3. Setup a good but short list of Interesting and Ignored tags. For example I have , , , , , as interesting and as ignored tags. This will help you see questions quicker.

  4. Avoid Wall of Text questions. They take way too much effort for little reward. And usually are syntax errors or bad structure.

  5. Post an answer even though the question has 1–2 or even 3 answers. In these cases, take your time and answer well. This will usually net you a good sum of rep.

  6. Learn when to edit. Post a short answer at first and then edit. You have <5 minutes to make that answer shine.

  7. Be humble, thorough and fair. There are a lot of smart people out there and many will know much more than you about the subject. Be thorough in the code you post, check it for syntax errors and make sure it fits the question. And if the correct answer/the answer you would have posted is there, upvote it, that person deserves the rep for their answer.

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321  
I voted this up because it contains a list with bold items. – Jeff Atwood Aug 25 '09 at 11:02
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This list is on my blog for those interested. cznp.com/blog/14 – Ólafur Waage Aug 25 '09 at 15:23
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@Jeff Atwood aren't we all hypnotized by bold? – Maxim Zaslavsky Sep 8 '09 at 22:34
28  
I think the list should have one more item: 8. Provide a good and simple code example (and format it correctly) – awe Jul 22 '10 at 12:37
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If SO reputation were money, this post would be investment advice, and @Olafur a rich man. – abel Jan 15 '11 at 10:42
Now you can edit your questions and answers any time. – nyuszika7h Jan 22 '11 at 23:47
Yay gold badge. Why did this get a sudden rep boost all of a sudden? – Ólafur Waage Feb 6 '11 at 11:39
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@Ólafur you mean bold badge? – rightfold Mar 15 '11 at 6:24
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@Radek YARR – Ólafur Waage Mar 15 '11 at 12:46
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By the way, subjective is not a tag anymore. – Dan Abramov Jun 13 '11 at 10:28
totally agree with your advise – Alex Sancho Oct 20 '11 at 5:47
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The answer and Jeff Atwood's comment both have the same exact number of upvotes. Keep it that way! – pinouchon Mar 28 '12 at 11:40
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I would vote this up, but I don't have the reputation haha – John Bale Nov 6 '12 at 17:47
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9. Demo Link. Add link to a ready to run demo of your code. (codepad.org, jsfiddle.net, ...) – PiTheNumber Jan 16 at 10:04
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I would add #8 Go Niche. Find something you are good at that is not as popular as [java] or [sql]. Watch that tag every day and answer questions if you can. There are usually fewer people on the tag and you can take more time to answer. – Jess Apr 10 at 20:58
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To be perfectly honest, I absolutely agree with #3. A bit of formatting

  • Makes the post more readable
  • proves that the user put a bit of effort into it
  • prevents the "Wall of Text crits you" effect
  • stands out
  • allows me to spot important points more easily
  • puts some structure into the posting

And #6 is also a no-brainer. Not because of the reputation but because that gives clickable names when migrating the question.

Point #1 is well discussed, just search for the fastest gun in the west problem. And Point #5 benefits the person who asks the question, because more visibility = more chance for an answer without having to post a bounty.

So only Point #2 is purely evil and should be somehow monitored and actively counterattacked, but I think that's what Jeff & Co. have been doing since almost Day 1.

But overall, I agree with these points, because nicely formatted answers from people with accounts who bump the question once in a while to give it more exposure are a Win for the site.

To further prove my point, here is a picture of a bunny with a pancake on its head:

This is Chewbacca. Chewbacca is a Wookie who lives on Endor.

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I LOVE PANCAKES! AND BUNNIES!! – Shog9 Aug 25 '09 at 17:54
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Waffles rule, pancakes drool. – womp Aug 25 '09 at 18:02
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Waffles are pancakes WITH BUILT-IN SYRUP RESERVOIRS! – Shog9 Aug 25 '09 at 18:13
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I ♥ BUNNIES! – Brad Gilbert Aug 25 '09 at 18:36
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Pancakes are ok too, I guess. – Brad Gilbert Aug 25 '09 at 18:37
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-1: That's a pikelet, not a pancake. – John Fouhy Aug 25 '09 at 23:30
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to a point, but too many bullets is arguably worse than "wall o' text". Restraint in all things, including restraint. – Jeff Atwood Aug 26 '09 at 7:18
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Damn, that does make for an attractive post. I cannot resist upvoting it. – Bill the Lizard Aug 27 '09 at 17:03
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+1 for an bunny with a pancake on its head – ephilip Sep 2 '09 at 13:47
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poor dead oolong – Sam Saffron Sep 8 '09 at 23:22
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Well, now we know what #7 is... – Benjol Sep 30 '09 at 13:22
"To further prove my point, here is a picture of a bunny with a pancake on its head:" Absolutely hilarious! – user146674 Apr 9 '11 at 9:36
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That pancake is a dorayaki en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dorayaki – Yuji Tomita Nov 20 '11 at 3:18
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The bunny is too obvious. If it hadn't been for the bunny, I might have up-voted this... – awe Sep 5 '12 at 12:47
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Non-bunny related comment: You're spot on for the formatting, especially for long winded answers. People don't read them, but they see every formatting tool available used, and they automatically think you must be really knowledgeable about the subject because of how much effort you put into it. About 50% of the time, they're absolutely right. But of course there's that other 1/2... – Eva Mar 5 at 0:35
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Is it just me, or would following these tips make you feel dirty too? Is this where the word "rep whore" comes from? Especially #2 is highly unfair, gaming the system, and preventing its usefulness. #1 is true, it is the old "fastest gun in the west" problem. After the first upvote(s) I can still invest in a great answer (otherwise being pushed down and I loose my first place). #4-6 great.

Am I an idealist? I would like to help and be helped. And still I find myself going after those 12 points to get edit powers at the time of writing. But at what expense? Never gonna do #2!

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I'll upvote you since you are the top answer. :) – Vilx- Aug 25 '09 at 8:31
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And I wasn't even first to answer ;-) And you noticed: no formating, no stratigical downvoting (I assure), didn't edit the answer so far. But also did not hit the 200 rep/day limit :( – malach Aug 25 '09 at 8:40
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+1 By upvoting you I lost my place on the first page of the MSO user list. I need to go downvote some other answers :) – Diago Aug 25 '09 at 9:30
@Diago: That wasn't for long, though, you're back at my expense ;-). It felt good for a very short time to be back on first page, thanks. – malach Aug 25 '09 at 9:35
@Ralph No no - You're back. We can go on like this the whole day :) – Diago Aug 25 '09 at 9:43
@Diago: Thank for not using your diamond magic wand on me and just recalc my rep to get me out of the race or so ;-). But for the moment we both made it (sorry, Stu). – malach Aug 25 '09 at 10:53
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"highly unfair"? It's mildly manipulative at best. Face it, at best you're only going to affect the ranking significantly if you and someone else posted almost-identical answers and neither one of you edits. I have answers posted late, with few votes for the first day and several down-votes that are still collecting up-votes months later, long after other, formerly high-ranked answers stalled out. IMHO, if you're in it for the game, then accept that you'll be gamed; if you're in it for the answers, then a few bogus votes make no difference. – Shog9 Aug 25 '09 at 16:15
I look at it as highly unfair in the light that the person is willing to "harm"somebody else in something that is so important to himself. I personally could care less. – malach Aug 25 '09 at 21:08
I would upvote this if I had enough reputation. There must be a better way to promote correct answers, rather than encouraging a reputation game. Especially since stackoverflow answers are so high in the google results lists. – Frank Hileman Aug 3 '11 at 17:13

Well, I certainly credit all my success on Stack Overflow to

  1. judicious
  2. use
  3. of
  4. obnoxious
  5. lists...
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82  
I fixed your post for you – Jeff Atwood Aug 25 '09 at 8:10
ah much clearer now – hyperslug Aug 25 '09 at 8:22
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This highlights #3: Jeff, your formatting just earned Shog9 an upvote! – malach Aug 25 '09 at 8:36
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Also highlights #5! Though not really in the way it was intended... – Shog9 Aug 25 '09 at 15:17
Well said, I say! – jrummell Aug 27 '09 at 16:43
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-1, not enough bold. – badp's kitten Jul 21 '10 at 11:24

I'd add more one: answer the questions people can understand.

A question like "I'm having a problem with really really really tricky SQL query: I need to count records groupwise" will bring you 10 upvotes in a minute, if you were first to answer.

But one of the answers I'm most proud of took me something like 30 minutes and was accepted with a negative score (someone might have been using downvoting strategically, you know). There are just too much lines to be interesting.

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16  
My highest-scoring answer on SO was a one-liner straight from the docs.. – John Fouhy Aug 25 '09 at 8:26
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Very true. Some of the most basic C#/Java questions are among those where the most rep is dealt out. – Jonik Aug 25 '09 at 8:28
In specific problems are going to gainer less votes/views then a general question. Its just the nature of the beast. – James McMahon Aug 25 '09 at 15:06
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So true. My highest scoring answers are quick-fire copies from the docs. BTW as we're rep farming here, why not link to your poor, unloved, masterwork? I bet it'd get upvotes (I would) – MarkJ Sep 16 '09 at 22:10
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OK, my mate Google found it and I just have upvoted it. stackoverflow.com/questions/1165878/… – MarkJ Sep 16 '09 at 22:15
Agreed! The answer that got me the most rep was pointing out that someone used '=' instead of '=='... – Liz Sander Jul 20 '12 at 14:35

I am formatting my answer as a list, but I have a good reason (see number 3 below):

  1. Be the first to answer
    While the fastest gun problem is not new to us, the post was written for an audience not familiar with Stack Overflow, so the OP is right in bringing it up. Being the first to answer is likely to bring you more votes. However, I disagree with his statement that there are many bad/wrong answers on top of the list because of it, my own experience is that quality floats to the top.

  2. Use Downvotes and Comments Strategically
    I don't know, most of the time I can easily see the three top answers on my screen. If a user can read them without scrolling, he/she will be very likely to do so, therefore I don't think this has a big effect. Besides, the vote difference between the first three answers is often more than two votes, so this is likely not to work at all. The systematic downvoting of a specific user's answers, as shown in the screenshot, will definitely be caught by the system.

  3. Use obnoxious in-your-face formatting and lists
    There is a reason why answers with formatting are getting upvoted more often. It is the same reason why the option to use formatting exists: Formatted answers are good answers. The same answer in plain text is not as readable as if it was well formatted, hence the trend for answers with lists and other formatting to float to the top.
    As for answers that start with a bold Yes or No at the top: If the question asks Is X a good thing to do? first giving a clear answer and then elaborating on your reasons is a good practice. These answers are upvoted because they are good answers.

  4. Be Aware of the 200 reputation/day Limit
    The reputation limit was never a problem for me, because I never got near ;-)

  5. Edit, But Don’t Edit Too Much Editing in order to bump up the question on the home page is a strategy that is likely to work. Unfortunately.

  6. Associate your other accounts
    Hey, I did that! And you know what: I got 100 points out of it!!!!!
    Once. Not such a big deal, really.

At the end I am left wondering: Most of us got to a point when we didn't consider our reputation that important any more. For me that was after I passed the 3k threshold on Stack Overflow and was allowed to vote on closing questions. (Yes, most of the people who tell others not worry about their reputation so much, because hey, it ain't that important, you know, have a reputation where it really isn't that important any more.)
Somehow, the OP doesn't seem to fall into that category.

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15  
This answer sucks, it has no picture in it. – John Nolan Aug 25 '09 at 9:40
I was with you till point 5. Refining and bumping is not only a strategy, it is highly encouraged! For point 6 you get my favourite punctuation mark link: sockenseite.de/__oneclick_uploads/2006/10/ausruf.html – Ladybug Killer Aug 25 '09 at 9:49
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+1 specifically for the point you make in the end: "Most of us got to a point when we didn't consider our rep that important any more." After I was able to retag questions & edit CW posts on SO I was happy with the privileges, and have had no compulsive need to try to accumulate more rep. (Although getting past 2k did make the copy editor in me even happier, and of course upping the rep score always gives you some warm buzz... :-) – Jonik Aug 25 '09 at 10:02
@John Smithers: Quoting from the linked page: Die Wichtigkeit eines Newspostings im Usenet ist reziprok zur Anzahl der enthaltenenen, kumulierten Ausrufungszeichen. Which is exactly the point I was trying to make ;-) – Treb Aug 25 '09 at 11:49
@Treb: It still hurt my eyes. And it drags down the whole post. – Ladybug Killer Aug 25 '09 at 11:56

#2 on this list "Use Downvotes and Comments Strategically" makes me rage.

I prefer Jon Skeet's advice on Answering technical questions helpfully.

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1  
Seeing as he has 229k reputation as of this writing, I would take his advice :-) – André Caron Oct 20 '10 at 5:47
+1 Agree - not only is Jon Skeet a SO living legend, he's polite & funny. – Jeremy Thompson Nov 2 '11 at 2:44

Ways to amass rep that positively impact the site.

There are plenty of vampiric strategies that one can employ. Those that overall don't make the site a better place to be. That don't make it a more effective place to get questions answered. I'll be talking about the ways that make the site work better.

I find that there are two general strategies to getting rep quickly:

Frequently visit "high-churn" tags

These are tags that get a lot of questions. Which means they quickly get a lot of answers. But the former means that, if you visit the site 20 times a day, odds are you will find a few questions that you can answer which have not yet been answered.

Naturally, this requires some significant expertise in high-churn fields, so that you can not simply quickly answer questions, but do so effectively. You can expect to get 2-4 upvotes on these questions, so you don't need more than 4-6 of them daily before you hit the cap. And it doesn't even matter if a couple of others slip in; as long as you're within the first 4 minutes of the question hitting the site, you stand a good chance of getting some upvotes.

Well, assuming your answer is correct.

Have significant expertise in a "low-churn" tag

Maybe this tag only gets 10 questions a day. Maybe only 4 regular contributors even check the tag, let alone know how to answer them.

Being able to serve the under-served parts of SO means that you don't have to visit very often, but it also means you get a lot more accepts, rather than just upvotes. So if you combine these two strategies, the 200 rep barrier becomes less important, since accepted answer rep doesn't count against it.

Indeed, if you happen to have a lot of various obscure knowledge, serving the under-served parts of SO can get you all the rep you need. Plus, you get to help people who might otherwise have not gotten help.

The downside here is that the low-churn tags are also more likely (by volume) to be from new posters who don't know what the accept button is, or don't even have the rep to upvote. However, those few regular contributors to those tags will likely hit you with an upvote when they see your answer.


Other Tactics

There are also other tactics that you can employ in your answer. One that I do as a matter of course that just so happens to fit in is to add useful advice while answering. You should know the general idioms around a particular knowledge base and preach them where possible.

For example, if you're answering a C++ question where someone is gratuitously using new, add a suggestion to your answer that they use a stack variable. If they're talking about writing destructors, bring up the Rule of Three and smart pointers. Experienced C++ programmers will almost always upvote you for that, and you'll be helping someone find programming techniques that they may not have found otherwise.

Overkill is another tactic. If you can't be first, then by God be biggest. Go into massive detail. Lecture the person asking the question.

You can't overkill on most questions. But you don't have to. If you're in a high-churn tag, a good bit of overkill can earn you 100 rep easily. Overkill doesn't work so well in low-churn tags, since overkill relies on many people seeing the sheer massiveness of your answer.

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4  
Overkill as in "I answered this question 2 years late, so I'll write a lot about it." :) Good answer. – CoffeeRain Feb 6 '12 at 21:13

I know first hand that #3 is a sure easy way to get more attention to your answer (and in turn more upvotes).

I always do my best to distinguish my answer from all the others by using plenty of links, quotes, formatting. Most of the time, this will shoot my question to the top of the list and ensure upvotes a plenty.

Oh, and especially pictures:

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5  
yes but that is not a bad thing, good formatting is a net positive – Jeff Atwood Aug 25 '09 at 8:15
What you say is indeed mostly true. But the last example could be better — you say especially pictures, yet link to an answer with 0 votes ;) – Jonik Aug 25 '09 at 8:22
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Jeff: Yes, it is a good thing :). Jonik: Yeah, it was a horrible example (It actually used to be -1), but it was taking me too long to find a better answer. – David Pearce Aug 25 '09 at 8:42
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Lousy pictures! Missing freehand circles! – Ladybug Killer Aug 25 '09 at 8:46
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+1 ooh shiny – Greg Hewgill Aug 25 '09 at 9:04
Love the fact my answer with equal formatting didn't get any upvotes :P superuser.com/questions/9120/… – Ivo Flipse Aug 25 '09 at 10:48
Ivo: In this case, i think you could have done without a giant XBox on the page. That only deters voters :P – David Pearce Aug 25 '09 at 11:45
And the nominations for "Most effective use of an unrelated image" are... – Justin Jan 18 '11 at 13:36
Links are an important part of formatting. My highest voted answer should be a one-liner, but I added 5 superfluous links and an unnecessary code example. I put the least relevant information first and the most relevant information last. I feel kinda dirty now... – Eva Mar 5 at 0:53
I think people really like when you put a different link on every word of a phrase. I get hetcha upvotes when I do that. – Eva Mar 5 at 0:54

Answer quickly but incorrectly unfortunately works. Sometimes such answers are even hastily marked as best answer.

I suggest sorting answers starting from most recently added, or sort few most recently added above others (this way each answer will be top for at least a moment).

Don't let few up/down votes affect order, at least when question is still new.

SELECT … FROM answers … ORDER BY 
  (CASE WHEN abs(number_of_votes) > threshold THEN number_of_votes ELSE 0 END),
  (date_added > NOW() - interval '10 minutes') DESC,
  …
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` SELECT * FROM ( SELECT * FROM answers WHERE number_of_votes > THRESHOLD ORDER BY number_of_votes ) q UNION ALL SELECT * FROM answers WHERE number_of_votes <= THRESHOLD AND date_added > NOW - '10 minutes'::INTERVAL UNION ALL SELECT * FROM answers WHERE number_of_votes <= THRESHOLD AND date_added <= NOW() - '10 minutes'::INTERVAL ` This is more index friendly. Sorry, just couldn't help it :) – Quassnoi Aug 25 '09 at 12:41
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I like code examples. You get +1 just for that... – awe Jul 22 '10 at 12:45

For an eye-opening read, check out the comments on reddit. Amusingly enough, someone chose the title of this post as Why StackOverflow sucks. My favourite from one relix:

I've answered exactly 1 question. It was the only correct answer to that question but it didn't get any votes and didn't get selected as the answer. Instead, the wrong answer was selected and got all the brownie points.

That was the moment I decided never to waste time on StackOverflow again. Why even bother.

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1  
Before I saw that, I thought nothing can beat youtube comments. – Quassnoi Aug 25 '09 at 14:48
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There are some people that seem to have some pre-existing prejudice to SO that I don't fully understand. – James McMahon Aug 25 '09 at 15:15
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There are some people that have pre-existing prejudice to everything you can name. – Quassnoi Aug 25 '09 at 16:07
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"I decided never to waste time on StackOverflow again" -> David Verhasselt "Seen 45 mins ago". Tsk. – hyperslug Aug 26 '09 at 20:48

Should we really care about points all the time. I am here for:

  1. Learning: It can be anything like learning new tips,logic etc.
  2. For getting my answers
  3. and obviously if you want your answer then do some favor for others. Check their questions and try to give them proper solution for their problem.

    Honestly saying i don't give a damm to my reputation. This is not a college class where you have to score good marks for good grades or something like that.

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Let me tackle these one at a time.

Be the First to Answer. Even at the cost of quality.

Absolutely true. Like others have said, this is actually a good thing because getting a quick answer to a problem is typically what you want. The only problem is (as noted by codexon) wrong quick answers can get voted up. Or someone posts something that's irrelevant but correct and gets voted up because people don't seem to understand or don't read the OP's requirements.

Use Downvotes and Comments Strategically

Tactical downvoting I don't really like. I really think downvoting shouldn't be anonymous for this and other reasons. Or as a compromise, downvotes on questions you also answer shouldn't be anonymous. This also includes putting on a downvote and later taking it off. As others have noted, if you want to rescind a downvote, you can edit the answer (with 3k+ reputation) and you're then allowed to rescind it after the normal time limit.

Use obnoxious in-your-face formatting and lists.

I don't see how "obnoxious" formatting helps. But there's definitely an advantage to using something other than a "blob" of text. You can break that up with headings, lists and/or images. It also helps to put a useful title in a link instead of just a raw URL.

Be Aware of the 200 reputation/day Limit

As I think Jon Skeet wrote, you need to get to the 200 reputation cap limit as soon as possible during the day to increase the window for over-200 reputation gains from accepted answers and bounties. I've made numerous posts against the reputation system working like this. I actually think this disadvantages more casual users. After all Jon Skeet won't spend much time during the day in the soft cap region. I read once he said that sometimes when he gets up in the morning he's already at +200 for the day (which is 6-8 hours in for him in the UK).

Edit, But Don’t Edit Too Much

True again. You don't want to make your posts CW and I have again posted numerous times how I think this owner edit forcing CW is actually a bad thing. It discourages people from maintaining their posts. I've proposed several solutions including edits after 6 not bumping the post but they've all been rejected. I think we should be doing everything we can to encourage people to maintain content they've written and updating it as the facts change.

Associate your other accounts

This is an easy one.

The only thing I'd add is that you want to judiciously bounty hunt and look for new bounties with low upvote answers. You also want to look for bounties that end late in the "reputation day" as around half the time the OP just lets the bounty lapse without selecting an answer and you know when that will be. No point wasting your time with bounties that end at 1 am UTC.

I'm not sure many bounty posters realize that the top answer only gets half the bounty by auto-acceptance. IMHO we need to encourage active selection of an answer by giving the OP a nominal reputation amount (say 10 points) for selecting an answer rather than auto-selecting.

Basically what's been said is correct. A few of the things I consider negative and should be addressed as described above.

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1  
"As I think Jon Skeet wrote..." Should the reputation system be designed based on the guy with the highest score? How many people hit the rep cap anyway? I hit it the other day -- for the first time in my life, and I'm just outside the top 10%.. – John Fouhy Aug 25 '09 at 22:30
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By definition those at the top have the most experience, which is noteworthy. But I wasn't putting Jon up as an expert in this context, merely attributing the source. – cletus Aug 26 '09 at 6:40

Regarding #2, what if you hide votes for the 10 minutes or so?

By "hide", I mean: people can vote, but answers will appear to have 0 score (and time-based sort order) until the 10 minutes are up.

You could even hide timestamps and randomize display order for the initial window, though I'm not sure that would be worth it.

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You would have to randomize the display order. If you simply had it by time, then people would still do tactic 1. – Unknown Aug 25 '09 at 8:34

I've seen a corollary to #5: If you're the top answerer, periodically edit the question to bring more attention and votes to your post. That way, your own answer never becomes wiki.

For the most part it seems accurate. I'm not sure you could call it gaming since this is already known tacitly condoned.

Reputation is a system that happens to motivate many people well, and it has produced great results. Coming up with strategies to maximize it while not really contributing is unfortunate, but bearable considering the advantages.

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I guess it largely depends on whether each edit is actually warranted and useful; periodically making trivial, non-consequential edits could more readily be considered gaming. (But if someone does a series of thoroughly useful edits, it might be partly gaming, or he might have the purest of intentions - others cannot really know.) – Jonik Aug 25 '09 at 9:48
Linking to the question from other, related questions can accomplish the same thing. Provided they're worthwhile references / edits, i don't see a problem with either. – Shog9 Aug 25 '09 at 15:19

Jokes aside there is a certain flaw in the way that reputation is earned.

There are additional factors to how much reputation you'll receive by asking a question or answering one that have nothing to do with the "correctness" of the question/answer.

It helps if you answer quickly, I found that if I answer an open question a day or more after it was posted the chances of getting up voted or chosen are close to nil. People almost never up vote a question, I think it got something to do with the fact that it's hard to decide if the question is a "good" question.

And of course users that instead of learning or answering questions try to grab as much reputation as possible, I've noticed people using the same dirty tricks explained in the post (like coping an already posted answer and bumping the other question down).

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I have also written an article on stackoverflow tips and tricks that can be view here:

http://sarfraznawaz.wordpress.com/2010/02/14/stackoverflow-tips-tricks-5/

The main points include:

1. Get 100 Reputation Points Free

2. Add “Interesting” & “Ignored” Tags

3. Install Greasemonkey Script

4. Be the First to Answer a Question

5. Markdown

6. Don’t Over-Style Your Answers

7. Add Pictures

8. Use Google Effectively

9. Use JS Bin

10. Edit Your Answers Cleverly

11. Keep Your References Open

12. Involve Yourself to Earn Badges

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I think a great way to restrain this behaviour is forcing to leave a comment on downvote. I think that the downvote comment must be anonymous, for not letting people downvote only for revenge.

In this way if the reason of the downvote is not good enough, a moderator (or everyone using the voting system) can eliminate the downvote (and take measure against the user with this bad behaviour if it persist in time).

share|improve this answer
? ​ – Brad Gilbert Aug 25 '09 at 17:51
@Brad: What did you not understand? – kentaromiura Aug 25 '09 at 18:04
The question doesn't ask how to fix the situation. – Brad Gilbert Aug 25 '09 at 18:07
Sorry, but with " Walnuts? Cantaloupe? " you weren't too clear of what you're really asking, basically you're asking for opinions, and that's my opinion. – kentaromiura Aug 25 '09 at 18:11
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I love this foolish behaviour, this is a open question (on a meta site) that is barely a question, the OP intention is not clear, but basically it ask for opinion, I gave one, costructive, and I get a downvote... It's just Amazing! XD – kentaromiura Aug 25 '09 at 18:39

1. Be the First to Answer. Even at the cost of quality.

Instead, randomize the order of the answers while the question is new. In addition, hide the up-vote/down-vote count as to not influence the other readers (i.e. lemming effect). Eventually transition the question back to normal view. The rate of activity on the question should determine the length before standard view is enabled.

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1  
This just optimizes SO for those who want to play games, at the expense of those who actually wish to use it for Q&A. – Shog9 Aug 25 '09 at 21:20
@Shog9 I disagree: this would reduce the short term benefit of the first answer with some up votes compared to later answers that may have been more thought out and/or referenced. – Mark Hurd May 31 '10 at 2:09

I know people disagree with #2. I disagree with #1 but I know it sometimes holds true. The others seem somewhat accurate.

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12  
#2 is the only one I disagree with to the point of considering some algorithmical way of blocking it – Jeff Atwood Aug 25 '09 at 8:14
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#2 just seems like temporary result-manipulating similar to this: meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/15746/…. In time the best answers will bubble up. – hyperslug Aug 25 '09 at 8:46

#1 is very true, but could maybe be alleviated by just receiving answers for a reasonably short amount of time (say 5 min) after the question was posted -- without displaying them. Then, these first answers could be shown in random order. This might take a little pressure away and encourage people to put some more efforts in their first try.

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I feel that the asker getting a fast response is much more useful and valuable than tweaking the system to discourage gaming reputation. – user133653 Aug 25 '09 at 9:29
See meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/73/… for a slightly different take on that idea. – Greg Hewgill Aug 25 '09 at 9:42

Also, work in popular subject areas. Most people wouldn't recognize Jon Skeet's name if he had the ability to write swift and excellent answers in Lisp, Haskell, and Delphi, but not anything else.

Pick your questions. Only answer questions that are easy to read. If people are turned off from reading the question, they're unlikely to upvote your answer.

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2. Use Downvotes and Comments Strategically

See my response to #1. I think that will help curb this. Another solution is to increase downvote cost if you have already answered the question. If the user downvotes before answering, then either revert the user's downvotes for the question, apply the new "cost" of the downvotes to the user after answering the question. This could be a confirmation the user has to agree to after clicking "submit". For example: "Answering this question will remove X reputation due to downvotes assigned to competing answers. Continue?"

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3  
Disagree. I sometimes downvote other answers on questions I have answered because the other answers are seriously wrong. I remember one question for alternative ways to determine whether .NET objects were equal, and there was an upvoted answer advising using GetHashCode [which is utterly wrong according to the docs]. It would have hurt a little to lose extra rep for downvoting that. – MarkJ Sep 16 '09 at 22:23

The choice of question is probably the most important point missing from the list - once you have embellished your post with enough obnoxious formatting, it's all about the number of people who see your question - the more people who see your answer, the more potential votes.

This means that the more popular the question the more upvotes, in particular:

  • Really easy questions tend to do well - lots of people think that they could have a go at answering it, so it gets lots of views.
  • QUESTIONS WITH THE TITLE IN ALL-CAPS also do quite well as some people quite enjoy moaning about / closing rubbish questions.
  • Questions posted by anyone demi-famous (like Jeff or Jon Skeet) always attract massive views.
  • Subjective questions are also great, but you need to get in there early before they become community wiki.

Of course popular questions also means more competition, and so its more important than ever to make sure that you get in early - even so, more popular questions always offer a better vote-to-effort ratio in the long run.

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What's the use of these reputations anyway? I became a member of SoF to find quality answers for my questions and if somebody has a question that I might know the answer, help him to find the answer. I know that it is enjoyable to gain respect among the fellow programmers, but I think that is not the goal. It's not a race for gaining more reputations but it's a game of helping each other to improve our knowledge. We are not players against each other but we are members of a team playing to gain the knowledge and skills that we need to be even better programmers.

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To me it is primarily a game, the Q&A is just a nice bonus. I dislike reading about the crap I do in my day job, but I love games. – dbaseman May 25 '12 at 7:22

Some examples that seem to work for me.




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Warning: The following contains absurd levels of snark that might be dangerous to the eyes, hands, or soul of a moderately to severely sane reader. I promise there's a point to this at the end. Maybe.

If someone has beat you to the #1 with a one-liner, follow up with some extreme #3 by repeating their answer:

Jeff's answer is absolutely correct: Walnuts do taste great with cantaloupe.

Here's a code example that explains it a bit more:

public class Walnuts extends Cantaloupe implements DeliciousCombination { }

When writing walnut-related code, follow these steps:

  1. Determine if you need cantaloupes
  2. Determine if you have cantaloupes
  3. Eat the walnuts no matter what

Things to beware about cantaloupes:

  • They are less delicious without walnuts
  • They are much heavier than walnuts
  • Less people are allergic to cantaloupes than to walnuts

walnuts.org, the official specification for walnuts, has this mostly unrelated thing to say about them:

California grows more than 99% of the country’s supply
and two-thirds of the world’s walnut trade.

Additional resources about walnuts and cantaloupe recipes:

Wikipedia's page on walnuts, Wikipedia's page on cantaloupe, Wikipedia's page when I clicked random article

[Note/Edit/Update/Addendum/tl;dr/Other Indication of Superfluous Footnote] You should probably get rid of the magic number on line 1000000.

You will get upvoted more than the person who answered first, and you don't even need to know the answer beforehand. As long as you have some experience in the general field and you understand what the answer is saying, you can add completely unnecessary bits and reap the benefits of another person's hard work!

But in all seriousness, I don't think this trick is always bad. You still have to put effort into your code example, lists, quotes, and finding related(ish) links. People upvote because it looks like you put more work into your answer (you might've) and because it's possible your answer is clearer to understand. Though Rule #1 says your answer will probably not get accepted.

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1  
May I suggest reducing some of the snark in this answer? Your last paragraph makes this a decent answer, in my opinion, but someone may not get that far before dismissing it. – Andrew Barber Mar 5 at 2:05
1  
@AndrewBarber You're right. I have this awful habit of burying the lead. Somehow every time I come up with something that I think flows, the most important point is in the last letter of the last word of the last sentence of the overly-long gag. I will try to think of a way to get to the point faster. – Eva Mar 5 at 2:18
I need to get a handle on my snark problem. Snarkers Anonymous? – Eva Mar 5 at 23:35

I'm thinking about writing a book focusing mostly on the strategy of getting rep on Stack Overflow. Here is a sneak preview. I want to see how much demand is out there for this. I think SAMs might be convinced to publish it. The real version will have to be like 200 pages, so I'll have to write a lot more.

Evan Carroll's Unofficial Guide to Stack Overflow


Chapter 1: Introduction

Stack Overflow is a more open Web 2.0 version of Experts Exchange. It is a replacement created by .NET programmers for the specific purpose of catering to the programming community. It has many features that Perlmonks, phpBB, and Yahoo! Answers are currently lacking including, tagging, (some) self-moderation, and a very bold outward REPUTATION system (phpBB has this). The largest feature is certainly tagging which makes it easy to follow the questions that interest you (even using RSS), and block the ones that don't. There is also an aggressive group of moderators that will filter out questions by blocking, closing, or deleting them. The StackOverflow is funded largely by Windows Shared Hosts in the form of advertising.

In the future, Stack Overflow will certainly be a big attraction to an employer. And, the developers creating the site have stated a desire to take it this direction. This is evidenced by their LinkedIn clone: http://careers.stackoverflow.com, which already returns a modest revenue stream. Soon, having REPUTATION could make the difference between getting a job, and not.

Chapter 2: Strategies

Using Stack Overflow without a solid strategy to get REPUTATION quickly is a major waste of time. At least, in so much as securing future employment. Everyone, should have fun with the service, but at the same time you need to be comparatively higher leveled than them to stand out.

Section "a": "Take the lead"

This strategy is a good one. Let's say someone asks a question, "How do I join two tables". Even if someone has already answered, so long as you can make your answer appear marginally different, and so long as they have fewer than 1 vote, you can answer along the same lines and downvote them! Because, Stack Overflow keeps the votes anonymous you can rest assured very few people will know you did. And, the gain? Your answer sits above theirs now. This is always a good tactic even with a minor point hit (-1 for downvoting) you gain a position worth at least 5 times that. People read the page from the top to the bottom. If your answer sits above, they'll assume it is better or that you answered first,

When it comes to explaining this strategy I like to make an analogy to moving a knight to the center of the board at the expense of losing a pawn. Often, it simply works out well for you.

Remember Stack Overflow has a snowballing effect on the answers towards the top of the page. The longer you go without taking the lead the less likely it is that you will outperform the other answers, or be chosen for best answer.

This strategy was approved of by devinb,

Actually the comment "-1 to every answer except this" IS an explanation. He is CLEARLY stating that this answer is correct and all the other answers are wrong (in his opinion). Which he is perfectly allowed to do on this site. – devinb May 16 '10 at 16:16

Section "b": "The art of knowing when to stop upvoting"

Keep in mind when you upvote that you don't get anything in return (except a few minor badges in the beginning). It is kind of like giving money to an enemy, in a system where money is free. Sure, the vote doesn't cost you anything... But, what do you really gain other than gloryifing your competition?

Section "c": "Upvoting the question"

This is a must!! Always, upvote the question. This ensures it will look like a more interesting question from the index page, and more people will look at it. Think of it like your own way to advertise that this question has your great answer. The more people that look at the question, the more people that might upvote your answer.

share|improve this answer
2  
Oh boy "How to become a 10k rep user in 14 days" should so be your title. – Earlz May 26 '10 at 18:00
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Oh wait sorry. It should be "How to become a 10k EXP elitist in 14 days on an Experts-Exchange clone". That sounds about right for your book. – Earlz May 26 '10 at 18:05
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@Earlz, I like the first one, but in fairness I thought of it first. – Evan Carroll May 26 '10 at 18:26
So you didn't think it earned enough downvotes the first time? – Lance Roberts May 31 '10 at 1:32
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I like this -- how to be an idiot on SO. It shows how not to be an SO member. – RCIX Jul 4 '10 at 7:24
I like the section "c" and, judging from the low upvotes I'm currently seeing on the tags I usually read, section "b" is pretty popular too. Section "a" is pretty lame and I think is a pattern that can be discovered in some way. – systempuntoout Jan 18 '11 at 13:51
Guys chill, this is his "unofficial guide". Lets wait for official guide, could be more fun – nawfal Feb 22 at 22:24

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