332
votes

Have a look at this Meta post for the current status of your swag!


It's easy to look at numbers; numbers tell us that many developers have been helped by what we built. That alone is very warming and makes us feel exceptionally great about what we're doing, wouldn't it be nice to take a little time on a Friday to share some stories that the numbers can't convey?

As I mentioned here, we're going to be running some special events here on Meta to celebrate hitting 10 million questions and reflect a bit on everything we've done together; this is the first of those events.

Your mission, if you choose to accept it, is to regale us with a tale of a Stack Overflow user going way above and beyond the call of duty in order to actually teach something to someone that wanted to learn, and anyone else that desired the knowledge going forward.

This could be written from several perspectives:

  • You just happened to be around when the answer was posted, and saw them continuously expand their answer to teach the subject more effectively.

  • You wrote one of these kinds of answers - don't be shy to share your own awesomeness. Talk about the experience a little, how did you feel when the person eventually 'got it'?

  • You asked a question and someone provided an answer that gave you more than some stuff you could try in your editor, they gave you the knowledge you needed to figure it out properly for yourself.

Examples of this don't need to be nearly as epic as explaining branch prediction like a boss - it could be as simple as an answer where someone finally grasped how memory is addressed, or why a regular expression did what it was doing, or the like. Let's pick some of our 10 million moments that we're the fondest of, and allow others to share in them.

Can you get to the part about the swag, now?

Why yes. The good news is, this isn't a contest, everyone that shares something here will receive:

  • 1 Stack Overflow T shirt (Men's or Women's)
  • 1 Stack Overflow mug
  • 1 Stack Overflow padfolio and aluminum pen with the logo, and some extra pens
  • 1 Stack Overflow 'Koozie' (it keeps canned beverages frosty)
  • 5 Stack Overflow stickers

In addition to this, we will contact the author of the answer that you mention and offer them the following:

  • 1 Stack Overflow T-shirt (Men's or Women's)
  • 1 Stack Overflow Ruled Notebook (acid free, high-quality paper, I'm not mentioning any brands because we have several and it depends on availability)
  • An autographed copy of "Smart & Gets Things Done" by Joel Spolsky.

Rules:

  • Answers must be at least two paragraphs and link to the answer on the main site you're talking about. You need to tell the story, with as much detail as you can. Put emphasis on what was learned, why it can be hard to teach, how someone could possibly have so much patience, etc.

  • If you're the author of the answer, you get both prizes.

  • Submission deadline is September 4, 2015

  • Allow 6 - 8 weeks for delivery after the submission deadline

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  • 36
    Actually, I need a coaster to go with my SO mug. Do you guys happen to have any of those?
    – BoltClock
    Aug 21, 2015 at 14:45
  • 31
    If "teach" becomes a trigger word on Stack Overflow, we're screwed.
    – user50049
    Aug 21, 2015 at 14:57
  • 14
    Has Mystical gotten swag for the branch prediction answer yet?
    – durron597
    Aug 21, 2015 at 18:06
  • 40
    billions of developers Wait, really? That means at least 13% of all the people in the world are developers who have been helped by Stack Overflow. That doesn't seem correct Aug 24, 2015 at 1:51
  • 13
    What do downvotes in this thread actually mean? Lousy answer or lousy story about the answer?
    – PM 77-1
    Aug 27, 2015 at 17:57
  • 35
    Sept 5: wheres my email to fill out the form and get my SWAG? Sep 5, 2015 at 18:21
  • 27
    Am I the only one who came here several times after 4th of Sept ?
    – akash
    Sep 7, 2015 at 12:19
  • 20
    are we supposed to recieve a email? :,(
    – CptEric
    Sep 8, 2015 at 17:49
  • 23
    I'll be contacting the initial round (folks that wrote something here) tomorrow, and then those that you've nominated through writing about them near the middle of the week. Hang tight!
    – user50049
    Sep 13, 2015 at 14:27
  • 32
    Just askin: who all (did not) get a mail (yet)? 1. me. Sep 15, 2015 at 17:32
  • 11
    A mail with a confirmation will be nice. The suspense is killing me.
    – Haris
    Sep 17, 2015 at 0:45
  • 23
    Sorry about that, something exploded while I was sitting on it. Mail going out on 9/18 for everyone that answered here, and on 9/22 - 9/25 for mail going to the folks that wrote the awesome answers you linked (it's a more manual process, hence a few days to get it together).
    – user50049
    Sep 17, 2015 at 15:39
  • 11
    Emails sent! If you feel like you should have gotten one but didn't, let me know (after checking your spam folders, and connecting your computers directly to your modems after turning them off and on again).
    – user50049
    Sep 18, 2015 at 15:25
  • 14
    @Tim your "Instructions for the locationally challenged" have made my day better, hilarious.
    – CubeJockey
    Sep 18, 2015 at 15:28
  • 13
    @TimPost Just a suggestion (not to be interpreted as a complaint), but perhaps it is a good idea to update this thread/question with the current state of things. Nov 16, 2015 at 12:47

237 Answers 237

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votes

It's ironic you should ask for cases like this:

You just happened to be around when the answer was posted, and saw them continuously expand their answer to teach the subject more effectively.

Because, until not so very long ago, that fruitful behavior was actively punished on SE sites:

Stop using community wiki as a reputation denial mechanism

Ten edits got one dispossessed, the post was force-converted to community-wiki, which was unfair, counter-intuitive and plain nonsense: The more one would work on a post, the sooner authorship was taken away from him / her. I was so frustrated with it, I wouldn't fix a known error in this answer:

Ignoring timezones altogether in Rails and PostgreSQL

Timestamps and time zones are a confusing matter. Add DST to it and people get headaches. Even more so with the data type timestamp with time zone, defined in the SQL standard and implemented in Postgres accordingly with its slightly misleading type name. (Even got our most achieved user on the [time-zone] tag confused.) In an effort to clarify things I kept editing my answer until I realized: one more edit and it's not my pet any more.

The internal representation of timestamps is a count from an epoch. But unlike the UNIX epoch (1970) Postgres timestamps are based on the year 2000. Thankfully, Basil Bourque filled in for me and fixed the mistake. While being at it, he added a whole insightful chapter.

Two months later, in April 2014, the SE team finally saw the errors of their way and removed the nonsense. And we all have been happily editing to improve posts ever since. I even got to be among the first illuminators on the site.

THE END.

This is all for the T-Shirt. I want it.

4
votes

The Answer

One answer that I found particularly useful was Arthur Ulfeldt's on Clojure Dynamic Binding. There's tons of depth to a lot of the topics in Clojure, and it sometimes seems like an insurmountable task to wrap your head around it, so I'm always grateful to people who can make it understandable.

What makes it special

What I like is that it would have been so easy for this to be just a quick and dirty answer. The question is just asking for how to do one thing, and I've seen lots of people in those situations just dump some code, with maybe a single sentence of explanation. But this answer takes the time to make you understand what is happening.

Going the extra mile

Just taking the time to break it down would have been enough, but this answer goes beyond that. It gives two examples, shows how they're different, and compares them. All the concepts are explained, in a way that makes it easy to understand. And, in spite of the complex topic, it's not dull to read. The answer is engaging, as well as informative.

It stands out to me that the answer started out as a good explanation. It wasn't just a quick, fastest gun in the west solution. You could see that some thought went into it, with the result being an answer far above what you usually see. And then he went back and improved it, nearly doubling the amount of content. That stands out to me as not being about rep; it seems like a genuine happiness to share knowledge, and make that knowledge easily understandable to others. And, because he actually made that effort, it can still be useful to people, like me, reading it years later.

4
votes

<<< Long post alert >>>

Prologue

I did register an account on SO almost two and half years ago to ask a question. I'm (now) not really proud of the question I asked first, but I got my answer and solved my issue. I was happy and did not bother about the downvotes I got. My participation to SO kind of paused, but I used to be a somehow frequent visitor to get the answers for my other issues.

Some random days later, I logged onto my account and while browsing through the questions, I came I came across a question which I can answer, and I posted the same. Did not quite stick around for the review and all left it there. Same thing for one-two more days, nothing noticeable.

Next to next day, wow, the green pop-up said, +15 when I clicked the link to the answer, OP had accepted my answer. I really helped someone (at least I thought so) and the feeling was quite good. So, I thought, why not try to contribute more so that I can help out people, who are just might be in need of help? This way, user 2173917 actually get started....

The one question and my answer to that, which made a big impression on my motivation to actually making the contribution, well, a habit:

Alternative for-loop syntax

The question seemed pretty straight forward and I added one (ok,ok, poor quality, I know, now) answer. Was feeling good about that but that feeling did not last long. Downvote 1, 2, 3...... I was puzzled. "What is going on?". As most of the newbies (no offense, please) I ended up adding comments,

"and the reason for the downvote?"

and was expecting, the downvoter will leave a comment. User anatolyg replied with a comment that the answer was not clear and confusing.

Being a non-native English speaker, I had no clue how to make the answer any better. I tried to add some more lines to clarify, but I got the reply that it was still unclear.

My immediate thought was, let me delete the answer and get rid of the downvotes, but wait, that actually did not happen...

Then came in the help, the follow-up comments, suggesting how I can improve my answer. Following them, the first time,

  • I did download a draft version of the C standard (well, I should say, first serious step to become a better programmer)
  • Read that up to actually understand better what is expected out of my answer

and edited my answer. Until that time, I was doing that just to prove I was not wrong.

To my surprise, I got 1 upvote, 1 more, 1 more. Two of the downvotes were also lifted. Anatolog reviewed the modified answer, replied that it is clear now. I was happy, but that was just the beginning. I edited twice more to add some more info, quotes from the standard documents, correcting typos, fixing formatting.

In the meantime when I was modifying my answer, the question received other (better) answer(s), and got accepted. I was not hoping anything more from my answer, but I keep on receiving uptoves 2,3,4,5... and to my surprise, my answer, got accepted. This was something beyond my thoughts. OP of the question commented on my answer that my answer, in its the then current form is much more elaborate and comprehensive. I was very happy and amazed. I could not believe, I actually turned my answer into a better-one that is seemingly helping many others to understand the concept better.

After settling down (first 10+ voted answer, something for a newbies for sure, no?) thought, I did a bad thing, posted a bad answer. The downvoters downvoted and could have moved on. Why they (atleast, some of them) came back to tell me how I got downvoted? Why'd they bother to tell me how to improve my answer? What is "in" for them? Nothing. Then also, they helped me, I made my answer better and at the end of the day, I'm happy. :-)

I felt I achieved something, I felt I did something helpful to myself and to others which is actually making me happy. I took an oath myself, "I'll try my best to continue doing so". I pledged, I should be giving back to the community which helped me, directly or indirectly to actually improve myself. I learnt something and I should be sharing the same with others, that way, I'll be making the best possible use of my knowledge, whatever I have gathered.

current situation

Now, I'm a regular on SO, trying to contribute and learn, each day, any time. I feel, that one question, somehow changed the way I was into programming. As I got more and more involved, I came across a great number of great people, using their valuable time to help out others actually to make a difference. The way the answers are provided here, they are much more than a quick-fix. They are the the symbol of knowledge and the source of inspiration to many like me, who, in the process of helping others, learned many things and also improves on myself.

Hope we can continue our good deed, together.

By lifting others, we rise. Long live SO.

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  • +1 You helped me with two C questions and I am very grateful. :-)
    – Cesare
    Aug 24, 2015 at 7:24
  • @CeceXX Welcome, and I surely hope those contents will be helpful for many more like you, too. :) Aug 24, 2015 at 7:29
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Which features of Perl make it a functional programming language?

I first saw a question about functional programming in C and perl - deleted question I'm afraid: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/30977789/why-is-c-not-a-functional-programming-language

The question posted was:

Why is C not a (fully) functional programming language? .... What is the one basic thing that makes it different from Perl, Haskell or Lisp (or any other functional language)?

My first reaction was "what nonsense is this, perl isn't a functional programming language".

But then I waded a bit deeper into the subject - primarily with reference to Higher Order Perl

perl does have quite a few of the features of functional programming - enough that it isn't actually all that hard to write functional code. Indeed, it's actually pretty common to use "callbacks" as handlers in parsers.

It was this that catalysed my understanding of some of the functions in perl that I'd been having a lot of trouble with previously. I'd done modules on functional programming at University, but then basically forgotten about them since. Joining the two means I gained a new understanding.

Specifically the thing I always had trouble with wasa map (and it's partner in crime grep - which unlike the standard Unix variant can take code as well as regular expressions).

map is an amazingly useful tool that's used for list transformation, and one I'd previously had a lot of trouble "grokking". Now it's seeing use on a very regular basis, because it makes some very elegant idiomatic code. (And yes, I know there' a lot of scorn for "write once perl" - I still dispute that notion. Just because you can write incomprehensible junk, doesn't mean you have to).

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  • 1
    I remember that question and your answer well. I also first thought wtf, but found myself agreeing with your answer and looking for similarities. :)
    – simbabque
    Aug 24, 2015 at 14:34
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votes

The answer: https://stackoverflow.com/a/31992600/

I use to migrate my currently Access based System to web.

The truth: I didn't know anything about jqGrid. I still don't know many things but I am learning. I have learned a fair amount now thanks to SO. One user in particular has been very helpful to me when it comes to jqGrid.

The Story: Every time I looked up an answer on SO, I found this particular user Oleg's answer on top, accepted and upvoted. I cannot count how many times Oleg has helped through his answers throughout SO not just to me but to any and all who needs help. Oleg helps each and everyone who has problems in jqGrid. All you need to do is ask. About this answer, there is a long list of comments in the question which he tried his best to answer which can solve my problem. At the end we did come to a solution given by him. I think this explains a lot about how helpful this community is and how people come above and beyond their call of duty and help others who actually want to learn.

For anyone looking for help for jqGrid, Oleg is the man to look for. jqGrid was hard to learn because jqGrid is developed by a Bulgarian guy and the documentation was poor and hard to follow at times. (That does not make jqGrid any less of a plugin that it is). Being a non-native-English speaker myself, I know how hard it can get to translate and write the content correctly. Oleg being a non-native-English speaker too has trouble at times. But that does not stop him from helping others. If it wasn't for Oleg, I would have never been able to learn jqGrid. This man helps, helps, helps, helps and helps.

Users like Oleg and many others who contribute to SO exceptionally and help people learn something new makes SO a wonderful community and makes this world a better place to live for programmers. I am thankful to all the users of StackOverflow and proud of being a part of something so huge and great.

4
votes

The Day I Learned How Much I Had to Learn

Let me start with this: I'm young. I'm in high school. I'm not a professional computer scientist with thousands of rep; I'm just this kid who really hopes to one day get there. I'm nothing big in the site (but my 440 rep certainly beats the overwhelming 1-rep population...). I first got drawn here in December 2014, and I've stuck with it not just because it helps me learn, but because the sense of community is unfathomable and the way I can learn and teach by simply browsing through millions of questions and lines of code is overwhelming.

Here's some abstract math-y stuff for you. This is where the learning begins. I wanted to compare sequences of numbers based on the expressions used to generate the terms of the sequence. I didn't quite understand how difficult that might be until Scott Chamberlain and some other users got involved, talking about Expression Trees and parsers and visitors and what kinds of equality did I need. They helped me refine my question to simplify it and have a more direct answer. But they showed that there was a lot out there that I didn't understand. Scott's answer was phenomenal, but it was more than that. It was a jumpstart into "deep compiler theory," a pretty large topic for an aspiring computer scientist. But it was fantastic.

The beauty of it all is, I wanted to start with playing with things I'd learned about from SO. I'm a big C# fan and user, so I wanted to start trying this fancy yield return statement and lambda syntax. Enumerables were a convenient starting point. But little did I know that it would take me into compiler land, where everything is just a memory location. I had so many things to learn. I had no idea what was going on when I looked at this Expression Tree. Scott Chamberlain put up with my simple questions like "How does it handle differently-named variables?"--it doesn't have to. He gave me examples and showed me things I never would have thought of, only to lead me on to bigger and better things which eventually started working.

It's not perfect (the solution). There is a part two, and it is limited in its capabilities. I haven't gone back to work with it for a while, but it will always be for me a legacy with a lesson. Sure, I think I know what lambda syntax is and what function delegates are, but do I really? What about all the "stuff" that I've never heard of and won't hear of 'til college, the "fancy stuff" that I want to get my hands on? Scott Chamberlain and the others showed me that this community will help me with the "fancy stuff," and they showed me that I really did want to grow up and do this. I loved it too much not to.

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    I just noticed this post, thanks man! :) Dec 14, 2016 at 21:02
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votes

The question

How to return the response from an asynchronous call?

The answer

How to return the response from an asynchronous call?

The story

Felix Kling's excellent self-answer to this question has already been nominated but I'd like to highlight the answer by Benjamin Gruenbaum that helped me personally the most. I'm primarily an embedded systems programmer and recently for a simple cross-platform mobile app decided to go down the Cordova / AngularJS path neither of which I've used before. After reading the docs I was struggling to understand the concept of promises thoroughly and how they worked but Benjamin's answer quickly made it crystal clear and the concepts snapped into place.

Apart from the clarity of the answer on a subject not always easy to explain in a concise way I was also impressed that Benjamin took the time to add an additional answer specific to AngularJS when sometimes those later answers attract a little less attention. Not to mention he also added a second comprehensive answer when not using jQuery which I wish was around a few years earlier when I was doing something similar in plain JS.

That question and associated answers are a great example of how collaboration on Stack Exchange can provide many different approaches to similar problems and build a great knowledge base that can end up infinitely more useful than official documentation often written by a single author. I ended up completing my project within a week using a multitude of questions and answers on Stack Overflow along the way and I just don't think that would have been possible using the official documentation or books on the subject.

4
votes

Talk about the experience a little, how did you feel when the person eventually 'got it'?

This is the greatest feeling, the feeling of having every little piece just click together all at the same time, so immensely satisfying both for the learner and the teacher. It was a toss-up to decide which of two answers I wanted to post here, so I just decided to post them both.

  • How is the recursion method adding itself?

    Ah, recursion. I remember a quote from the very first programming book I've read that just about sums it up:

    I'm not sure, but I think that the term recursion comes from the Latin recurse, recurset, recursum, which means to curse repeatedly. I do know that that's exactly what many programmers feel like doing when they're struggling with complex recursive programming problems.

    —Java All-in-One for Dummies, 3rd Edition, by Doug Lowe

    My best guess is this is exactly what the OP felt like doing, but the OP was plainly having a very hard time understanding how recursion works in any case. I could clearly relate to the OP's struggle and tone of frustration in the question.

    Then, after a few comments on the answer:

    OMG ok I get it!!! :) THANKS! – David Camacho Sep 17 '13 at 21:44

    This was immensely satisfying to me; I could only imagine how much more it would have been to the OP.

    And you know what? I think that after working on that answer and that explanation, I understood how exactly recursion works much better as well. Writing up that answer not only benefited the OP, but it was a mutual learning experience. And that's one of the best experiences one can... well, experience on a Stack Exchange site.

  • Javascript conditional not short circuiting like I would expect

    I still distinctly remember reading this comment, 9 months later:

    [...] This is a new concept - not sure how it has averted me for 10 years. [...] – Ryan Wheale Nov 13 '14 at 22:13

    Answering ordinary questions is good and all, but what's even better is that awesome feeling of helping people. I'd been programming... what, two or three years when I posted that answer? So having helped someone who had been programming for around four times as long as I have (and around 75% of the amount of time I'd been alive) was a really amazing feeling to have.

    This also gave me a look into someone else's perspective. I'd never thought of short-circuiting operators the way that the OP had, and it was really interesting to see how the OP saw it. Going back to the theme of "mutual learning experiences," looking at something from a different angle, more often than not, can actually teach valuable lessons itself.

    The answer went through a few edits to get to its current form, but again, the end result taught both of us, rather than simply being an answer to a question. And of course, there's nothing like that moment when all of the puzzle pieces just... click (especially when the pieces that'd been supposed to be clicking had just been mucking about for the past 10 years, failing to so much as graze against each other).

I've had a bunch of other similar experiences among my answers (and questions!) on Stack Overflow, but these are the two that stood out the most to me, and that I thought I'd like to share.

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votes

If I may be so triply self-congratulatory, I'll offer my own question and self-answer:

How do Mockito matchers work?

I had been contributing to the tag for a while, in part because I had occasion at work to dig deeply (a full day or two) into the implementation details while diagnosing my own team's test problems. I discovered that Mockito's matcher feature works in a very counterintuitive way (via side effects) that cause them to break with poor error locality and messaging, even when making innocent-looking refactors to working code. The documentation didn't mention this behavior, other than a sentence or two.

After answering question after question after question based on this research, it became clear that others were running into the same trouble I had: Lack of a niche, canonical, comprehensive resource. I got to the point where I was dying for someone to ask a big-picture question, so that I could offer a better-scoped summary and link to it when answering other questions, or so that others could learn the basics in the first place on behalf of their teams. At some point, I realized that there wasn't anything I should be waiting for, and posted the question and instant-self-answer.

After some initial "you didn't give anyone else a chance to answer the question!" hubbub, the answer has proven extremely useful in keeping related answers both complete and concise, to myself (1, 2, 3) and others (1, 2). It has also benefitted from others' updates, who have contributed better and more-specific points than I'd posted initially. As I check and update that post over time, it warms my heart to see favorites and upvotes, just to know that the days I lost in research weren't for nothing.

When reading StackOverflow for answers to my own problems, it makes me all the more grateful to imagine folks learning the hard way, and choosing to share those lost days with the world to make others' own days better. I'm extremely grateful to the community for contributing to and cleaning up this site, and to the StackOverflow team for providing a solid, permanent, clean platform to make it so easy to find, update, and share good answers. Thanks SO, and happy 10M!

3
votes

I wanted to nominate a double answer. Both answers to Template partial ordering - why does partial deduction succeed here, by:

The Story

Once you do anything non-trivial with templates in C++, trying to explain what actually happens gets ludicrously complicated. I've been trying to further my understanding of all the corner cases, and was actually introduced this example by bogdan in a comment on an answer of mine. For such a short example, the answer is decidedly non-trivial.

So non-trivial, in fact, that it led to two long series of comments, and a very long and hugely interesting discussion between the two answerers about the fact that the C++ standard itself does not even answer this question, and actually working out how the standard could be phrased better to handle all of these cases.

This is not a popular question. It was never going to be. C++ function template partial ordering rules aren't exactly low-hanging reputation fruit. But this is still two users spending days on their answers because they genuinely care. And after spending a long time reading their discussion and their answers, I think I may finally get it. Well, probably not. But at least I have that resource to keep rereading so that someday I will.

3
votes

Simple proofs that GUID is Not Unique

This question is a bad question in many ways and many of the answers and comments are supposed to be in jest. I occasionally re read it for a good laugh.

BUT

When I first stumbled across this answer I did not understand pseudo uniqueness or what GUIDs were. I also didn't really understand how combinations for something like GUIDs would grow so big so quickly.

This question is marked as a bad question but good for historical significance. At the same time it does a very good job of explaining why something that is so important for assigning id's works and doesn't have to actually be unique. I just finished college and I taught various computer science courses particularly in backend web development. Students would ask different questions about big data and how to build keys or give unique identifiers. I would sometimes point students to this question because it illustrates what they are very well.

TLDR: This is a question that points to a critical misunderstanding of how something in programming works and ends in answers that are both entertaining and illuminate a somewhat difficult topic.

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votes

My First Question on StackOverflow

I came here because one of my developers was talking about how useful this site was. I remember coming around to asking this specific question, I had been trying to develop something we now call the TableSnipper. My goal was to develop a utility that would snip from html documents specific tables based on parameters specified by the user. I had been working for over eight or ten hours on this specific problem and I finally decided to throw it out to the community.

It was a really cool experience. I think it took me more than 30 or 45 minutes to frame the question so it made some sense to me (and hopefully to one of the experts on the site).

I posted the question, shut down my computer and then did some grading for an hour or so. I went home, explained what I was struggling with to my wife, got a beer from the refrigerator and logged into my new SO account to show her my question. Wow - how amazing, there was an answer.

I was dead but the fact that I had such a complicated looking response to my question caused me to pull an all_nighter. It was just really neat that a stranger took the time to invest in helping me move forward with a project that most people thought was silly.

It really became my practice to work as hard as I could solving some problem and then if I could not solve it as midnight was approaching I would try to post the problem to SO, go home and get a beer and then log into my SO account from home. More times than not the answer I needed was ready.

Probably two of the most influential people on my development in writing code are Steven Lott and Alex Martelli. They are very different but wonderful in their own way. Steven is a -it has to be the right way or hit the highway kind of guy. Initially it was kind of tough to read some of Steven's comments or answers because he was so brutal if you did not follow PEP something. But if you could get past that he offered some incredible insights. And then Alex, seems to be a very gentle soul that would rather help then criticize. I remember the first time he answered one of my questions. I had his book on my desk. Usual stuff, I got home, checked my answers and saw wow the one and only Alex Martelli answered one of my questions. I yelped for feeling cool, woke my wife up and learned something (and then had another beer).

Gosh I have not seen a lot of folks recently. I remember many of my early questions were also answered or commented on by SilentGhost, JFSebastian - amazing folks who for no other gain then something they got internally would spend hours parsing questions asked by people like me who know little about programming and provide some critical insights that help move us forward in solving real problems.

I should note that one of the reasons I singled out the users above is that they seldom were in a rush to post an answer the fastest. Truthfully, for a guy that has no programming experience they could be frustrating (not Alex). However, if you carefully parsed their comments and answers they typically had insights much greater than the question or many of the other answers.

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  • 2
    I only hope you stick around a bit longer now after asking a question, responding to the quick first comments. Beer can wait :) Aug 22, 2015 at 20:29
3
votes

The Question: Randomly Generating From Variable Weights
The Author: @DavidEisenstat

Some Quick Background
I am a High School student that enjoys programming! I am 100% 'self tought' (I am not sure if that counts considering how many tutorials there are on the internet) and in the past have had some very basic programming questions. It is crazy the amount of time I have saved by having my questions being answered here.

This specific question goes a little beyond a basic programming question, and the answers on SO did not disappoint.

P.S. I am aware that this question barley fits in the scope of SO questions.

The Actual Story Two college friends (brilliant kids) and I had been working together to come up with an algorithm that would randomly select items from an array based off of individual weightings. We had been working for a couple of days, going through different algorithms and testing them only to find out that there was something wrong. Maybe the weights didn't end up having any affect, or maybe the algorithm took an hour.

Eventually we got fed up and I decided to post our problem on SO.

The question has a lot of probability and logic involved, so we got a couple of answers with different approaches, but they had some issues. Finally David Eisenstat proposes some logic and says that he will be attempting to implement it.

For the next day and a half (about 36 hours) he continued to work with me on his approach. We constantly bounced ideas off of each other and finally he came up with his solution, and sure enough it worked. In addition to the code that he supplied, David also broke down his logic into easy to understand steps and explained why he chose to do it that way. He elaborated on the probability involved.

I know that this question is a bit odd for SO. But what made me want to share David Eisenstat's answer was the amount of time and energy he put into addressing my problem. I am just some random person with an odd question, and he took many hours to find a solution, and in the process taught me a lot about probability.

It is this kind of thing that continues to make SO incredible. The users here are awesome and really want to help.

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I've been using Stack Overflow for about two years now (that is definitely not so much in comparison with some other users). I have just started studying and when I got problem, Google usually directed me here. I never thought about this site as something more - it was just a way to find a solution when I was stuck. I wasn't even a registered user back then!

I was (and still am) a huge amateur, but eventually I encountered problems I wasn't able to solve by googling. Looking back, they were also pretty basic, but I have spent a lot of hours trying to figure them out and failed. Since I had no one to ask, I remembered that hey, there is that great website with questions where I always look, maybe someone there will help me. And they did. Sometimes even without answering, since I was able to debug it while I was writing the question.

The more I was looking around Stack Overflow after I registered, the more I liked it - people, who put their free time into helping other people they don't even know, not only by answering their questions, but by letting anyone look at it. I am a huge fan of open source, and people sharing their knowledge as "open knowledge" and trying to help random people around the world, without being paid, in their free time was something that I felt (and still feel) very enthusiastic about. I have learned so much not only reading answers, but when trying to answer some questions on my own.

Every time I had a bit free time, I looked here - looking at questions I may answer, reading answers I may learn something from, and, of course, just sitting around meta and reading, how to make the site better. That was when I realized Stack Overflow is not just your normal Q&A site - it's more like a second family or lifestyle. I am sure no one remembers me from here, since I am usually the silent observer, and if I ask (or answer) a question, it's something pretty basic, but I feel home here (not only here, but at other SE sites too). As I have a job now, I don't have much free time, but I always find time to look and read news here at meta, the same way you catch up with a friend you haven't seen a while.

Stack Overflow has taught me a lot - not only with programming problems I have encountered. You have encouraged me to help others, because even the little knowledge I have may help, to ask questions when I don't understand something (because it's better being called stupid for 10 minutes than for your whole life - I am really shy, so this really helped me a lot!) and since English is not my native language, being around here helps me with my English skills, too.

The answer I would like to nominate is this answer to my basic question from Dietrich Epp. Not only did he help me find the problem (installing additional package), but the rules he wrote are helping me every day. For me personally, this is the type of answer that gives me more than just the specific solution - I don't use that library now, but still apply the advice I was given.

Thank you, everyone, for being here to help. It's an honor to be part of this awesome community!

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The day I understood anonymous inner classes

Question: Double Brace initialization Type Confusion
Answer: https://stackoverflow.com/a/25602404/1803692

Somewhen not too far back, when I was working as a Trainee on a big java application I wrote some tests for a specific utility placed between Controller and View of the application. I had these tests and one of them, that should've definitely worked (at least that's what I thought) produced unexpected results.

The answer by Simon André Forsberg I recieved only minutes after taking some time to properly write up a question clears up the misassumptions I made about Types, Anonymous inner types and Brace-Initialization in the first third of the answer.

Then Simon proceeds to demonstrate two alternatives to solving the problem, both viable solutions and both packed with some more insights. The answer closes with a repetition of the solution to the initial misconception.

This is what I love about SO: People that get to explaining what they thought was right, learn so much more when you tell them where the error in their chain was. I'll never make the same mistake again, and I hope someone else finds this Q&A and learns from it as I did.

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Making code that runs automatically within a given interval

This answer was one of the first answers that I posted. I wasn't expecting it to be this popular at first. The OP is asking about how to run code in a certain interval. After looking at his/her question, I found that the OP doesn't need a timer or anything. He/she just needs to check if the players have killed all the monsters in the map. I thought he/she can just check it when the player kills a monster. (Actually that came straight to my mind) So I told him/her to create an interface and event handlers to handle the KillMonsterEvent.

After that answer came out, there's a person called Turrican who immediately said that this is the most elegant solution! My reputation was only like 40 something at that time. I was like "whaaaaat?" Before this, I thought I was a noob and knew nothing compared to the others on SO. I was really surprised that a guy said my answer is "the most elegant solution"!

Soon after that, the OP saw my answer and asked me about it. He/She didn't seem like to understand the use of the interface in this case and he never used them before. Since I really like to teach people, I explained the whole thing to him/her. Finally, the OP understood it and my answer got accepted. The comments section is filled with he/she asking me more about interfaces and me answering each of them patiently. That day definetly was the best day of my life.

Ah, that definitely makes sense. It's a bit difficult to wrap my head around. I can have different implementations with different listeners, right? Each listener might have something that's different, but ultimately I can call the same method on all the implementations and they'll all do different things

And I was like "Oh! he/she finally understands! I was sooo happy!". I felt the happiness when I helped someone. It was very different.

And from then on, I kept answering questions but only one of the answers got a higher score than this one. I think that day, July 22, is unforgettable.

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If you don't solve it, no one does...

I guess many software developers once in a while are struck with this daunting feeling that everything depends on them. So this time it was me, struggling with a problem I really had to solve somehow. I mean, I had to solve and if I didn't, we were facing major refactorings to implement a work-around that would virtually throw us back to the drawing board. With waiting customers and all... you get the picture.

Without going too much in detail, it was about a well-know issue with the SQL IN statement that gets untenably slow with larger numbers of elements.

I felt somewhat relieved when I found a workable solution, but it wasn't close to satisfactory. Stupid me, it finally dawned to me that I could ask a question at Stack Overflow, which I did:

Scalable Contains method for LINQ against a SQL backend

I didn't know what to expect. But I certainly didn't expect what happened next.

...until someone does

The same day, more precisely, only 9 hours later, in came this wonderful gem of expression massage that exactly did what I needed in a way that I could readily copy and paste into my own code. It would have taken me 9 weeks to get this done! (If ever). The user, having the somewhat indeterminate name codeworx, drily started his answer by saying

I’ve solved this problem with a little different approach a few month ago

I've solved this problem. What do you mean, 'if I don't solve it...'? There was this guy (I guess...), tucked away in the Austrian mountains, willing to respond and freely share what must have taken him a couple of hours, at least.

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https://stackoverflow.com/questions/30516886/where-is-the-bug-in-my-sql-join-logic

So I was stuck on a SQL query late one night , around 3 AM. I had some convoluted JOIN logic I needed to figure out. And I asked a really long and probably painful-to-read question about my issue. Things were looking bleak to me!!!

And although I didn't get an answer, one user - bluefeet - simply gave me a way to simplify how I think about debugging my SQL problem. Not sure why, but this one comment really helped alot. Maybe others don't see that, but I really did.

And it made me really happy that night. so thanks!

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    Kind of a buzzkill that the linked content is deleted, for those of us without 10k privileges.
    – Air
    Aug 27, 2015 at 21:50
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I've been away from Stack Overflow (participation-wise) for a while, and there is an element of it that I missed that continues to draw me back: the sheer power of a simple question and its answer(s). It may sound a bit lofty, but the ability of someone to lay out a problem s/he is facing in front of millions of developers waiting to provide a solution with the push of a button is truly incredible.

The community sustains itself well with diamond moderators, review queues, and the like, but it all comes back to that Q&A model that is the basis for all interactions on the site, one so powerful that it has spawned 148 sites (at the time of this writing) with everything from similar to completely disparate subject matter, all utilizing the same basic structure.

In searching for a question or answer of mine that highlighted this principle, one stuck out in my mind. There's nothing particularly special about it – it's a fairly typical question for Stack Overflow: a couple of upvotes, medium length, mostly code. Perhaps that's why I didn't notice the relatively high rep of the asker, TIMEX, until I had already submitted my answer.

I'll admit I was fairly shocked when I realized that; I hadn't ventured very far above my own "rep bracket" previously, and even the best instance of that was fairly low risk, given the multitude of answers and relative simplicity of the question. It's not as if I made a conscious effort to do so, but I guess I had just assumed those with a significantly higher rep than mine had nothing to learn from me.

Answering that question expelled that notion and showed me that, in a community like this, we all have things to learn from each others' experiences in the programming world, since in this area, you can never finish learning.

So, while there are much more extravagant answers I could have chosen with much more interesting stories and follow-ups, I think this one fits the best – a typical question we all see strolling through the site that got a sufficient answer quickly and without fuss, by design of the site and its format. So typical, evidently, that from the outside no one may have guessed that it taught its answerer (and hopefully its asker) something worth holding on to.

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    I couldn't agree more, I encourage others not to fear questions from trusted users but see it as an opportunity, often its one of those days where the high rep'r cant see the forest for the tree's and needs a second pair of eyes. High rep user questions are usually more attractive because they have good karma, know how to pose a question that's easier to answer, tend to maintain a high "Accept Rate", will reward good answers and because its presumed to be a hard question will usually garner more praise. Aug 24, 2015 at 8:57
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The day I learned the problem is with me, not jQuery

Question: jQuery code behaves wrong
Answer: https://stackoverflow.com/a/13317101/1344955

The story

I was building a FAQ for my website, and being the jQuery newb I was, I didn't have any idea of the concepts involved, such as DOM traversal and filtering of the found elements. What I ended up with was a huge mess of selectors sprinkled with an unhealthy amount of string concatenations, and as it could be expected, it didn't work, so naturally, I blamed it on the library, and I was expecting one of the developers to answer thanking me for the bug I had just discovered.

When I saw @nnnnnn's answer, it was only then that I realized, the one to blame was myself. He offered me a clear and simple solution with more than enough explanation to allow me to start form scratch and see what I did wrong. Thanks to his answer, I discovered that I should first look into myself before blaming my coding mistakes on the tools I'm using. This was the first answer that introduced me to the use of var $this = $(this); which I have been using from that day onwards.

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    Thanks! I appreciate your comments.
    – nnnnnn
    Mar 14, 2016 at 22:32
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While browsing Stack, I came across this answer on identifying users without using cookies etc. While most of the other answers on that question were brief and just mentioned the name of one possible solution, Baba's answer discussed a number of different solutions to the problem, then went on to suggest and then explain Fuzzy Logic and Artificial Neural Networks, and give some sample code to demonstrate how it could be implemented by the question asker.

However, the answer wasn't specific to the question asker's problem - although there were code samples and a link to a reference library, the post explained it from a language-agnostic perspective, and even gave examples of how the same techniques that are described in the post can also be used outside identifying users, which is way beyond the scope of the original question, but very useful to anyone who happens to come across the question later.

The question asker had asked what probably seemed like a really simple question, and the other answers to it were similarly straight forward. However, this answer went far beyond what the question was asking to give a solution to the problem that the OP, and anyone else who might come across that question again in future, was facing. All Baba needed to do to get the message across was to post link to the class and some code samples, and it would have answered the question, but instead he took it upon himself to actually explain how it would work.

Over the few days after posting the answer, Baba then posted numerous edits, improving the answer from one that already covered most of the important points to one that gave several examples and reference implementations, and could be treated as the go-to reference for identifying users without cookies.

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The question

Howto call .getContent and .parseContent from bootstrap-markdown.js

My answer

https://stackoverflow.com/a/25103980/975520

The story

The OP wants to call .getContent and .parseContent of bootstrap-markdown.js, at the first sight was a strange question and I don't know the plugin and I goes away, but a few hours later I come back and start thinking...and than the decision I want to work on this!

I always thinked that markdown editors are a great examples of complex made simple so is a good change to know a new one.

So I start with the magical three steps:

  1. RTFM: so many times, the docs are not read, so I read deeply the docs and, nothing :-(, is not implemented
  2. Google: I start to search on Google and nothing
  3. Open the code on Github and go deep in the mud!

The code on Github is well documented, but there is no clue for the implementation.

The requested methods are avalaible only for the markdown element so how can I get it? Tipically in a jQuery plugin the transformed element is stored in a jQuery data object of the original element so...ok check the code if it's the right direction and ok is the first step.

Now I have the markdown element and on it I can call the requested functions, hurray!

The lesson

Many lessons, first if you don't know an argument (a plugin or other) is not an excuse to not start to learn it; and here on SO is the main concept. Whoever look at your problem is trying to solve it and firstly enter a problem that doesn't belong to him/her.

The second, paraphrasing Forrest Gump,

Ok I checked the code, I thought maybe I can find a how is implemented and then a solution

Forrest says:

That day, for no particular reason, I decided to go for a little run. So I ran to the end of the road. And when I got there, I thought maybe I'd run to the end of town. And when I got there, I thought maybe I'd just run across Greenbow County. And I figured, since I run this far, maybe I'd just run across the great state of Alabama. And that's what I did. I ran clear across Alabama. For no particular reason I just kept on going. I ran clear to the ocean. And when I got there, I figured, since I'd gone this far, I might as well turn around, just keep on going. When I got to another ocean, I figured, since I'd gone this far, I might as well just turn back, keep right on going.

https://youtu.be/QgnJ8GpsBG8?t=41s

Third, I earned a bounty of 200, I'm not a bounty hunter, but it's a pretty satisfaction.

enter image description here

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A few years ago, I was realtively new to programming. The first language which I took up was Objective-C, and with no prior programming experience, as well as missed basics in the language, I found myself having a hard time with relatively simple things.

Case-in-point is this question which I had asked back in '13.

I had been struggling for hours to perform this simple task, but was getting absolutely nowhere. After very careful thought and over 30 minutes typing and re-checking my question, I posted.

Less than 15 minutes later, the answer to my question was posted as a comment, which also had a question. I answered the comment and 30 minutes later, I was notified that an answer was posted.

I didn't expect to find an answer like this one.

Now while the question was to handle a very basic problem, which is in no way difficult or obtuse, and the answer simply provides the built-in method of performing the action, I was surprised and amazed by a few things.

@Rob was detailed. His answer was complete, extremely informative and spot-on. He saw that I was new, probably confused easily, and in need of basic help. He took the time to provide this complete answer in which he:

  • Answered my question flawlessly. Complete with screenshots and step-by-step instructions.

  • Gave me his opinion and best practices on naming conventions, but specifically pointed out that it was just his opinion (instead of asserting it as fact).

  • He was kind and patient, even when I had trouble with his extremely detailed answer. He stayed with me and helped out until I had it right.

Additionally, he pointed out a flaw in my program which seemed to present a bad user experience to him. He was right. Just by his comment, he got me thinking with UX for the first time, and I've been in love with it ever since.

Not to mention that his rep showed me that he wasn't interested in answering my question just for the points, but he just wanted to help.

And help he did.

He also taught me to be patient with others, and remember that even though the rep is fantastic, it isn't the reason we're here.

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votes

Being a junior dev with little coding experience, I first found out about regular expressions just a few years ago. Since that time, I have learned a lot (much of it by trial and error, after error, after error...) about this extremely useful technology.

Now, there are websites and wikis devoted to regular expressions, but the one I found (and continue to find) the most useful, is no doubt this community wiki, contributed to 46% by aliteralmind.

The fact that this answer is regularly updated and maintained for over a year, and that it already extensively covers so many questions I was faced with in learning the technology is why I choose this answer. It embodies what Stack Overflow is to me. Real, peer-reviewed and helpful answers to any problem you can or ever will think of. Thank you.

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The long road to understanding Swift Optionals

The question 'What is an optional value in Swift?' isn't overly complicated and can even be answered sufficiently in a sentence or two. However, this answer is one of my most visited and shared answers as the author crafted this answer to perfection. Rather than just answer the question, he explains the answer in tremendous detail so that the reader thoroughly understands what optional values are.

Here are some of the things that make this a great answer:

  1. Useful and relevant documentation snippets
  2. Listed points detailing where optionals are useful
  3. Code snippets demonstrating syntax
  4. Recently updated code snippets explaining new changes to the language
  5. Snippets showing incorrect use
  6. Example use in real life scenarios
  7. More documentation inserts
  8. Equivalent code converted to Objective-C
  9. Links to further reading material
  10. Humorous poem at the end

Early Days

Before I stumbled across this answer, I was finding optionals confusing impossible to grasp. I had been trying for months to understand what they are, how to use them and how not to use them. At the time, the swift programming language was brand new so to say documentation was limited was an understantement. The Apple documentation to me is the least detailed and most vague I have ever seen... I found that from other answers/tutorials I was simply copying the correct syntax rather than learning how to use them properly. None of the explanations seemed to work for me. Eventually I happened to come across this question and it cleared everything up for me. I finally understood what optional values were, what how to use them and why they are useful. From such a positive experience I was able to refer friends to this question so that they could learn too.

This question helped me and many others to finally grasp something which at one point I thought I was never going to understand!

So Nevan King, thank you for such a wonderful answer. And Stack Overflow, thank you for teaching me so many useful skills without me needing to fork up thousands per semester like I would in school!

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votes

The day I realized being a self-taught programmer was going to be a longer road than I thought

I majored in Information Systems (pretty much a Business Analyst-geared degree) but decided to take a job as an Intern (programmer) at a financial company. I had taken a couple very basic programming classes and a Database design class where I learned some SQL.

My first project as an Intern was a Microsoft Access application to be used by the Law Department Administrators to log billable hours per Lawyer per Case/Subsidiary. Here I learned a little, but no a lot.

Then I was the project lead on a Windows Forms application done in C#. Whoa - what the hell? An Intern as a project lead with no assistance from a senior programmer? Yeah - I was confused, too, and almost quit programming because of it.

In Microsoft Access, I was used to being tightly coupled with the Database. Okay, someone wants to add a record somewhere for a table? Let's just create a Form and let everything do its' magic! Windows Forms? Not. So. Fast. It was at this point that I asked this question. Open a connection with a database? What connection?!? What are all of these Classes and things I am referencing that I didn't write? Why does my application not run? How do I even troubleshoot this? How can anyone find this enjoyable?

At that very moment, my eyes were opened. I started Googling a million things throughout the day and I never gave up. I ended up ditching the Windows Forms and went with a MVC Web App using Entity Framework and KnockoutJS, and I learned it by finding samples online, trial and error, and meeting another person who was also doing web development within my company (which was full of mainframe).

It may seem like such a small and stupid thing for someone to not know or be familiar with, but that's my story of what really got me going on my programming journey and a moment that really lit the spark in mind.

TL;DR Databases need to have an open connection to be able to communicate with them. =)

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votes

Excel Date Conversion from yyyymmdd to mm/dd/yyyy

Dealing with date data can get really messy, any programmer or database admin can tell you that much, so when I came across an instance where I needed to extract information from a SQL Server table and then insert it all into another table (short version, it was a lot more complicated that).

My question was actually the opposite of a lot of other questions out there, and Daniel Cook Provided the answer I needed to make a good decision on what I needed to do in my situation, and he did it in record time which was great because...Deadlines.

Thank you Stack Overflow, Daniel Cook and all the other people that help me on Stack Overflow when I have coder's block.

3
votes

The time SO taught me what a great Android answer entails

The Details
The Question: How does the mapping between android resources and resources ID work?
The Answer: https://stackoverflow.com/a/6646113/1167780

Why it's great
The answer is a few years old but does a great job of explaining how resources are generated in Android. Specifically this is what made it great:

  • The answer started with an overview that defined how the resources are generated

  • The answer then talks about the typical resource format and how they are allocated

  • Next, there's an example/walkthrough of a demo resource allocation to break down step-by-step what's happening behind the scenes

  • Then there are some notes about gotchas that relate to the OPs question

  • Finally, like any good answer it ends with a few links to the source code so the OP can understand what is really going on.

This answer could have been only a few sentences long and still answer the question but he went above an beyond to not only have an example but also to link to the source code.

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    Good read, thanks for sharing :)
    – 2Dee
    Aug 25, 2015 at 7:51
3
votes

Answer:

Shape with a slanted side (responsive) by Harry

I am basically a front end developer who fiddles with basic HTML and CSS, a little bit of jQuery as well and obviously by the detail of the answer mentioned above, the OP(Harry) is a master of CSS shapes. That answer gave me a path or approach to come out of the basic HTML/CSS circle and concentrate more on other web technologies(SVG, Canvas and different CSS hacks) as well.

When you look at the answer bounty given by another user to the self answered question, it explains the quality of the answer. Pros and cons explained neatly. In short, one of the best answers I have seen in HTML/CSS section.

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    Wow, Thank you very much. Your post has made my day today :) I never expected somebody to mention my post here.
    – Harry
    Aug 25, 2015 at 8:54
  • 1
    No problem! :) That was coming for you.
    – m4n0
    Aug 25, 2015 at 9:13
3
votes

Decoding hash codes

When I started on Stack Overflow, I did not know much. I had absolutely no formal programming education, but was programming for fun. Eventually, I heard something about a "hash code", so I decided to look it up. I did not understand why this nebulous "hash code" was needed, or what it means, or anything of the sort. I learned that it was needed to enable use of Java's HashSet, HashMap, etc, but I had no idea why. So I asked Good hashCode() Implementation.

Adam Siemon's answer taught me almost all I currently know about hash codes. Sure, before his answer, I understood that a hash code was necessary for use in a HashSet, but that was about all I understood. Adam made edit after edit to help me to understand it. I ended up realizing that hash codes aren't about creating a seemingly-random number for whatever reason. Hash codes are about encoding an object into an int (in Java's case) in order to make object lookup near-constant time via an array. My mind was blown. I had heard that HashSets/HashMaps were faster, but near-constant time (well, at that time, my thought was, "near-instantaneous time")?

Adam Siemon taught me that collisions are (usually) necessary. I foolishly thought that avoiding collisions of 3 longs when encoding them into one int should be very possible. I thought, "If I write a good hashCode(), then I should never have to worry about collisions. But how do I write such a hashCode()?" Somehow, through his answer, I learned that the hashCode function isn't about uniquely mapping out your values amongst int, it's about distributing them nicely over it. Suddenly, everything I'd heard about this "hash code contract" was making sense.

In another note, Adam Siemon was at the beginning of what taught me not to worry as much about implementations. I was under the impression that, as a programmer, my responsibility was to make my code the best it could be. That meant that I had to optimize my hash code method to have a perfect distribution, right? Nay. When Adam compared my hand-coded method to the "one that Eclipse generates," I started to realize that maybe I don't have to code everything. Maybe I can let tools take care of some of these things for me. Maybe premature optimization is evil.


I don't know how Adam did it, but he managed to teach hash codes to someone who had never even heard the words "data structures" combined as such. In fact, looking at his answer now, I feel as if he cared more about my understanding the material than any computer science professor I've had so far. Thank you, Adam, for your effort.

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