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

88
  • 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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So I am putting forward my own answer to this question.

It isn't a particularly tricky question or the longest/most complete answer in the world.

However, the comment from gbn:

+1 Over clause is elegant – gbn Oct 7 '10 at 18:47

Is what really got me changed my way of thinking.

I was always of the opinion that people who were more "Senior" than me or had a large amount of reputation on Stack Overflow were always right. They always knew more than me, because, well they were Senior / had more rep. I didn't know everything and I was therefore not a very good developer (classic imposter syndrome?). I'd shy away from making my opinions known, avoid any technical suggestions I had.

After reading this small comment, something inside my brain clicked. I realised that just because a person was "senior" or had lots of imaginary "reputation", you simply can't know everything.

People who I'd previously assumed would not be interested in what I had to say, well, they didn't seem off limits anymore. GBN had a far higher rep than me and, if you've been active in the tag will know that he really knows his onions.

It was a small, off the cuff, compliment that changed my approach forever. I made my suggestions, I gave my opinions. Not all were right. Not all were accepted. They were all welcomed though.

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Update two TextViews inside a runnable

This is not a big story, but for me it has a nice meaning since it was my first answer to a Stack Overflow question. For a long time, I have been a user of Stack Overflow who just looked for an answer and never participated. Even, I never had the need to ask anything, since all the questions I happened to have were already solved by someone else before.

However, some months ago, I read the book Apprenticeship Patterns, which I recommend you to read, and I realized that I should try to contribute and help others by documenting my learning progress (so I decided to open a blog) and share the knowledge I have grasped in the past few years (so I started answering in Stack Overflow and opened a GitHub account to open source some pieces of code).

The answer I provided to the question above was not really very complex and many other people could have provided it, but for me, it was a nice feeling knowing that I helped someone in some other part of the planet who I don't know. I think it is some kind of magic that Stack Overflow makes possible, and I has become a tool for many developers to solve issues which might be difficult to solve by oneself.

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Gridwise application of the bisection method

Anyone who has worked with Python's spicy.optimize.minimize branch before knows how utterly complicated things can turn out to be, and how sometimes the cleanest most-senseful code just won't find that minimum or those roots you're after. Even worse, as soon as you try to scale this, and come up with vectorized solutions, you'll bang your head against a wall more often than there are lines in your code.

I was looking for a - duh - vectorized bisection method. Vectorizing the "Let's see whether a is now closer to 0 than it was before, and whether we need to increase it or decrease it" part was just above my head. I tried, and failed. And failed. Some genius in a different post had come up with a snippet that worked in that way, but I didn't understand what was happening. He gave me a rough overview of "First we do this, then we do that". But It was indexing magic in scipy/numpy, and indexing magic is just something I cannot wrap my head around. So I could stare at single lines and still not get it. The code worked for some time, and then, it didn't. It was like magic, but the bad kind.

And then this guy fixed it. He took that snippet - someone else's code, and explained it. That day I learned much about index magic. I've forgot most of it again, but that question is a favorite of mine now. And whenever I need to become an index magician, I have a quick look at it again.

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I actually have three different stories to pick from and a real hard time deciding upon one...
... but finally it was the most pleasant moment for me, to go above and beyond the usual scope of this site.

It was a low-traffic question asking a something quite unusual and you didn't have to be some kind of magic wielder to see that the OP was more on the beginner level in terms of "thinking like a developer" (no offense!).

After writing a quick answer to OPs original question I remember he had a follow up question in a now deleted comment. As his follow up question was a no-brainer I quickly edited my answer and he was already like "wow cool!".
After this it got obvious that his code had bugs and somehow my personal interest grew a bit, as this project he was working on sounded quite cool: an RPG on a virtual tabletop.
So I began inspecting his code, as he provided most of it in a GIST. I managed to track down most of the bugs. While we I was doing this we had a quite lengthy Q&A session in the comments to my answer (that got deleted and deservedly so!) where I explained general programming concepts, JS specifics and what I do to him.
Two hours into Q&A, bugtracking and answer-editing I went to sleep, although it threw a nasty NaN-exception. Nevertheless I already felt a bit satisfied. It was good to know that I helped someone with my knowledge and explanations.

You know how it is: if you have a big problem (code-wise), sleep a night and you may find the fix in no time. That was the case here. The next morning, when giving the code another look it struck me. A nasty little whitespace and a non-capital letter. I edited this into my answer, informed OP by a comment and a few hours later I just had a big grin for the rest of the day after reading

Awesome you totally rocked it!!

It was just the feeling of knowing that I really helped someone out, made them learn something new and showed them a few tricks. This was great and a ton of fun.

Unfortunately I didn't had the time to look at his follow up question and I don't know what happened to his project. Checking his user profile just shows that he isn't active anymore.

Nevertheless, this was by far the most memorable moment for me and an awesome feeling.


Now I just have to share another (short) story on how a comment can make you understand a whole world.

It was my first question on SO, shortly after I joined this awesome community.
I didn't expect the question to attract a lot of traffic, but after twenty minutes someone finally made a comment... and my brain was just like boom. I still know that @jcoders comment opened up the whole world of floating-point precision to me and made me connect the dots.
I knew about floating-point precision. I knew what it was and how it can be problematic. Unknowingly I wrote my own example code that even visualized a float-point precision problem, but I couldn't make a connection between my problem and the so-obvious answer. All it took was a small comment.

So... THANK YOU @jcoder - if you ever read this.

1
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The subtle semantics of Reference and Value types.

The answer I would like to call out is my own, but the helpful person is Jon Skeet. This story played out via comments and my own revision history. I had originally posted an answer that answered the question, but was not technically correct. Jon Skeet posted a comment dsagreeing with the wording of my answer, and through it, I learned a bit about references and value types.

I remember being frustrated at how picky Jon was being, but reflecting on it now, several years later, I realize that he was just trying to impart knowledge. I have since learned more about value types, references, objects, and how each are handled by the runtime.

1
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Last year I was put into my first web project which used JSF and Java EE. The EE stuff wasn't hard to learn as I had a long spring background and recognized the concepts which I've already used before.

But the JSF stuff was a tough beast. I spent so much time looking for best practices to adopt. Building a basic web application with JSF might be easy but with a claim of building user-friendly UIs eg. by providing early validation feedback, keeping states and so on complicates this a little bit pretty much. Also JSF is one of those technologies were you really have to consider the version you are using and the version a blog post or SO answer is talking about.

Almost always I googled (or SO'd) for a JSF-related problem I ended up with a stackoverflow question which was answered by BalusC. "Answered" doesn't fit here very well maybe "elaborated" is a better word? (Sorry I'm not a native speaker). What I want to say is that BalusC answers a question which consists of one sentence with an essay which fills three screen pages. In that he points out different ways for different JSF versions and tells you things which might answers follow-up questions. Instead of just grabbing the answer, upvoting and go on I often had the feeling of really learning something. GREAT!

I am very thankful for answers like this one on Differences between action and actionListener.

1
vote

Django i18n_patterns - How to prevent prefixing of non-active languages?

Django i18n_patterns - How to prevent prefixing of non-active languages?

I came across this question and decided to solve. Since I was not familiar with i18_npatterns, I spent a lot of time reading docs, SO, checking code to solve it. I tried couple of ways but using a third party package seemed to be simple solution.

After 1 hour of research, I posted a solution. I am very happy as I was able to find a simple solution (and I was also expecting a bounty as there were no answers).

After few hours OP posted a comment saying I didn't even understood the question and my answer wont work.

I double checked question & answer, they looked correct. OP was missing something and I don't know what it was. So, I created a demo project using the solution I have mentioned & asked OP to try it once and see if works out.

Later he tried that & found that he had to remove a middle ware to make it work and he was very happy it worked. I am very happy to help out OP :)

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vote

The day I stopped feeling like an impostor

I've already discussed this question a little bit in the discussion, Did the Red Baron hat motivate you to be a better Stack Overflow user?

In that post, I called the question a "diamond in the rough" and described the steps I took to reveal and polish that content, along with my answer. But I didn't really spend much time talking about how it felt because I wanted to see how others responded, first.

The truth is that every time I write a long, detailed answer, I worry that I'm putting my foot in my mouth. I think that's common enough, and for me it's a product of really valuing that level of knowledge that comes when something "clicks" so that you really understand, but not having the depth of experience myself that's evident in so many of the answers I've learned from.

Well this time, I found a problem that called out to me personally and made a connection with something I was involved in professionally. It was a complicated issue, broad in scope, and one that had led me around in circles on SO for more than a year already, piece by piece collecting and synthesizing solutions and approaches from different Q&A (plus more than a few trips to the library and—gasp!—sites other than SO). I was eager to share what I had learned but also afraid, as usual, that one of the giants whose shoulders (or, more likely, shins) I had scaled to reach my current level of understanding would come in and yank a critical Jenga block from my tower of knowledge, leaving me embarrassed and uncertain once again.

I avoided discussing the Q&A openly while the Winter Bash was still on, feeling like an attempt to leverage the meta effect to fulfill the hat requirements would only expose me as a fraud. And then, before I had time to write up the debriefing post on MSO, I received a comment from a trusted user with some very solid SQL credentials who said:

As someone who also does this, I agree. ...you capture the essential points.

If this sounds like a weak endorsement, what you have to understand is that my real-world experience on one project in no way guaranteed that I had taken the right approach. I had struck out on my own in an office that just wanted me to "do the thing" and offered no subject matter expertise for me to draw on, so this small nod from someone senior in the field to me was a huge validation of my efforts. Though the meta effect would bring in views and votes a few days later, it was this innocuous comment on top of the OP's acceptance, cooperation and gratitude that finally gave me that feeling of having passed some kind of entrance exam into Reasonable Competenceville after years of just muddling through.

In the end, maybe that's a big part of what I came to want out of Stack Overflow overall. Sure, it's an incredibly useful site; I got hundreds of answers to questions without having to ask them myself. I've always gotten a kick out of problem solving, sharing knowledge, explaining things and knowing they're understood (hard without body language to read). But beyond that, Stack Overflow provides a feedback loop that lets me assess myself, while constantly reminding me how much room there still is to grow. It keeps me in the game, so to speak, and reminds me in so many ways why I'm on this path at all.

1
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The day I realised about the power of the Open Source Community

Question: Error importing HoloEverywhere

Answer: https://stackoverflow.com/a/10888882/1397152

The story It was more than three years ago, I was a high school student who was learning programming. I was really interested in Android because I had adquired and Android phone recently and I knew some basic things about Java. It was also dark times, when we (Android devs) had to use Eclipse and import the libraries by hand. I was trying to import a library called HoloEverywhere. This library was a backport of the new Android theme, Holo. But unfortunately, I found some problems. I tried everything I had learned, but I was unable to run my app, so I deceided to ask a question in StackOverflow. And my question had no answers until three weeks later. But the answer was great! Finally, I could do a well designed app even for old phones!

What I learnt I learnt that when you need help, the community is there to help you. Even the developer of the library commented the question! This also indicates that you can be in touch with the people who develop those great libaries you use everyday. And they don't care about if you are a high school student or an awesom developer, they will try to answer your question.

1
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Determine Whether Two Date Ranges Overlap

This is one of my most used pieces of logic. My code before finding this answer was very complex. I thought it needed to be to catch all edge cases.

This is one of the answers that taught me that instead of writing lots of code and changing bits as you go, Stopping and having a real good think about the answer you are really looking for produces much more elegant and maintainable code

Thinking and planning code before just jumping in to write it has helped me produce much better code.

The answer both explains the problem really well, and keeps the solution really simple.

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When I realize I'm not the smartest person on the internet... ;)

The question, although this is more about the answers.

The question asks if it is better to use two separate blocks for error/success handling or a single one. I wrote an answer arguing for two separate ones. Soon after, another SO user posted this answer, arguing for a single block.

Me, knowing I was right ;) started commenting back and forth with this user on his answer (worth checking out). Little did I know, bbum is not as naive as I had assumed. After our semi-lengthy dialogue, anther user kindly pointed out: "bbum is an Apple employee, and was a NeXT employee too if that helps you make up your mind on this topic". Well, to say the least, I was a bit humbled.

It just blows my mind that I can have the opportunity to have real programming discussions with people of this caliber. I additionally learned that you truly never know who is behind the avatar. Although, I do not feel I was being disrespectful in our conversation, it is a good reminder to respect all peoples on the interwebs.

Thanks bbum and SO!

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The Question

How to solve "unable to switch the encoding" error when inserting XML into SQL Server (2010-09-21)

... and Using StringWriter for XML Serialization (2009-10-14)
... and Trying to store XML content into SQL Server 2005 fails (encoding problem) (2008-12-21)

The Answer

https://stackoverflow.com/a/8998183/751158 (2012-01-25)

(Full disclosure - yes, this is my own answer.)

The Story

3 near-duplicate questions over 3 years, already sharing over 15 answers - even including some involvement and an answer on the 2nd from the legendary Jon Skeet. (The dates are specifically listed next to each of the above links, as I think the expanded timeline here is an interesting part of this story.)

Other answers had already provided solutions that technically worked - but could be argued to be more work-arounds that resulted in additional "waste" of running XML through extra conversions (de-deserializations and serializations - to DOM, strings, or otherwise).

to actually teach something to ... anyone else that desired the knowledge going forward

Well over 1-3 years after the previous questions, I was able to contribute an answer that looks to have helped improve the understanding of what was actually happening here, and offer a potential better way of working with the interface. This seems to have been validated by voting - and to my surprise, another member was apparently appreciative enough of the information to award additional bounty points to the answer. This was all against ~3 years of "history" here across the various answers - and this answer wasn't only possible due to the typical advancements in the languages and product versions, etc. - but ideally would have been the approach followed from the onset.

The other part to this story is that this wasn't just an answer to someone else's question - but something that I was running into myself, which is why I found the "old" questions. At this point, I was taking a break from my regular Java/Oracle focus and working on a different project for a few weeks for another company written in .Net and SQL Server. As there were going to be some high transaction loads on the project, especially around the XML processing - I knew that performance was going to be critical - and running the XML through any such additional conversions would have been significantly and measurably wasteful.

Coming from more of a Java focus where I've repeatedly worked with similar concerns, I was sure that there had to be a better way of working with this in .Net as well. In the effort of researching my own original issue, this also resulted in another successful question/answer combination on SO at Most efficient way to read XML in ADO.net from XML type column in SQL server? - which then further contributed to my above answer.

So besides resolving my own quest for improvement, the completed effort was able to be shared to the benefit of the rest of the community as well. Additionally, as I always try to strive for - this wasn't only an answer as to "how" (as the other previous answers may have focused on), but an answer as to "why" - I.E., the "teaching" aspect. So as a credit to SO's advantages - most of the questions and content here are not posts that simply go into archive, or become irrelevant a few weeks past their original posting - but are part of an ongoing collaboration system where content continues to remain relevant across many years.

Stack Overflow is a community that I'm proud to be a part of.

1
vote

The question that made me learn a lot in an effort to explain something comlicated to a wider audience was Explain the proof by Vinay Deolalikar that P != NP

This question had an initial massively upvoted (+30) answer (now deleted) by paxdiablo, a user I greatly respect, saying

That's brilliant! Some uber-math guy creates a hundred page paper on one of the thorniest problems in CS and you expect a bunch of mere mortals to be able to summarise it into a couple of paragraphs on SO.

...

As well as several comments suggesting that no summary would be forthcoming on Stack-Overflow, as the subject was too complicated.

Being of a math bent, and taking the state of the question as a bit of a challenge, I started wading through the 100 page paper. The result after much digestion and worry that the summary would be overly simplistic, and may have missed some of the subtleties of the paper was my answer https://stackoverflow.com/a/3437115/221955

1
vote

Back when I first started at SO (I think less than 100 rep), I saw a question asking whether a server running PHP had been hacked. I'm not an expert at security, but it interests me a lot, so I decided I would try to figure out the code that OP posted and answer. I spent a few hours doing this, and it was often a tedious process deobfuscating the code. In an effort to provide real time updates to somebody who might have been compromised, I edited the question a LOT (22 revisions). I didn't understand the rules at the time, so it automatically switched to a Wiki while I was working on it. I got dinner in between the start of the answer and the finish (and I received some help from Jonathan Kuhn while I was eating).

What was learned, or at least I hope in any case, was how to figure out for oneself whether some strange-looking, obfuscated code is actually a problem. Instead of saying "yes, this is malicious", I provided a play by play account of how I deobfuscated the code. This involved base 64 decoding, linking to preg_replace issues, replacing variable and function names with meaningful names, and then analyzing the code to explain what it does. Afterwards, I tried to explain how to best clean up the server if restoring it from a backup was not an option. At the end, because you never know what's run on a compromised system, I explained that OP should restore the server from a backup.

My goal was to provide OP with the knowledge to repeat the endeavor himself, how to clean up the problem, how to prevent the problem in the future, and what's best to do in case any malware is installed. I'm sure the points spurred me on a little bit, but I answered the question to help OP and because it interested me.

1
vote

Two members taught me how to dig deeper rather than just giving me an answer, and taught me more than I even knew to ask.

They taught me to not just use a function in MATLAB but to examine toolboxes, open source code, and check how they evolve with each release. It was a fairly simple question a difference between two similar functions, but they taught me how to answer my own question.

I learned that in MATLAB you can view source code by running:

open('function_name')

I also learned that you can see what MATLAB toolboxes by running your code and then running:

license('inuse')

It always amazes me that people are willing to take the time to guide a newbie to finding an answer rather than simply giving the 2 second answer. They also were kind enough to warn me that while I had managed find out how to eliminate the unnecessary use of a toolbox for my current version of MATLAB, I would need to be aware of changes coming with the next release. By teaching me rather than simply telling me, I learned skills that have helped me solve other problems on my own.

THANK YOU!!!

1
vote

Question: Cloning Git repository throwing ArithmeticException

Although I asked and answered the question, the credit really goes to VonC for helping me research and debug, and I feel that he should get the answer swag for this one.

I was testing various behind-the-firewall git servers such as Github Enterprise and Atlassian Stash to use for some internal git repositories. I eventually came across the open source Bonobo server. I set it up and was testing various aspects of it and ran into a problem when performing a clone from it - only on specific repositories, and only during a clone.

I tried a few things and eventually asked this question on SO. VonC came along and decided to help, even though he had no straight answer to provide. He researched a few things and added a comment of a similar issue in another git server implementation. Although it didn't answer my question, it helped me debug further and I was able to reply. He then replied, and we went back and forth "talking" this out with each other for a bit. His last comment was very close to the solution, and eventually led me to figure out what the problem actually was. I implemented a fix and confirmed that I was able to clone the previously uncloneable repositories. Not only that, I was able to open a PR with the solution and provide it to everyone.

This, to me, sums up what is great about SO - someone took time out of their day to help me resolve a problem, even though they had no previous knowledge of the issue nor any reason to help anyway.

1
vote

How I learned about self-sizing cells

@smileyborg's answer: https://stackoverflow.com/a/18746930

One of the new tableView features in iOS 8 was self-sizing cells. Since tableViews have been a common theme in the apps I've worked on, I looked forward being able to eliminate having to calculate row heights in tableView:heightForRowAtIndexPath:

@smileyborg wrote one of the most detailed answers I've come across which has been viewed almost 200,000 times, and favorited by over 800 people.

As imagined, new features are generally accompanied by a new set of problems, and self-sizing was no different. Whenever an issue arose, @smileyborg would investigate it and update his answer and sample code.

The time he has invested and the knowledge he has shared has benefited countless developers. I've come to really appreciate Auto Layout and self-sizing because of his contribution to Stack Overflow.

1
vote

How I Learned To Send 100,000 E-mails Weekly And Love The Bomb

A cold, bright October afternoon has found me sipping coffee and idly browsing SO's newest questions in the php tag, when suddenly, an unassuming title caught my eye.

On my blog, I have 100.000 subscribers and I want to send them an update email weekly. How can I do that with PHP ?

This can't be. I wanted to stop the asker from venturing too far into the strange territory of the Elder Gods - for there are horrendous, nameless things lurking in the depths of the Net, thing mortals should not disturb, lest they lose their sanity. I should know: I had been there.

Not another programmer walking into the same hellhole into which I have naïvely entered some years earlier. It all flashed back to me: the CPU overloads, the infinite bounce loops, the assumptions of [a-z]{2,3}, the CAN-SPAM Act, the routing and delay issues, the fruitless days and nights of debugging, the blacklistings, whitelistings, greylistings and yellow-with-purple-dots-listings, the bit-eating crow, and worse. Moreover, I was sick and tired of describing all these things over and over and over again.

I have set to work, expanding my "Just Don't Do It" answer into something just as collosal and twisted as the unnamed horrors it describes. As the answer was taking shape, I have realized one thing: I have read many articles on Email Considered Harmful, but never a useful technical summary on the problems of running your mailing campaigns in-house. When I was done, the question was already closed as not constructive, its author derided as a spammer, but my job was done: I have tackled e-mail and defeated it. (Look how awesome I am, look at me!)

Since then, I have used this answer many times instead of needing to lecture on e-mails; and the link to the question keeps popping up in various places, which tells me that other people are also finding it useful. This gives me hope that SO has helped to diminish the unholy alliance of PHP and e-mail, doing what it stands for: making the programming world a saner place.

1
vote

The time I was waking up at 4-5am EST every day so that developers on the otherside of the world would help me.

So, at work I was told I needed to develop an Android Application from scratch and I know that was not my area of expertise or familiarity. I'm a software developer but I've been mostly coding in C# and on the .NET framework using Visual Studio. I remember a little a bit of Android/Java from one class I took. That's it.

So, I was given a few tasks and those tasks became the biggest learning curve of my life. Android was just... different. I had to memorize the activity lifecycle , how activities and fragments worked, their concepts of pagers and adapter, writing RAW SQL. Everything frustrated me and this project needed to be done in two months or so :(

I started to ask questions on Stack Overflow like a desperate person, hoping someone would explain why what I've done isn't working or isn't proper.

I want to give a shoutout to mmlooloo and stonebird especially (but really there were so many others that helped me on my Android development path). Both of them helped me with a problem that's been bothering me for weeks! mmlooloo helped me with understanding what a viewpager does and how to use one.

From this answer I found to answering my question on ViewPagers.

Stonebird was one of the most memorable ones that stayed on "continue this discussion in chat" when I needed help. Starting from this annoying problem I had that was hard to explain that I had to upload a video for the answerer to see the behavior and continuing to help me through another problem I was having.

His snarky response to asking for more help:

"@KalaJ you don't expect me to walk you through your app, do ya? :P"

Besides, asking question on SO. I learned the most from the StackOverflow chatrooms. Unfortunately, the main Android chatroom is locked and only for elite Android community members. There's a smaller one called "[iOS][Android][ChaosOverFlow]" and only for users with certain rep. I noticed most of the developers on there are from India or the other side of the world because it would almost always be empty when I'm working or during day here in the US. But they would be most active in the early hours of the morning, 4-8am.

So, I would tell myself, I don't have a mentor or someone to respond to my stupid questions... only them. So I'd wake up at 4-5am everyday asking a bunch of questions about Android and most of them are friendly. Berserk, I remember, helped me quite a bit among others.

Hardest period of my development life was learning Android but it was worth it :)

Now to the present? I'm back to developing in C# and I would love to give out a shoutout to the C# and WPF chatrooms! Very, very friendly people! NETScape and Reed Copsey helped me with my WPF questions and TravisJ, Charlie, Sippy,tweray, Kendall, etc.. with my C# ones. I am even appointed one of the room owners of C# and I would have never expected it (I only noticed after someone pointed it out to me!). I try to help out now when I can either on chatrooms or answering questions on my level on SO. StackOverflow is my virtual family :) The community is amazing and I owe my life to SO :)

I know the more I learn, the more I can give to others looking for knowledge as well :)

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  • It's difficult to tell which answer in those questions you're recognizing (you forgot to "link to the answer on the main site you're talking about"). Aug 26, 2015 at 15:15
  • Thank you for your suggestion. I'll edit my post :) I assumed the reader to know it would be the accepted answer.
    – Kala J
    Aug 26, 2015 at 15:25
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Stack Overflow taught me to be a developer. From scratch.

The Internet is lauded as the "great equalizer". On here everyone can have an equal chance to learn and do. Well, I came from a rural area in Nebraska, and I was home schooled. I didn't know what the Internet was until 2005, and I didn't have a computer until after that, and the Internet was still dial up.

Fast forward to 2011, when I decided to go to college. For some reason the adviser sent me to the IS&T college of the University and I signed up. I signed up with utterly no technical experience, computer experience, or knowledge of how computers worked, much less a knowledge of programming.

My first post on Stack Overflow was during a class in C programming. The only comment I got was "If you are asking this dumb of a question you obviously do not know how the language works". I repentantly deleted my question and abandoned all contributions to the snobby website Stack Overflow and read the articles from the safety of anonymity.

Then! In 2014 I had the fortune to get a wonderful IT internship for computer hardware support. Within several months I had been assigned several programming projects with ASP.NET and MVC, including SQL Server usage and Visual Studio. I had never even seen one of those frameworks/programs much less used any of them. My school, in its infinite wisdom, only allowed students to program in Unix and Java so I was woefully unprepared for such a task. Stack Overflow was my instruction on everything from Visual Studios shortcuts to overwriting C# classes. I finally joined the site again and I try to help those who "obviously don't know what they are talking about" because that's how you start, right?
I have beeing working on a Single-Sign-On system for multiple in-house sites. I have basically lived on Stack Overflow trying to figure that process out over the past few months. Thanks to stephan.vikal for helping me with allowing anonymous access to an MVC web application secured with SSO. And thank you to all you other geniuses who taught me to program. I joined again and posted questions just so I would have enough credit to upvote the answers that saved my life every day.

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I learn more from answering questions than asking:

My Answer: how to enlarge text in gagawa graph?

This was actually my first answer on StackOverflow, and it was to fulfill a bounty!

I had seen the problem, and began researching. I found a website that contained the source code for the package this questioner was using, and trawled through that for several hours. Still being new to programming, I was looking for problems to solve and came across that question.

Initially, for me, it was hard. I'm still new to programming in general; it's only my second year in college, and my first in the workforce. I had used standard input/output and had a basic grasp of objects and such, but I never really looked into libraries to see how they worked. For some reason, I really wanted to answer that question, so I set to work. I started by googling for the package name and source, and ended up at the grepcode.com website, where I first met the Javadoc. It was here that I learned quite a lot about patterns, object usage, and was the first time I had met the final keyword.

It was also here that I learned how distant college curriculum is from real world application. In fact, the most important things I have learned about programming have been from my coworkers and this website.

I digress; after reading into the source code, I realized that I could not set the Font object since it was a final variable. I also noticed that the class itself was not final, and so I crafted another class that did the same thing, but added that functionality of modifying the Font object. When my answer was accepted and the bounty given to me, I was so pleased with myself. I only noticed afterwards, however, that another user had answered the question with another way of solving the problem.

Unfortunately, the questioner never commented or said anything back, however, I was happy enough with the result. I'm glad to be able to help, even with my limited knowledge. :)

Another one of my massive explanation answers that I enjoy even more is this question: Java Mahjong Game - Help Implementing a hand reorganizing that shifts JLabels away from where I drag my chosen piece Similar, linked: Shifting the contents of the `ArrayList` to the right

My answer was the only one, and I even included pictures detailing how the code worked behind the scenes in both questions. The questioner had a bit of trouble understanding my answer at first, but three edits later, he was wowing at how dedicated I was to answering his questions.

I always seem to find myself learning more than the person asking the question, as I often get side tracked during the research I do to provide an answer. It usually starts off with me looking for similar stackoverflow answers, then delving through the googles for more in-depth information.

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The question which turned me into a Stack Overflow addict

The question can be found here and my answer to it here.

The Story

When I answered this question I already had over one hundred answers under my belt and if I remember correctly a little over 2000 reputation. However Stack Overflow was still pretty new to me. I had created my account just a few months earlier and was answering pretty much as many questions as I could. Most of them were quite simple and of low quality but every upvote I got excited me.

But then came along the question How to slide the ActionBar along with the NavigationDrawer from Android F0X. It took me a long time to write the answer, refine it, test it one many different devices and overall it was the first answer I invested a lot of effort and time into. I feel like I went well above and beyond what the question originally asked for and provided an answer I personally still am very proud of. Suffice it to say that from that point on I was hooked.

I started to care way less about my reputation and started to really care about the quality of my contributions to the site and about Stack Overflow in general. I gradually put a lot more effort into my answers and most of all I started being more picky about the questions I choose to answer. And that drive is still what keeps me browsing Stack Overflow and other sites in the Stack Exchange network multiple times every day.

Reading interesting questions and answers and providing answers to challenging problems or simply helping someone understand how or why something works is what Stack Overflow is all about for me and that is also the reason why I love this site so much. Every time I have a few minutes to spare you can be sure that I am spending them on Stack Overflow.

While I certainly don't post as many answers as I once did when I finally do post one I put a considerable amount of effort into each and every one of them. Because of that I am just really glad that there was this one question which made me discover my passion for Stack Overflow.

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I almost missed this - better late than never.

I've been a Stack Overflow user for almost five years, so there were a lot of questions and answers to sort through. So many people have provided me with excellent answers that I find it difficult to select a single answer. But I finally decided on this one:

How to point OpenSSL to the root certificates on an Android device? (answer by jww)

I was in the process of porting Git to Android for an application I was developing and needed to enable access to remote repositories over HTTPS. After a significant amount of configuration, I was finally able to compile OpenSSL using the toolchain provided by the Android NDK. After resolving some more issues, I finally managed to get Git itself to build.

My excitement quickly turned to disappointment when I attempted to run git clone with an HTTPS URL. As the question states, I ended up with the error message: The SSL certificate is invalid..

At this point, I began brainstorming alternatives, such as using SSH. I tried building OpenSSH but ran into all kinds of bugs. Even after fixing them (and submitting patches upstream), the openssh client would just crash with SIGSEGV. In desperation, I returned to the original plan of using HTTPS.

I finally concluded that OpenSSL was validating the certificates against an empty list of root certificates and rejecting everything. Because I use Ubuntu, I'm used to having all of my certificates in /etc/ssl/certs. Unfortunately, Android appeared to have no equivalent.

Then I asked my question.

After a few weeks, user jww posted his answer. And what an answer. It carefully documented exactly where the certificates were distributed in the filesystem both for past and present versions of Android. He also went into detail on why I couldn't simply "point" OpenSSL to these directories and expect everything to work.

The suggested alternative was to use a certificate bundle from cURL or an organization like Mozilla who have already decided whom to trust.

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The story I would like to share is about this answer of mine: How to avoid bash command substitution to remove the newline character?

The answer started out by pointing out a common (and trivial) problem of OPs code, where he forgot to quote his variable. Being a trivial typo, at that point did not expect the answer to be read by anybody other than the OP.

However, the OP of the question had misdiagnosed the problem, and thought that the command substitution was removing the newlines in his output, so his title asked how to avoid process substitution to remove the newlines. In fact, there is a strange feature of process substitution that removes all trailing newlines in the command output, so some people commented on the answer with workaround on how to prevent removing the trailing newlines. Over time, I gathered the different workarounds from the comments, and integrated them to the answer.

Long story short, a trivial typo-question was converted to a way more general and useful question/answer, that since has been receiving a steady stream of upvotes over time, and now is my second highest scoring answer.

The conclusion of this story is twofold: 1) It is often hard to tell from before if a question is useful or not. Sometimes a trivial typo may reveal a more general problem that is useful to many people. 2) That I really want a stack overflow t-shirt :)

enter image description here

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Kyralessa's answer to how-do-you-undo-the-last-commit is totally awesome.

Several years ago, I was at a college hackathon with two of my friends, and we decided to use Git for version control. We were all git noobs at the time, but since everyone else was using and preaching git, we had to use git :)

All was good until 4am, when our webapp started to throw up left and right. After an hour of groggy, energy drink fueled debugging, we decided that our best option was to "go back in time". All of us were confused with how to properly undo several commits. We were scared to roll back, because we didn't know what we were doing and could potentially nuke our repo. It didn't help that git provides so many different options to effectively undo our changes.

After searching on Google, we were directed to this answer. The accepted answer gave a quick and dirty summary of the relevant portion of the git docs, but this answer was different. The text diagrams with pointers to commits gave us insight to how git works under the hood, in a easy to understand format that our sleepy brains could understand. It was also reassuring that the answer mentioned git reflog to find destroyed commits if the worst happens. After reading that answer, we all had that lightbulb moment:

A HA!

Armed with this newfound knowledge, we confidently "traveled back in time" to when our webapp worked properly. We didn't win anything at the hackathon, but we left feeling like winners anyways because we learned how to navigate through the git commit history.

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  • Hey, thank you for the kind mention! (I didn't see this until just now, because just now I got an e-mail from JNat about it.)
    – Ryan Lundy
    Mar 14, 2016 at 20:38
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When Stack Overflow helps settle my disputes

The Question: Literal vs Constructor notation for primitives, which is more proper for starters? posted by myself

The Answer: https://stackoverflow.com/a/21395784/3149020


The Story Behind it:

While a good amount of the story is actually in the question itself, I would like to share my personal preferences about how it developed and help me with my confidence. Basically it came down to a dispute between me and a professor for a client-side programming class. Most of the things taught in class I agreed with, but there was one thing I felt was not a proper way to teach. Note that the instructor highly appreciates me and takes my comments seriously.

The problem basically is in the question. Before I asked I felt that I was correct and have enough knowledge and experience in web development to know that, but of course I want to see what others think, and better understand where the teacher could be coming from. And so I asked this question on Stack Overflow.

(This was back then when I was new to the site. I now understand that this question is not a perfect fit for Stack Overflow, hence why it's closed.)

It turned out most people have agreed with my point of view, and that the teacher was encouraging poor practice that could cause harm or give odd problems to the coded programs students make.

Oddly enough the answer was given by another teacher in the field. This experienced help me have more confidence in when I taught others and talked about web development in general. Along with that helping to improve the education of my school and classes. Of course, I still have much more to learn.


More Notes

These are just my experiences in general on Stack Overflow. There have been several questions I've answered that were great learning experiences for me and the OP. There are too many to list here, so I'll just give a more general information.

I've had plenty of accounts where I had to gradually teach and explain certain concepts for others, and there isn't nothing quite like seeing a student finally "getting it", both on Stack Overflow and in students I've help taught in general.

Whether it was an easy to answer question, or one where I really had to put along of time and research in to answer; seeing the OP's delight in having a solution (along with seeing others seeing that I've helped them) was always worth it.

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Seeing lots of complex questions (way above my head at the moment) but SO is not only great for the experts, but for anyone, the beginners, intermediates, whatever, as the question/solution/story I've elected shows.

All in all, thanks SO for helping me (and everyone) and at unholy times in the morning!

Question - MVC 5 Dynamic Rows with BeginCollectionItem - asking what is the best way to add/delete rows to a table when I was starting out with MVC after using web forms initially.

Solution - Originally, I didn't use BeginCollectionItem as was suggested in the comments and instead got something working using multiple Partials, it did what I wanted, but isn't the best way of doing this, which is what was suggested to me, I am yet (now-ish) to give an improved answer, using the suggested (and brilliant) BeginCollectionItem.

Story - After university I wound up in an IT Support role, however I wanted to get into the programming industry, so enrolled into a course doing .NET to add to my CV. Throughout the course and afterwards in searching for a development job SO was there. Helping me learn, improve, and occasionally managing to help others along the way. Eventually landing a .NET dev role.

I highly doubt this little story is in anyway unique, more to add my gratitude to what Stack Overflow has done and will continue to do, not only for me, but for many others.

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  • Oh god. I spent days trying to get something like that to work. That NuGet packaged helped, but has some issues of its own. I've come to accept that MVC & razor just wasn't meant to do that. Next time, I'll just add a webforms page to the project and be done with it.
    – RubberDuck
    Nov 7, 2015 at 10:52
  • Aha yes - typically it was my first MVC project as I wanted to get away from Web Forms at work and try something new. It would have been so much easier in WF, hey-ho, BCI is a wonderful thing. I don't know why it isn't supported in MVC - sure there's a good reason. Nov 8, 2015 at 11:16
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Question

The question was about the Sieve Of Atkin implementation and why it was not working.

How It Helped Me

I was originally just looking for an implementation to calculate something for school; however, I got interested in how the sieve itself was derived, so as I started to research mathematical functions and their derivations, and it gave me much more appreciation for maths and mathematical programming, and so I've been learning as much math as I could since that point in time (not so long ago), and it has been a large help, both in improving my (lackluster) programming skills by forcing me to try new things when making custom mathematical functions, and my calculus skills (by making those custom functions).

It also got me to give Python a try (at the time I was using C++), and it has turned from a language I only used for some very basic functions to my favorite language due to its many advantages over C++. Due to this change in the learning curve, programming (and mathematics) went from being something to do when I was dying of boredom to a hobby that I do as often as I possibly can.

That single answer changed my daily life altogether, and I have learned infinitely more than I thought I ever could about computers, in that short journey since that day; and I hope to continue to do so for a very long time.

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First thank you Stack Overflow for being here and to all the people, a great example of democracy.

The question

JavaScript/JQuery: $(window).resize how to fire AFTER the resize is completed?

The answer (not the accepted)

JavaScript/JQuery: $(window).resize how to fire AFTER the resize is completed?

The story

Some years ago I was building a generic jQuery resize handler, and sadly a good CSS3 grid system wasn't enough, so I wrote a function that made some calculation on resize and move-show/hide many elements accordingly. But the resize event fires too often and sometimes the website hangs...

I was googling for days and finally found this answer. This solution teached me three things:

  1. Underscore.js: I didn't use it, and it was a good occasion to learn a new, great, library
  2. debouce: oh dear, the keyword that solved my issue!
  3. The great Paul Irish (read more for details)

I was thinking about a timer, but it seemed to be too much "hard-coded", but now I knew the correct key to search more deeply: debouce.

But why did this happen? I found the Paul Irish blog and a great post about this (Debounced Resize() jQuery Plugin), so:

In IE, Safari, and Chrome many resize events fire as long as the user continues resizing the window. Opera uses as many resize events, but fires them all at the end of the resizing. Firefox fires one resize event at the end of the resizing.

And the explanation:

This isn’t exactly throttling, but it’s close. Basically debouncing will fire your function after a threshold of time (e.g. 100 ms) has elapsed since the last time it’s tried to fire. Throttling would withhold subsequent firings, but debouncing waits for the last one and runs that.

What this story teach me

Keywords are not important; they are fundamental! Before starting to search too much, stop, breathe and think if you are searching for the right key concept; thanks again Stack Overflow!

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Android ImageView crazy parameters

I was trying to add a border inside an ImageView in Android when I started to experiment strange behaviours if I added it ScaleType parameter. Stack Overflow was there to help me, always there is somebody whose had the same problem before than you so I tried the answer marked as solution, what normally is the best option.

But this time something was wrong. The solution was not a real solution; it was a workaround, and I was completely sure that there must be something that fixes the problem in a clean way, so I went to the Android documentation and surprisingly the solution was there! XD.

So I published the solution there to avoid people to dig into the Android documentation and to save the precious time of a developer.

My answer was never accepted as the solution, but everyone that had the same problem voted it up and took it as the real one.

So one of the greatest things of Stack Overflow is that the community, being critics, can increase the value of the answers even if they are not marked as solutions and helping everyone to improve.

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