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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I spend some time way out on one of the long tail of little-used, have yet to issue a bronze badge tags, specifically the intersystems-cache tag.

The original poster was asking about how to solve a problem with old MUMPS code that used a particularly poor part of the language - how it deals with I/O such as sockets. Each implementation of MUMPS has hard-coded ways of dealing with I/O, and there isn't really a way to change it or mock it, and it makes working with such code particularly difficult. This question asked about how to write your own device handler, which is a big missing feature that causes untold pain. Unfortunately, the language has no way to do this..

Except, it turns out it does. Someone who works in support at Intersystsems, a MUMPS vendor, published an undocumented but stable way to do this, which solves an enormous problem with no other work around.

This is why Stack Overflow exists. Before it did exist, that answer would never have been shared where people could find it. It's not an issue very many people will ever face, but for those that do this will save them a really huge amount of time.

And it's just one question out of 10 million. A little question, with only a couple of hundred views. It won't look like much statistically, but it probably is worth hundreds of hours for each of the couple dozen people who actually use it. Time that would have been wasted if Brandon Horst had answered Chris Smith in an email, instead of on SO.

I would be thrilled if you sent Brandon a T-shirt. I hope Intersystems does more of its support via SO in the future.

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  • Thank you for the kind words! I no longer work with ISC or any MUMPS-related thing, but it's such a great feeling to know that I helped somebody. I will wear the t-shirt with pride :) Mar 14, 2016 at 20:06
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votes

I like Haskell. I think it’s a fairly well-designed language, and it allows you to express reasonably abstract concepts without much trouble. That abstraction is also a stumbling block for persons learning Haskell: doing so much as printing “Hello, world!” will involve using a monad, and monads, due to their abstractness, have proven to be difficult to understand at first. While monads are the most notoriously difficult-to-understand concept, they are not alone.

One day, I stumbled across this question. I read the title and it seemed to be a relatively simple question with a relatively simple answer: an Applicative lift over a tuple constructor and you’d be done (with some explanation about what exactly that does, of course). Now, when I read the body of the question, I was pleasantly greeted by an existing attempt to abstract the problem. Looking more closely, I saw that they were reinventing a specialization of a standard library function.

Going back to monads, one popular monad tutorial tries to explain them by showing a common problem, how you might go about solving it, and then showing how what you invented along the way was actually a monad. Creating something without the abstraction, and then bringing in the abstraction as a generalization of your existing concept, seems an effective way of breaking down the learning curve behind abstract concepts. Given that from this question I had just witnessed a specialization being invented, I figured I’d point out how it was a special case of the general existing idea of a Functor.

That out of the way, I was able to show how that existing concept had already been extended to encompass one particular type of use case that was asked about. At that point, I think it would have been a good answer to a good question. But the question also brought up something more complicated, something I wasn’t entirely sure how to do at first. I had to think about it a while before coming up with an answer to that part and adding it to my answer. It’s these questions that bring up subtler points that I might not have thought about before, that require some extra thinking to figure out how to do, that I really enjoy answering.

After all was said and done, I received positive feedback from the user asking the question, and another user hailed my answer as the canonical answer on the subject, of which I am pleased. It’s not a very popular question, having only 111 views at the time of writing, but I am sure that anyone else coming across that question having that problem will come away from it having learned something, which is always a wonderful occurrence.

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votes

Back to basics for a beginner

I'd like to share the story of one my answers, on the question Need to create an array to reveal correct letters.

It is neither a popular question nor answer, with a small 51 views, but it is the moment I found the most rewarding in my 'StackOverflow career'.


I stumbled upon a user which was "hopelessly lost" with his C# program, on what could be seen as a fairly basic question.

It could have easily been answered with a bit of LINQ or some 'more advanced' C# features and minimal code. However, the user appeared to be pretty new to programming. A quick answer could solve his problem now, but would not help him understand at all what is going on.

So I took the long road. Relying only on fairly basic programming notions (arrays, for loops, and so on) that I'm pretty sure he is familiar with, I started from his code and showed him how to improve it to solve his problem, step by step, explaining every detail. I could have easily skipped what he did and solved it right away, but I am sure he worked very hard to get where he was. Instead of ignoring everything he did, I used it as a foundation, to show what could have been improved and why.

That way of answering was quite different of my other 'right to the point' answers, but man, it did pay off:

You were a big help. I like that you took the time to work with my code instead of suggesting a ton of changes that would make all my work a moot point. Also the fact that you took it step by step and explained it to me was extremely helpful. thank you!

It was the first time that I got feedback indicating I really helped someone. Seeing a 'green tick' is always rewarding, but nothing can beat the feeling of having helped someone on that level.

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votes

I recently saw this post and I thought I’d share a little story that happened with me just a few days ago actually. First of all, I’m not an expert in HTML or CSS. So I was attempting to refine my skills w/HTML and/or CSS in order to not only have a better understanding of CSS properties but also, learn how these specific properties affect different HTML tags. I was playing around w/the button tag and wanted to get the rounded corners effect that is so visible nowadays throughout the web. After finding border radius helps w/that, I implemented border radius to my CSS but soon I realized that my button was getting “dark” on the sides. I had no idea what was happening. I was pretty lost. The people who helped me out didn’t know that I actually attempted to search for this online for many hours. Not being a HTML/CSS I wasn’t able to describe this problem, hence google was not able to give me the results I wanted. Like there are times when everyone knows the problem but its sometimes hard to write that question out, you know? I guess I was just having one of those days…Anyways, after a few hours of just hitting myself on the head and getting frustrated, I decided to ask that question (hoping someone would understand my reasoning) to the stack community.

Here is my question:

HTML button (part of button is dark)

In a matter of just a few minutes, I received three answers that all conveyed the right answer as well as resources of what else I should look into. I was so happy and delighted just to be able to find an answer to my solution especially since it was bothering me so much. Honestly, I know its a simple question but I can’t even describe the level of happiness and elatedness I felt!

The answer : https://stackoverflow.com/a/32134923/5140373

Now the interesting comments started appearing…

The user @KhrisAzuaje basically started commenting on how this is such an easy question and how he had low reputation compared to me and his comments honestly, really made me feel very disappointed. Before I had even posted this question, I had this same exact feeling that this is an easy question and that the Stack community is so intellectually advanced that they will see this as a trash question and bash me for asking such a low level question but I mustered up the courage to ask it anyways, because I wanted to learn.

Moreover, the premise of the stackoverflow community was built on the idea to help developers of all skill levels so after thinking for a bit, I realized that there was no problem w/asking this question. As a result, I responded to this user’s comments as you can see from the post. I’ll summarize what I said. This person clearly seemed very disappointed that he would answer questions yet he would never be chosen as the “best answer” hence not earning stack rep. And what I emphasized is that I’ve come across so many answers that have not been selected as the best answer yet I’ve learned so much and I’m sure I’m not the only one who feels the same. But at the end, it seemed like he understood my point of view and I felt glad that he didn’t take anything personally but rather put importance on the premise and learning aspect of Stack rather than Stack rep.

From this, I just want to give a big shout out to everyone on stack who answer questions regardless if it becomes a best answer or even if a best answer has already been chosen. You don’t understand the impact you make on the developers ALL AROUND THE WORLD and that’s something to be proud of! People always say they want to help others and make an impact on the world, and I want to emphasize that all the users of Stack make an impact in one way or another EVERY SINGLE DAY. Everyone is a very knowledgeable developer and those who aren’t, become experts through the knowledge that is shined upon by the very highly intelligent individuals. You guys are all awesome and without all you guys, this community would be as large as it is today!

Btw, my intention was not to single out anyone through this post. It was something I experienced and it said to get in detail, hence, I did. I hope the moderator sees this and gives @KhrisAzuaje some swag as well.

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votes

I've thought this over, and I can't really pick out a top Q&A, but I would like to take this opportunity to highlight some of my top answerers.

Looking through my questions, I've roughly been through 3 phases since Stack Overflow started: F#, then git, then Rx framework.

For F#, I found Tomas Petricek ALWAYS goes above and beyond. Brian too (though he hasn't been back in a while)

For git VonC is the fount of all (my) knowledge, he's the answerer who just keeps on giving.

And finally, for Rx, James World and Enigmativity stand out.

(The question/answer into which I personally put the most effort was probably this one, which was - ironically - mostly for my own interest.)

2
votes

Such a Simple Answer but I Learned So Much

The answer I want to talk about is quite innocuous but it is part of the main reason I have been active on StackOverflow recently, earning 685 reputation in August 2015 and placing in the top 0.87% for August 2015.


Why Did I Need This Answer?

In October 2014 I begun my PhD in the area of computational electromagnetics really not knowing what was in store for me. It was to be a continuation of the work done during the project in my Bachelor's degree. During this project I worked exclusively with Matlab implementing iterative solvers, like the Conjugate Gradient, and solving indoor electromagnetic propagation problems. I grew very a depth at the matrix nature of Matlab and utilising shortcuts to write efficient programs. I now know I was naive and didn't understand the pain staking efforts that had gone in to developing Matlab and making it so easy for somebody like me to implement efficient programs without the need for very expensive and elaborate loops.

Anyway fast forwarding over the summer from the completion of my Bachelor's degree to the beginning of my PhD. My supervisor and I thought it would be a great idea and very easy to implement my current Matlab programs in C or C++, parallelise them and run them on a supercomputer. Oh, how wrong we were!

I had grown so accustomed to the ease of Matlab and was about to leave it for the complex field of High Performance Computing. One of the key optimisation techniques I had used in my programs to accelerate my solutions involved an element wise vector vector multiplication which is exactly what was asked for in this particular question. This was something I had searched long and hard for and leveraging the BLAS documentation was unable to see how I could achieve it without using a dreaded for loop! Alas! My search ended when I came across this answer by finnw. This answer came over 1 year after the question had been asked and answered by the OP but more accurately answers the question and more importantly provides the solution I needed.

Looking Closer at the Answer

finnw when writing his answer was very unselfish and only thought of the betterment of StackOverflow and the benefit he would provide to people down the line in years to come. As such his answer has risen to the top of the answers list and garnered 3 times more votes than the accepted answer.

The answer has many good aspects. It is very clear and the succinct pictorial description makes it very easy to understand what is going on behind the scenes. It really made me think about what I am using and how I should keep a more open mind to finding solutions. I also learned about the extern keyword which has become quite common in my C programs as of late.

The useful of finnw's answer has now made me an active member of the StackOverflow community and deserves recognition for that.

2
votes

That time I helped someone get over 300 up-votes

Once upon a time there a question where someone wanted to make custom markers in the Google maps api. Google Maps API 3 - Custom marker color for default (dot) marker

I answered the question with what the OP felt was a less than desirable response, but he accepted it anyways. A few months later someone came a long and was inspired by my answer to get closer to what the OP wanted. This answer was accepted and grew in both fame and fortune.

Sometimes an accepted answer will scare people off. I mean, what are the odds the OP even cares anymore? But this guy saw a dissatisfied OP and was able to get closer to what he wanted.

2
votes

Answer to "Global touch gesture in Android?"

Since I've started developing apps for Android some three years ago I often focused on implementing functionality at the limit of what is possible. Usually, this involved root access or exploiting (obviously) unintended behavior of Android's internals, resulting in apps being incompatible with later Android versions where such behavior was changed/fixed. Still, I found something else in Android opening many possibilities but (mostly in the past) lacking from complete and useful documentation, references, and examples: AccessibilityServices. Personally, I like to describe them as one of the hidden gems in Android, little known but very powerful.

When I found the said question, "Global touch gesture in Android?", I already knew two things:

  1. Many or even most developers would say "it can't be done" because of platform restrictions like privacy-related limitations, security impact, etc. and
  2. It can be done and I've a good idea how.

Detecting gestures within one's own app is an easy task in Android. The problems basically start when doing something like this globally, if another app is running. Having spent much time working with AccessibilityServices I was familiar with their wide-reaching capabilities. Things "normal" apps can't do like accessing other apps content (Views) and even interacting with them are possible using AccessibilityServices. Even more, they are the perfect (and maybe only) candidate for a solution to this problem.

After taking a refreshing look at the corresponding information in the reference I quickly found the specific feature (a flag in this case) to enable such a global touch gesture detection in Android. Together with some additional information, e.g., general hints about AccessibilityServices, I posted my answer. Promptly, I was rewarded with a comment starting with "This is very knowledgeable. Thank you!" As a rather new contributor such a comment was very endorsing. After a short comment answering a related question by the original poster I was again thanked with "That is understandable. Once again, thank you." To me, sharing such largely specialized knowledge in an understandable fashion was and still is a great experience, especially being able to answer such a question with "yes and here's how" where others would say "no".

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I'm not entirely sure if it fits the criteria or not, and it might be bad form to be posting my own answer, but...

Answering this question made me "get" SO

I work in Web Application Security, and I've been doing it for a few years now; it always kind of upsets me that almost everything I know about my field I learned "on the job" rather than from college or reading I'd done in the past. I feel like it's an important field, and it really gets neglected by most CS programs and tutorials that aren't specifically geared toward security.

So, when I saw this question come up, asking for an explanation of some XSS injection strings, I thought I'd answer it; my rep wasn't (and over a year later, still isn't) by any stretch very high, and it seemed like a sort of niche question that could potentially earn me some decent rep. So I wrote one of the most detailed answers I've ever written for it. It's not a super stellar answer compared to tons of the absolutely brilliant ones I've seen on SO, but it's the first answer I really put a lot of effort into, because I was really interested in teaching the concepts of XSS testing to the asker.

Proud of my formatting, step-by-step explanation, and generally (in my opinion) very good answer, I submitted it and waited for the rep to pour in.

And waited.

And waited.

That answer has been there for almost a year, and to date it hasn't been accepted, and still only has two upvotes; the answer that I consider to be the best I've ever written hasn't even been accepted. And at first, I was really miffed about it, but then I realized that getting the reputation wasn't the point of trying to teach these concepts, teaching the concepts was, itself, the point. And that's when I realized that I shouldn't be answering questions just to get a higher rep (which is pretty much exactly what I had been doing), but to share knowledge I have that others might not.

I haven't answered a question since then, not because I've given up on doing so, but because I want to answer questions that mean something to me, that really teach instead of just doing a glorified LMGTFY.

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votes

How to get Docker to run on a Windows System behind a corporate firewall?

As anybody using Docker in a corporate environment is aware of, its support for running behind a proxy server isn't - uhm - great. When starting to use Docker, I immediately ran into the same issues as in the question (and I'm not even using Windows). When I found the answer, I was speechless - this answer included every possible detail on how to use Docker with a proxy server. The answer had been updated several times with more recent information, and VonC had even created a GitHub project to open source some of his work in this area.

I think I even left a comment along the lines of "Epic answer" under the answer, but it looks like the comment has been deleted since (might have done that myself - can't be sure...).

Anyway, when looking for answers in the Git tag, you can be sure that VonC is always one of the first to answer, and his answers are always full of information (links to the Git source code, links to other questions/answers, etc.). When I find such an answer, I know that there's valuable information in there that addresses the question - that's a sign of quality. He doesn't simply provide you with a one liner that solves the problem, he goes into detail (why is this working, how does it work, when was this added) to make sure that people learn more about the topic, without forcing his superior knowledge of the topic down your throat :-)

2
votes

So, What’s a Number?

Do you think you know? Are you sure? Think again. I thought I knew until I read this answer by Tom Christiansen, a recognized Perl and Unicode guru.

This is a perfect example of an eye-opening answer written with out of the box thinking. If you're looking for a "Falsehoods programmers believe about numbers" article, it would clearly be that post.
Most people think this is a very simple topic and dismiss it as a solved problem. This answer shows there's much more to it just by asking a few questions which reveal the broadness of the topic and all the details you couldn't possibly think about. The big picture is more complicated than what we're used to.

The whole thing started as being another answer to another "how do I match a number with regex??" question. I remember I first stumbled on it by simply following a duplicate link...
And the sand produced the pearl (pun intended). This is a prime example of what I enjoy the most about Stack Overflow: sometimes you find a really interesting answer, which goes way beyond what's expected. You can tell only by looking at it that Tom put a ridiculous amount of effort into that one, and I want to thank him for that, and for his overall history of awesome answers (just check his top answer to date - if your browser can cope with it - I could write a similar post about that one too).

2
votes

Java has type erasure. What about C#?

Looking through C# questions on Stack Overflow, I came across this question about generics:

What is reification?

At that time, I knew that Java implemented generics through type erasure, but I had never stopped to think about how they were implemented in C# and the CLR. For me, C#'s implementation of generics was done through "not type erasure".

Theodoros Chatzigiannakis' answer was helpful beyond what was asked of it, because, besides explaining what type reification was, it also compared it to other languages (C++ and Java) and explained how generics worked in each of those other languages (in C++ it's actually templates, which are a bit different from generics). This explanation gave me an overview of how generics can be implemented and what the pros and cons of each implementation are.

One example of something I learned from this question is why C# allows you to use value types (e.g. int, double) as generic type arguments without boxing, while Java does not.

A stepping stone

Theodoros' answer served as a basis for further understanding of generics. It made me think of why some languages have certain restrictions with generics beyond what was written in the answer. With the knowledge I gained, I was able to reason about further doubts, such as why C++ templates allow you to write code that only works for arithmetic types, but C# does not. Essentially, it's because C++ compiles the code once for each template type, while C# compiles it once and requires all operations on the generic type to be valid for any possible generic type.

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votes

When I came in the world of coding I was really lost. I think that almost everyone was in this situation, because when you have some kind of experience in any programming language it's easier learning a new one, but du you remember the FIRST time that you saw some kind of code?

So I was in that situation. Almost everything was a challenge for me, everything I tried to code seemed difficult, so I spent hours looking for troubles related on the Internet... And it surprisingly I always ended on Stack Overflow. I didn't ask anything because I always thought that anybody will answer because I couldn't believe that someone could spent his/hers time on answering my newbie questions.

I continued forming as a programmer, and, of course, Stack Overflow kept solving my unasked questions. Suddenly, one day I couldn't find the answer to one of my problems. I was about going crazy, so I decided to put my first question and you can imagine my surprise when I got an answer, in less than a couple of hours. After trying the solution, I could prove that it worked. I was glad with Stack Overflow thinking that it saved my life with such an answer.

I kept posting some questions, and I thought that the only way I could help was making clever questions. The other day I came across with one of my questions (this), and I could see that it had been seen more than 900 times. That made me feel that I had helped a few people with that. Then I went to the unanswered section, and I could see a question that I could answer. This was THE ANSWER, it was chosen as the correct one and make me feel good. That feeling made me know that you don't have to be an experienced programmer to help on Stack Overflow. There are a lot of issues which you can solve, you only need to take time enough to find a question which you can answer.

I'm not a very good writer, and I'm even worse in a foreign language, but I do my best.

2
votes

Detecting an SSD in Windows

I had asked this question as I found a way to optimize the server load on a gameserver, but this depended on whether the drive was fast enough (an SSD or faster equivalent).

I thought I had it sorted; I had all the code in place, bar the ability to detect an SSD. Instead the answers I received helped hugely although they didn't (directly) answer how can I detect an SSD?.

Instead, the answers pointed out that I was incorrect to assume that SSDs will offer the best possible performance in my scenario (in particular, this one, which I just accepted [by unaccepting the old accepted answer]). The answer lit a lightbulb inside my head where I literally went 'oh!', and because of this answer I ended up scrapping three days worth of code.

Looking back, this answer really did help me an awful lot (and for that reason, I have awarded a 150 rep bounty to the answer), and I still look back on it to this day. As a result I still use the context of this answer in the programs I write to this day, the answer was that useful to me..

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votes

NOTE: I have decided to write this as a short story, just so I can reach more people.

The Post

Into the Dark Forest of ptrace()

Para 1

How does one define a tough project? Is it the one where you spend a long time coding the solution. Or is it the one where you spend a long long time searching for answers. I was facing a similar kind of dilemma when I first took up a browser security project for my Advanced Web Technology subject. At first when I read the details, it felt really awesome. Intercepting system calls made by a browser and inspecting them for malicious behavior.

The real problem started when I started to code. I decided to use the ptrace() system call. The problem was the convention that different OS uses to make system calls. Because my OS where I was implementing it as POC was a fairly new one. It was very difficult to find contents online.

Para 2

I started off by reading the source code of strace (as internally it uses ptrace()), but somehow when I was using that knowledge, I was constantly getting errors and garbage values in my code. Moreover, as it is known, ptrace() handles registers directly, so one slight wrong access and the program use to come crashing down with a segmentation fault. I was asking in forums (like this one here) and other places for solutions and a clear convention how parameters and return values can be accessed. Looking on the Internet, I stumbled upon this post on Stack Overflow.

Para 3

Now, for a little back story. I started my Masters last year. I had to learn Python as a new language for implementing projects, and I started to use Stack Overflow frequently for syntax and solutions. I noticed how people help each other, so I decided to contribute something back to the Stack Overflow community. What started as way to give back, quickly became my hobby.

So, before I was going through the Internet, I had already gone through what the Stack Overflow community can do to help, and how people contribute. I was highly impressed by some people, who gave their valuable knowledge and time to help people stuck in something.

So, when I found this post on Stack Overflow, it was surprising that I didn't get it in the beginning. Probably because of wrong keywords I was using to search. This post was very helpful to me. Not only did it provide me with the complete set of registers for the system calls. But, it also showed me the way on which I have to go to find more help.

Para 4

Let me tell you what impressed me about this post. The effort made the OP who answered can be easily seen in the answered itself. Not only did he post all the details of the convention, but he went an extra mile to validate the information by going through the Linux Assembly Tutorial. The main help that I got from this was because he had posted about different architectures also.

That was something that I wasn't able to find anywhere. I feel the work done by this user was awesome, and it would have helped not just me, but many people. It's evident by the number of upvotes.

Para 5

In the end, I completed my project, and I got a nice grade for it. But the important part was that I learnt a lot from it. The same goes for the answer posted on Stack Overflow. It showed me the way out of that Dark Forest. :)

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The question

How to decide if a phone is a phone or a tablet is a tablet at Android.

The answer

No valid questions, all valids, neither of them valids.

The story

I had a meeting with some clients trying to decide if a 6" phone is a phone or is a tablet because that clients doesn't want to implement a different UI for phone or tablet, just show a message with a play store link to another application, let's call that "app HD".

So how to do it? What is actually a tablet or a phone in Android? There are many sizes and also there is a new concept "phablet". Stack Overflow to the rescue, as we can see on the thread there are many answers with different approaches to let you think which is the best one. With some of this different approaches I was able to convice the client to implement a different UI for 7" and reuse the same for 10" like the Android design guidelines of the moment told. Thank you so much.

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Why Stack Overflow can complete the official documentation of any platform

It happens very often that you want to accomplish some coding task, and you read the documentation, and the reference, and the examples, but you still can't find how to achieve something that in your head is really simple and should be possible to do. Then you start digging, and apparently nobody has the solution, specially if it is about some new API or framework.

So that was the case with the new Android reveal animations, where you can create an circular animation to reveal a new view or view group, and they were easy to use except in one case where the view you want to show is an Android fragment, because it has an asyncronous way of showing the contents.

This was asked in this question which I found really challenging and I wanted to try it myself. Applying the expertise I had on Android, I tried different approaches until I finally found the solution which seems to solve the problem for many people according to the upvotes. I also published an example on GitHub (deleted now) which was starred by many people too.

So in this case, my answer provided some samples of a technique that wasn't explained in the official documentation, but it was also a valid approach for a common case.

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Applying Muenchian grouping for a simple XML with XSLT

I found myself at my current job with an opportunity to take over a specialized task. The only problem is it required learning XSLT which was something I was not exposed to previously. So I hit the Internet and discovered Stack Overflow.

The experts in the XSLT space are amazing. I learned so much from their answers to other people's questions. And not just the very intricacies of XSLT, but also how to fashion a great answer (for examples, check out almost any of Dimitre Novatchev's answers, he is like the Jon Skeet of XSLT).

But the one Q&A I learned the most from was about one of the most difficult and yet satisfying concepts in XSLT, Muenchian grouping. XSLT v1.0 doesn't have a function or method for grouping similar XML elements together which is where this process comes in. Everyone inevitably runs into an issue where you need to use it, but it's just complex enough to not make any sense the first time you come across this grouping process.

In steps, this question: Applying Muenchian grouping for a simple XML with XSLT. Like I said, everyone has this question at one time, but the reason I liked this one is because of how the community worked together to really flesh this question out.

First, you have Martin Honnen's answer which is to the point on providing the working code. But then joocer follows up by breaking down the important lines in Martin's answer to really drive home the 'how' of the code. And then to wrap up is StuartLC to give the 'why' of how the Muenchian method even came into being.

While I feel that joocer's answer was really the linchpin of the three mentioned and the one the best answered the heart of the question; the combined effort of these three really help show one of the things that makes this site special: volunteers sharing their time and experience to make the Internet a much better and well informed place.

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Android Game Loop vs Updating in the Rendering Thread

I've been on Stack Overflow for a while now, but pretty much all of the time I've been a lurker. I mainly use Stack Overflow as a resource for finding answers to random problems that I've been having while working on various games. I'd like to nominate the answer by fadden.

I saw this post a while ago, when I was just starting to get into Android game development and didn't have any idea where to start, and was already running into stuttering problems right off of the bat. As I was exploring different forms of game loop development, I ran across the answer that fadden wrote in response to the question, and it really described the stuttering problems that I was having.

Although I am nominating fadden's answer on the question, Blackhex's answer also provided some insight into the problem. However, I felt as though fadden definitely went above and beyond in helping not just the OP, but also everyone else that would've stumbled across the post.

Fadden's answer provided not only examples but also really detailed descriptions and explanations on why the framerate was struggling and how to fix it. He also provided links to other resources that provided an even deeper explanation to the problem at hand which helped me achieve a much deeper understanding.

Ultimately, this helped me fix the problem that I had been struggling with for weeks and improved the stability of my game. I am really thankful for the Stack Overflow community and how everyone works together to help each other. I have learned so much from this community and its limitless vault of knowledge and hope to one day be able to contribute my own knowledge to help others as well.

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Encouragement works
sometimes it takes a few years

Back in the heady days of the Internet Stack Overflow's earlier days, I came across What does <![CDATA[]]> in XML mean?. I fired off a quick answer, with a link to the relevant portion of the specification and called it done.

Unbeknownst to me, Richard JP Le Guen was in the middle of writing up an excellent answer. My answer was accepted, but his garnered more up-votes because his was the better answer. (So much so that there was even a comment under my answer "This answer cites the proper sources, but Richard Le Guen's answer is better").

The upvotes kept coming in, and since it was my most highly voted answer, I kept seeing it ... and when I looked at it (now and again) I would see Richard's answer, and the well-earned approbation of the community.

Three years later, I went back and wrote the answer I should have finished writing in May of 2010. Thank you Richard for demonstrating the difference between a sufficient answer and a good answer!

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The Details

The Question: How to use conditions inside Email template in SugarCRM

My Answer: https://stackoverflow.com/a/28793261/2775748

Not every question has an answer

In my beginnings on SO (reputation at astounding level of 81!), when I started to realise what community stands behind all those answers I've been using through the years, finally I began MY contribution.

Slowly, steadily learning what are all those badges, answers, questions, flags and what's their meaning.

Well, I found this contribution pretty engaging and I started my conquest to the questions unanswered for years. Many of my answers to those almost dead questions didn't receive any reaction, but some of them I managed to happily answer until resolved.

This story however will be about fairly fresh question asked on February this year. OP asked about some way that he could use conditions in his SugarCRM email templates.

I knew absolutely nothing about SugarCRM at that time, so challenge was even bigger. So for that one question I started digging into SugarCRM docs. As I found nothing about conditions in e-mail templates (there were only few posts on their forum), I started to wonder if they have any templating engine built-in (Smarty for instance).

No information about it can be found on the web, so I took more insightful approach. I jumped into their open source. For my convenience I even downloaded repository to my NetBeans so I could use classes insights for it.

What I found somehow scared me.

SugarCRM - one of biggest and well known solutions have spaghetti code.

Try it out yourself, and try to easily understand parse_email_template method. I'm sure it is working, but maintaining this must be a nightmare.

When I found that email templating is simply replacing variables, I knew that there's no answer to "How to use conditions?". There was only an answer to "Is it possible to use conditions?".

That answer won OP's heart, and I won my first StackOverflow bounty.

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How I learned the ListView recycling mechanism with Stack Overflow

The question was about how ListView works, something I came across when I started developing for Android.

S.D. added the first answer. While it was not the answer I was expecting, it helped me understand how I could improve my code and the inner workings of one of Android's main framework tools.

vikki added a good answer, explaining the underlying problem, how the component works and the appropriate solution directly applicable to my question while still being great at explaining the recycling mechanism to other readers.

I suppose this question (mine) and its answers are nothing out of the ordinary for most readers, and in fact, there were probably similar questions around when I asked mine. Nevertheless, Sam posted a comment suggesting I go watch the Google I/O video about ListView recycling. I did and have sent those videos to countless Android beginners ever since.

For me, this illustrates perfectly one of the main strengths of Stack Overflow, regular users giving each other great tips, teaching each other without even knowing it (I'm pretty sure Sam never came back to the post and never knew how much his comment helped me back then). Even if there isn't one great answer with a score of 1000+, a combination of the efforts of several users can often constitute quality content, probably even more so that one "guru".

People are willing to help each other, just because. And Stack Overflow is there to encourage them to do so. I'll never forget that first time I realized: they just want to help ...

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  • It also illustrates one of the weaknesses. You got the information you needed because you asked very specifically about Muenchian grouping. Most people with XSLT grouping problems don't know that they are called by that name, let alone that there is a specific technique (Muenchian) for solving them; as a result, they find it much more difficult to ask the question. Nov 16, 2021 at 10:25
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The question

How to update GitHub forked repository?

The answer

https://stackoverflow.com/a/7244456/5301198

The story

A couple of months ago I forked a GitHub project, because I was really interested in the changes of an unresolved Pull Request. In order to do that I needed to know how I can get those changes into my fork. What did I do?

Stack Overflow to the rescue!

As a developer, I think this kind of update is not common and I always end up forgetting it. So, whenever I need to apply fixes in a new version of the original project, I turn to that answer!

That's the power of Stack Overflow!

I think, Stack Overflow is a huge technical dictionary in which you can always look for useful answers.

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First, is there a prize for someone with the smallest rep even looking on SE Meta page? (not trying to be sarcastic, but afraid I have the dubious honor...so far.)

The story is that of the beginning of my participation in the greater SE network in general. As most stories, it began with a question.

I have recently began working with SAS, and as a novice it can be encouraging but also discouraging to see expert awesomeness manifested in forums like SO. The former because it helps to get answers and nudges the learning. The latter because it illustrates the vastness of the knowledge gap. I try to stay focused on the encouraging part.

To the point. I figured I would need help now and then (i.e. all the time) so joined SO as a preventative measure, in case I have questions that nobody asked before. Between this and other forums, it took me about 2 months to realize that it might be years until I have such a question! But I still wanted to contribute in some way, in part because teaching is a great way to learn. However, I faced a dilemma.

What could a novice add to a community of experts dishing swift and precise answers to questions regardless of difficulty level? With hope nearly lost, I lazily eyed the daily feed of fresh questions.

OH MAMMA MIA PRIMADONNA!

Am I dreaming?! Did someone ask a question I could actually ANSWER?!? Why yes, they did: about summing observations vertically based on condition. Indeed, it had already been answered, and answered well, by Mjsqu (whose response I want to highlight). His response was a great model to follow, because it was (a) correct, (b) highly detailed with complete, unambiguous code examples, and (c) offered several alternative solutions. In fact, it was almost too good, tempering my initial hopes of an opportunity to contribute. But I mentally bookmarked that question in case there happened to be yet another answer. Lo and behond, a couple months later I stumbled on another alternative approach. So I went ahead and supplemented the original question with it, modeling my response on @mjsqu's.

I am still in the territory of learning more than contributing, but that experience nudged me to focus my contribution efforts in other areas where I already have experience, and contribute to a few other forums in the SE sphere. As my experience with SAS and other tools builds up, I hope to become a more active contributor to this and other technical forums.

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  • Having a response on this thread voted down feels like being bullied. Lame. I am confident that on the whole this community knows better. Come on lighten up!
    – A.S
    Aug 24, 2015 at 14:10
  • 1
    It's actually a pretty well written answer that you linked to, so I have no idea why this is being down voted. Aug 26, 2015 at 12:42
  • Stack Overflow is not a forum. Sep 5, 2015 at 22:40
  • Thanks @PeterMortensen, learned something new. Q&A site/platform, then.
    – A.S
    Sep 8, 2015 at 12:52
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Question: Python in vs ==. Which to Use in this case?

Answer: Python in vs ==. Which to Use in this case?

Not only StackOverflow contains a lot of awesome questions, awesome answers, but also awesome people who are not just talented but also vary helpful and eager to learn. I believed that although I can learn a lot from SO, but I am not much of an expert who can really give simple, convincing and elaborate answers to questions that ask in detail about programming language constructs.

SO helped me build up my confidence a lot when I attempted to answer the aforementioned question. The question really asked to write and compare in detail in terms of performance, best practice and memory usage of two fundamental functionalities provided by Python.

Not many answers were posted till that time, so I took some time and posted based on simple checks, how in compares with ==. I got some upvotes and this really boosted me that even though I am still a novice, I can help others. Not that every one is expert in every other field. After sometime I thought probably I can help even more by comparing the performance of list with dictionary and tuples as well. I also posted some details about functionality that I knew. And upvotes flooded in. But I was more content because I helped not just for upvotes.

Although, this is my meager contribution, but I ended up helping myself better while trying to help others. Although all answers here will surely highlight awesome contributions, I did not hesitate to highlight how SO helped me become confident, and this answer exemplifies that confidence.

This is what I have learned from stackoverflow :

  1. Answer accurately and elaborately.
  2. Support the best answer, but don't hesitate to provide your insights as well.
  3. Helping is more important than upvotes.
  4. Community will reward if you answer properly.
  5. It is you who make the community, so reward deserving people.
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Some time ago I was browsing Stack Overflow, as you do, and saw a PHP question about an ORM. Specifically Using with() in Spot ORM. I'm not too well versed in ORMs, but I've used Doctrine and thought I might be able to help. I never heard of Spot before (and still haven't seen it except for that one question). So I thought the odds of someone being able to provide an answer to it was relatively low. The question had gotten an upvote, but wasn't getting much attention else-wise. At first I thought the question was relatively simple, but then I started looking through the documentation. The docs weren't too clear, and it looked like as if it was contradicting itself.

I was intrigued.

So after some researching I found the answer. I don't think it's a great answer, but I learned something from it, and I think OP did too. I learned that with some research you can really provide a clear and exact answer (or to me it feels that way) if you want to. You don't have to know the technology the OP is asking about, you don't even have to have worked with it. It was kind of fun researching how it would work and providing an answer for a question that didn't look like it was gaining much traction. It's still one of my favourite answers I've given. It doesn't have a lot of views, it doesn't have a lot of votes, but it's one of those answers that still make me feel a little proud. Proud to have helped someone in need, who probably wouldn't have gotten much of an answer else-wise. To me that answer describes what SO really can do for someone.

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A journey ...

I had originally started answering questions on SO to teach me something as much as the OP: my theory was that if I understood a topic well enough to understand and then answer a question clearly then I knew I had finally grokked the topic.

One of the early answers I gave (that I thought may not have been worth the effort at the time) turns out to be the one that still rewards me by reminding me on a regular basis that the effort here is worth it. You can reach more people with a good SO answer than you will ever meet in person in your life.

The long answer ...

Only a few weeks in to my SO journey Rowan Freeman posted this question which was (is) huge. Each part had a very specific answer but there were so many parts.

I had used SimpleMembership before but I didn't really know it and could not yet visualise how it all slotted together. I set out to post a minimal answer. Over the course of a day I made time between other work to tie together my knowledge of SimpleMembership, create the answer, and then polish it with a few edits. My "minimal" answer ended up being 1500+ words, nearly 40 external references, and taking periods of research and effort over nearly 12 hours.

I had learned a lot: the effort put into answering it had taught me how all the components of SimpleMembership worked in concert and I was happy with that. I just wasn't sure if writing the answer as well was a day of coffee, lunch and dinner breaks well spent.

The big surprise ...

After posting the answer I forgot about it and moved on, and so it sat for 2 weeks. But then Rowan did something that knocked me off my chair: he came back and awarded me a bounty, editing his question to say:

I have placed a bounty on this question and intend to award it to Andy Brown for an outstanding answer.

It was an unexpected and unnecessary compliment, and one I will always be grateful for, Rowan, and I am glad I have this chance to openly thank you in return.

The long tail ...

Every now and then the question gets an upvote, and I see it now has 20508 views. Those upvotes remind me that sometimes the best answers are a fish and 12 lines explaining how to catch that fish again, and sometimes going that extra 12 hours to write an essay is worth it. As I said at the start: I now know that, whether it takes 12 seconds or 12 hours to write, a good SO answer can reach a lot more people than I will ever meet in person.

1
vote

I am still new to this site, but back when I was even newer, I was in a position where I had to use a technology I had no understanding of, namely .NET.

I was having a hard time, and I felt immensely pressured to do well in my internship, but I just couldn't get anything right. My co-intern was not very good at explaining what he didn't understand well either. So I posted a question:

Does asp.NET call code behind class' constructor at each fired event?

My question was poorly formatted for SO, but kind community members edited it. And I got an answer that made .NET much more understandable to me. hvd answered my question and explained the reason why it was like that. And I understood. The knowledge I gained made it possible for me to dig in and work hard in my internship again with new energy and new understanding of the technology.

I would also say that this answer by I recently got to a question is very thorough and taught me a lot, even though I had already solved my problem with the help of another answer.

1
vote

When learning something new, sometimes I have a hard time grasping concepts of just how the nuts and bolts of something work together. When all the pieces finally fit together for me logically, and I have that "AH HA moment", I feel inspired to learn more. So when I can answer a question thoroughly enough to where I provided that same "AH HA moment" for the OP, and it is validated by a comment with the same type of inspiration I feel when I experience that moment, then I feel my job is done.

Also, when I see comments like:

Once again, thanks @peeskillet (+1)! I have posted a lot of questions on SO, and you are by far the most thorough, responsive & helpful user I've come across here. Thanks again!

I am inspired myself to continue answering question in great depth. Making no assumptions about the OP's knowledge and explaining something so that all the pieces just fit together, also makes the answer more universal for all other readers.

It's hard to pick just one question where I feel I did a good job of teaching, as I believe there are so many. That's not to brag at all. I just feel that you don't really understand something until you can teach it. So often in my answers (when I'm not being lazy :-), I will teach rather then just "answer". If I can explain something to the point where the OP is not just copying code to solve a problem, but actually learning how it works, that is more beneficial to the OP, to all other readers, and to myself.

The questions I linked to, there was not much interaction with the OP, but that is kind of a good sign, as the OP learned enough from the initial answer to not need to ask further :-)

1
vote

The problem I couldn't let go

Determine non-convex hull of collection of line segments

This isn't necessarily my best answer, at least not in the sense that it had a clear-cut solution to serve on a plate. But what this answer does is it captures that spirit of letting yourself be drawn into a very specialized and unique problem and not relenting until the asker is taken to a much better place than where they started.

It was variation on the concave hull theme, with a twist: the things to be bounded were line segments, not points. It was such a mind teaser that I couldn't stop thinking about it.

With a first effort, I came up with a solution, which the OP was happy with. But the thing kept rolling in my head; it wouldn't go away. Sure enough, special cases popped up which would make the algorithm fail. Before the OP could accept the answer, I made sure to bring this up. In fact, upon closer consideration and after some discussion in the comments, it turned out that the very problem itself was ill-defined.

I kept coming back to the problem to tweak the solution; more problematic edge cases came up. It went on like that day after day. I knew I had other, "more important" things to do, but I just couldn't let it go. In the end, after almost a week, I had cornered the thing into a place where the remainder of the problem could be dealt with using standard pruning algorithms, at which point the answer was accepted.

Both I and, I think, the OP learned a bit more on how to define and address this type of problem. In my time at SO, I have found that getting answers to one's questions is nice, but that in fact, I learn as much, if not more, when I answer other people's questions.

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