97

Stack Overflow's hit 10 million questions. Yay.

SO's celebratory logo variant

I'm curious, though; what does the question count actually include? Does it include closed and downvoted questions? Because in my favourite tags over 50% of the new questions I see every day are not actually useful to anybody. So I was just wondering.

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  • 82
    Nowhere near 10 million good questions.
    – Barry
    Aug 20, 2015 at 16:37
  • 4
    It doesn't include deleted questions (which closed/DVd ones tend to become). I think it includes closed questions which haven't been deleted yet. Aug 20, 2015 at 16:40
  • 36
    Assuming Sturgeon's Law, we're at about 1 million questions that aren't crap.
    – Mysticial
    Aug 20, 2015 at 16:44
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    I'm also hitting 100k on this day itself :-) Aug 20, 2015 at 17:23
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    @AvinashRaj: Congratulations! Aug 20, 2015 at 17:25
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    Depends on what you consider "good" I guess.
    – Kevin B
    Aug 20, 2015 at 17:50
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    Yay, SO reached 10m questions because it's being flooded with crap every day! And everybody knows that quantity is the most important metric anyways, nobody cares that milions of those questions are low quality duplicates, typos, people too lazy to read the docs, and so on. So let's all celebrate by tweeting #SOreadytohelp. Because we're a help site! /Facepalm...
    – l4mpi
    Aug 20, 2015 at 17:52
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    ...and you recieved a troll answer on your GOOD question /facepalm... Aug 20, 2015 at 18:07
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    @Mysticial Sturgeon's law may say that 90% is crap, it doesn't say that the remaining 10% isn't. I'd interpret it as a lower boundary.
    – gerrit
    Aug 21, 2015 at 10:10
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    This is no different than Apple saying they have X billion apps in the app store (how many of those are good?) or Twitter saying they have X trillion tweets (how many of those are GOOD?!). Volume, while not a measurement of quality, is certainly still a measurement of success. Aug 22, 2015 at 2:58
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    Is your question is a good or bad one ?
    – 0x90
    Aug 22, 2015 at 13:43
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    What's a GOOD question? The upvote count is no clear indicator. Even questions with 100 upvotes can be totally simple (In the shell, how do I test whether a file exists?) or downright silly (In C, what does the --> operator do?).
    – Jens
    Aug 22, 2015 at 21:40
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    @1000Gbps: No, it's not. Aug 23, 2015 at 10:21
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    @1000 Your rationale is equivalent to saying that "With your help, we can reach Mars by 2030" means NASA is a help site. Aug 23, 2015 at 16:17
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    @AntónioPaulo: Not everything that helps you is a "help site". Like, a dictionary is also not a "help site". Stack Overflow (not "StackOverFlow") is a repository of questions and answers, each one deliberately being of benefit to multiple people, both now and in the future. Of course, reading questions and answers is a helpful process. But calling it a "help site" makes it sound like each question is just for that asker. It's not. When it's like that, quality sinks to oblivion. SO was deliberately founded to not use that model. Mar 23, 2016 at 14:44

5 Answers 5

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The /questions page excludes historically locked questions, since they are not seen when browsing that page. (Reference) Everything else is included.

As of now, there are 9,152,194 non-closed questions with non-negative score, so by this measure, the celebration appears slightly premature.

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    I'm surprised it's that much. Well, I suppose auto-deletion takes care of it? Aug 20, 2015 at 16:43
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    I can't decide if I'm impressed or depressed that about 91% of SO questions are "good" according to this... :(
    – enderland
    Aug 20, 2015 at 20:11
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    @enderland: Probably impressed. Or skeptical. Your call. Aug 20, 2015 at 20:27
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    @JonEricson it's like the 80/20 principle, backwards!
    – enderland
    Aug 20, 2015 at 20:29
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    @enderlandL The Pareto principle does apply here too: 20% (or whatever) of the questions get 80% (or whatnot) of the votes. [citation needed] Aug 20, 2015 at 20:31
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    And 4.5 million questions with a positive score. How good is "good"?
    – Warren Dew
    Aug 22, 2015 at 18:26
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    how many of the 10M questions are non-closed with negative score?
    – einpoklum
    Aug 23, 2015 at 8:33
  • @enderland 91% of the currently existing questions. Closed questions with negative score eventually get auto-deleted by the system. This answer says nothing about the ratio of "good questions" (non-closed with non-negative score) to "not good questions" (closed or negative score) because the vast majority of "not good questions" end up auto-deleted and only SE employees could tell us how many deleted questions there are.
    – nhgrif
    Aug 23, 2015 at 22:02
14

How to define good questions anyway? I've read questions that are downvoted and they helped me. Sometimes questions are downvoted because they are not formatted or for the lack of research, or because of being duplicates, but as for me, a regular user, all I care about is the answer.

Bad questions affects the quality of the website and also make it hard for users to help the OP, but it doesn't matter for people who google it; sometimes they find good answers too. So in a way or another, bad questions are still helping users, therefore helping the site grow.

I would argue that bad questions sometimes help more than good ones, the googlers. Because I'm more likely as a Python guy to want to know how to fix this than to know about this. Sure the first is silly and the second is interesting, but when I'm programming I won't really care about the second. Fixing the first is a priority, and I would probably read the second while scrolling on Stack Overflow, if I have nothing else to do.

I bet that there are more unregistered or inactive users on Stack Overflow each day than active users. Those users want their issues to be solved. Downvotes or upvotes, they don't care, if the answer solves their problem. It's a good question from their point of view, because it was their question too.

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    -15, really? Questioning our values in terms of question quality should not be punished, in my opinion, and it is definitely on topic when the original question is drawing comments about the quality of the 10K questions. I hope @Lynob does not delete this. Props to Peter M for cleaning up the question though, sloppy grammar is worth downvotes.
    – Dan Ross
    Aug 21, 2015 at 14:34
  • I was going to write a similar answer and so I appreciate @Lynob's effort. most people think I am ugly, my wife thinks I am handsome. There are lots of questions that I have seen that have been downvoted, shot at etc where either the question made me think about my issue a different way or one or more of the answers was spot on for what I needed. Maybe we should have a SO lite and and then one for the rest of them. My guess is that the programming 'geniuses' who sometimes get real picky would still be around if their rep transferred even if they were not allowed to dv on the SO lite site
    – PyNEwbie
    Aug 22, 2015 at 18:24
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    @DanRoss Note: on meta upvote and downvote can just mean "I agree" or "I disagree". In this case I disagree with his examples, as the first one isn't closed and has both answers and a linked duplicate (which is higher quality and has the best answer out of the two). While, though he is correct that the second question can be very interesting to developers but not as pertinent to an actual project - he fails to take into account that this is reflected if you look at the duplicate as it has a rep of 100 and the second question only has a rep of 29.
    – LinkBerest
    Aug 22, 2015 at 18:32
  • @JGreenwell sorry about the examples, I picked random example to prove a point, and didn't read it. I was trying to showcase a random example to prove a point, too late to change the example, if you see the point I'm trying to make, that's all that matters to me.
    – Lynob
    Aug 22, 2015 at 19:28
  • Thanks for this answer. I use lesser "quality" Q&A for getting work done many times a day. I do not contribute "canonical" questions/answers and rarely use them either. Although they should be applauded - they already get more than enough positive press. Mostly the questions I find personally useful on a regular basis are about edge cases and smaller misconceptions. The answers to those questions are rarely high score but frequently vital to progress. Aug 23, 2015 at 17:55
11

In my opinion, two important ways we can measure the quality of questions are:

  1. Was the question well received by the community? Proxies for this would be the question's score and whether or not it's closed.
  2. Was the question useful to the world at large? A proxy for this would be the question's view count.

Limiting to the 9.12 million questions in the Stack Exchange Data Explorer with a question score of at least 0 and that are not closed, we can look at the distribution of the score and view count (note the log scale on both axes):

enter image description here

The questions returned by the query are concentrated at score 0 (the bottom row of hexagons) and view count of roughly 100. In total, 1.96 million questions (21%) have score 0 and no more than 100 views, and 4.13 million questions (45%) have score 0 and no more than 1,000 views.

Summarizing, about 850k questions are closed or have negative score, and nearly 2 million additional questions have score 0 and no more than 100 views. While some of these low-score, low-view questions may be in low-traffic tags or may have been posted quite recently, I think the data show that there's a sizable number of questions that haven't been well received by the SO community or the world at large.

Methodology:

I grabbed the number of questions with each score/view count combination from the Stack Exchange Data Explorer with the following query:

SELECT ROUND(LOG10(ViewCount+1)*100, 0)/100, Score, COUNT(*) from Posts
  WHERE PostTypeId=1 AND ClosedDate IS NULL
  GROUP BY ROUND(LOG10(ViewCount+1)*100, 0)/100, Score;

The rounding of the (log-transformed) view count ensures that the query returns fewer than 50,000 rows, the limit for the Stack Exchange Data Explorer. Storing the query result in dat.csv, I ran the following R code to process the data:

# Read data, transforming so we have one row per question
dat <- read.csv("dat.csv", stringsAsFactors=FALSE)
dat[,1] <- round(10^(dat[,1])-1)
names(dat) <- c("ViewCount", "Score", "Count")
dat <- dat[rep(1:nrow(dat), dat$Count), c("ViewCount", "Score")]
dat <- dat[dat$Score >= 0,]

# Plot view count vs. score
library(ggplot2)
print(ggplot(dat, aes(x=ViewCount+1, y=Score+1)) + stat_binhex(bins=15) +
      scale_x_log10("Number of Views (plus one)", breaks=10^(0:6), labels=c("1", "10", "100", "1k", "10k", "100k", "1m")) +
      scale_y_log10("Score (plus one)", breaks=10^(0:4), labels=c("1", "10", "100", "1k", "10k")) +
      theme_bw())

# Summarize questions with low views and score
sum(dat$Score == 0 & dat$ViewCount <= 100)
mean(dat$Score == 0 & dat$ViewCount <= 100)
sum(dat$Score == 0 & dat$ViewCount <= 1000)
mean(dat$Score == 0 & dat$ViewCount <= 1000)
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  • Excellent work! What's your conclusion? Aug 23, 2015 at 22:21
  • @LightnessRacesinOrbit buried at the end: "I think the data show that there's a sizable number of questions that haven't been well received by the SO community or the world at large."
    – josliber
    Aug 23, 2015 at 22:22
  • Oh right was wondering whether you had a rough figure in conclusion. Not to worry! Aug 23, 2015 at 22:30
  • @LightnessRacesinOrbit Ah, now I understand. Of course, it totally depends on how you define a "good" question." If we define good questions as those that are not closed and either have positive score or more than 100 views, then we have about 7.16 million good questions.
    – josliber
    Aug 23, 2015 at 22:32
  • It may be interesting to look at individual examples of the best questions in "score per thousand views". This is the query for a minimum of 1,000 views; there seems to be a natural limit at arround 100 score points per 1,000 views. With no view threshold, extreme examples appear at ratio 1,000: typically, score 1 and 1 view. Oct 10, 2016 at 10:59
9

Yes, it includes closed and downvoted questions, but it does not include deleted question.

You can refer to this question, where @Shog9♦ mentioned that deleted questions are not included in total count.

If you refer to this closed and downvoted question, and this question is also listed in main question list(without tag filter) which shows a count towards 10M, so it means downvoted and closed questions are included in the 10M list right now.

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    Can you provide any references to back up your answer? Aug 20, 2015 at 16:42
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    @LightnessRacesinOrbit - If you run a query on is:question, you get the 10 million figure, and can see counted in that list downvoted or closed questions. Deleted questions (of which there are 2,584,855 at present) are not in that list.
    – Brad Larson Mod
    Aug 20, 2015 at 16:44
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    @Brad: Okay so roughly a ratio of, what, 9:4 good to closed-or-deleted questions by my count. Empirically to me it seems like we need to close and delete more ;P Aug 20, 2015 at 16:46
  • @LightnessRacesinOrbit :- If you click on the question button(without tag filter) on SO main page, the you are able to see the count more then 10M, and it inlcudes downvoted and closed question over there Aug 20, 2015 at 16:46
  • The purpose was to find a reference for the assertion that "it includes downvoted and closed question". Aug 20, 2015 at 16:46
  • @LightnessRacesinOrbit :- I don't think, SO have that documented somewhere, but if I get, will post it here Aug 20, 2015 at 16:50
  • @LightnessRacesinOrbit :- see the edit answer to reference for "it includes downvoted and closed question" Aug 20, 2015 at 17:37
  • @HaveNoDisplayName: I have reverted your edit to the question. The spelling "favourite" is correct. Aug 20, 2015 at 19:52
-4

A basic query to filter out a lot of crap:

is:q closed:no votes:2.. locked:no

2.4M results.

Adding some negative keywords, the best query I could come up with is this:

is:q closed:no votes:2.. -thanks -thx -please -pls -suggest -edit -u -urgent -"a doubt" -informations -spit -cuz -coz -skills -lol -librarys -"couldnt" -teh -wat -tanks -newbie -noob -n00b -expert -"guide me" -"refer http://" -"any ideas" locked:no

1.5M results. ~96.5% have 1 or more answers, ~61% have 2 or more answers.

So we have about 500k helpful on-topic Q/A pairs.

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  • ONLY 2M??/?// YOU DOOMED THE WORLD!!11!1!!! Aug 23, 2015 at 16:36
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    Don't forget "guide me" and "refer http://" Aug 23, 2015 at 16:41
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    So, containing fluff like "thanks" or typos like "teh" somehow disqualifies a question from being helpful? Plus other things like "any ideas"? Or "expert"? I'm not sure how it even remotely makes sense that some of the phrases you've included automatically make a question entirely unhelpful.
    – nhgrif
    Aug 23, 2015 at 22:06
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    @nhgrif There is an extremely tiny number of false negatives; false positives are much more of a problem as there is no simple way to filter them out. Obviously, this query is very inaccurate. But most questions which have those keywords are of significantly lower quality than those with, so it at least gives us a starting point for a list of high-quality questions. The only tools really that we have to determine post quality is a) votes (which gives a disadvantage to low-traffic tags), b) structure (which can't be covered in a query), and c) keywords (which can only correlate with quality).
    – bjb568
    Aug 23, 2015 at 23:49

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