Motivation:
I only posted this because I have seen complaints from others about the exact same type of behavior in multiple tags.
I was able to participate in the non-public documentation period.
I added a few examples that I am intimately familiar with that are basic things that get asked over and over on the main site in preparation to be able to link to them.
Once the documentation feature went public my examples were mutilated and vandalized by people that were not qualified to make changes to them to the point that they are now completely incorrect. This implies that even more people that were not competent to judge the changes approved them.
These changes all were considered "stylistic" changes, but they also broke the semantics of the code because the editor(s)/approver(s) had no concept of what final
does to local variables in java.
Here is a description of one of the examples that I requested to be deleted:
I did not want to link to the specific example because I did not want it edited or un-deleted or fixed, I just don't want to be associated with it any more. But I did end up posting one because a mod requested it.
I found the original example that I am referring to here. I am not sure if anyone can see that link, but that is how the example started, I think you can see the edit history is a mess and why I gave up; just look at what I contributed and the last edit to see what a complete mess of it devolved into.
I had an example that showed how to properly close JDBC resources pre-1.7.
The code uses the final
keyword to ensure that the references are immutable and by doing so completely eliminates the need to test for null
, because the resource reference is either created successfully or an exception is thrown.
This means that the try/catch/finally
block can skip the null
check and just call .close()
, because it is guaranteed that the reference can never be null
.
Multiple people edited and re-edited the try/catch/finally
blocks into a single method that the reference was passed into to eliminate duplicate code. Well, this also completely removes the guarantees that my code afforded.
After reverting and explaining to stop approving these edits multiple times I just gave up and requested the example and others that were suffering similar fates to be deleted and have never logged back into that part of the site over frustration.
I can put the same effort into examples on my own blog and not have to worry about that they will not be vandalized to incorrect balls of mud and attributed to me.
Here is the problem:
My examples had lots of upvotes when they are were correct, and they still have those upvotes with all the edits that make them incorrect now.
In the end I just requested all the examples deleted because they are now just wrong, and I got tired of the Sisyphean1 task of correcting them over and over and over.
My main personal concern is: I don't want my name and reputation (outside Stack Overflow) tied to incorrect information.
A secondary personal concern is: I don't want the reputation points from incorrect examples, and I don't want to lose reputation points I gained from when they were correct.
This is fundamentally broken, and if documentation stays this way it will get the same reputation that W3Schools has about providing just plain incorrect information with equal weight as correct information.
My Solution:
Examples should be tied to the original creator and that creator should have unilateral veto over edits by having to approve them before they are public, since the editor is free to create their own example how they would do it.