Recently, I have answered a few questions that were upvoted by factors more than the accepted answer, but not accepted. This one, at the time of my writing, has an accepted answer that the asker said was not what he wanted. I don't know why. In the future, when people view this, people might only look at the accepted answer and move on. Would it be possible to have a "community accepted" feature? Maybe only the people at the top can vote to accept it or something. How much rep, if any, should go to that person?
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How about not giving "community accepted" status to any answer, but instead adding "accepted by community" indicator to the question. So it would not bring any extra reputation to the answer with most votes, and it would not be a property of that answer or shown in the answer at all. It would be applied to questions which have an unaccepted answer with some minimum amount of votes, which is also more that votes on accepted answer (if there is an accepted answer). It would be useful when looking at this question list (note: user specific listing), at least. |
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The issue you're addressing is basically irresponsible askers or users that don't use the site features correctly. It is almost the same issue as users who don't come back and accept an answer after asking a question. Unfortunately a type of cruft. I think that for users that un-signup as it were (their name appears gray), something should assume ownership of that question and be able to move that checkmark around. |
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@Jonathan idea may hold true for popular tags. But take opencv or some other less popular tag. There are very few people who contribute, and most of the questions are done by new users who won't upvote nor accept an answer. Eventually those who participate in this non-popular tags will get sick of spending time helping others when they known their work will end up being unrecognized. For instance, I gave 72 answers in opencv and got only 33 upvotes (I encourage people to review my contributions). The fact is that we can't trust new users to accept answers when their problem is solved. Sometimes the OP even adds a comment saying "Thanks, that solved my problem!" but it never accepts the answer and also never comes back. This is really frustrating and it's a real problem. We need a mechanism that allows the community to accept an answer. My suggestion is that users who own a silver tag-specific badge (that is being used on the question) should be allowed to cast a vote to Accept an answer. Pretty much the same way we do it to close/reopen a question. I already stated this idea before and later added that it might be better if we deny/prevent users that answered the question to also vote for the accepted answer (to avoid a potential conflict of interest). |
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The "accepted answer" feature was never intended to mark which answer is best or even if the answer is correct. It is, simply stated, the answer that the original author found most useful in solving their problem. The people's-choice favorite answer is selected through the voting process. The "accepted answer" is all the original author. If you want to let the users also select the "accepted answer", the purpose of having a selected answer becomes redundant and useless. That decision has to come from the author, or you're just conflating the two features. |
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Why can't we just have a 'community answer' in addition to the 'normal answer'? Just because I upvote something, doesn't mean it always answers the question, it may contain very useful information which the actual answer has missed out. |
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The site is at it's heart a 'question & answer' site. Although many people have taken to posting answers which appeal to the community at large, there are cases where they do so at the expense of the actual question asked by the poster. An example (NOT REAL) situation:
The answer will then get upvoted hundreds of times, even though the answerer did not answer the question. Someone else may attempt to answer the question correctly, but because the community is so set against doing XYZ, they won't upvote that answer. Then the poster marks it as correct. In this case, the correct answer (the answer the poster was looking for) will appear directly beneath the question, and the 'best practices' or 'community accepted' answer will appear right below it. There have definitely been times where I think the OP picked the wrong answer, (especially when one of my own beautiful and well-crafted answers are in the mix) but since I am not the asker then I do not know exactly what he/she is looking for. Only they do. You may have answered the question to the best of your ability, but only the OP can select the answer that helped them the most. |
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Wow, this is quite a blast from the past (so to speak). I actually suggested this many months ago, back when StackOverflow was still in private beta:
And the official response was:
It's certainly an interesting suggestion, but unless something has changed in the nature of StackOverflow in the intervening months (as well it could have) I think that the official response would be much the same today. |
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I think the idea is to have it stick to the top, right below a person's accepted answer. Not everyone views posts the same way, and if the community thinks that an answer is best, and it's on page two for me, I might not see it. However, if the community can not only upvote, but say "this is the right solution", then the "right" answer will stick to the top for everyone. |
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I would be in favor of a notification -- if there isn't one already -- when an answer receives more votes than the currently accepted answer. This would allow the OP to easily revisit the question and change the accepted answer if a better one came along. |
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We have a badge called Populist which addresses the fact that the community finds your post much better than the accepted answer. Implementing something along the lines of "Community Accepted" is incredibly redundant since the community is voting on it with their upvotes. |
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A bunch of up-votes shows the communities acceptance. If the "accepted answer" has no up-votes, but yours has 12...clearly yours is the community-accepted answer :) |
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