I hope this question isn't perceived the wrong way. I am sincerely interested in hearing some of your thoughts about the title of this post.

Sometimes, answering a question on Stack Overflow is an exercise in speed as well as accuracy.

If you see a question that isn't answered yet, or doesn't have the correct answer yet, and you attempt to answer it, you have to move very quickly, because there is lots of competition out there and answers get posted fast!

The consequences are obvious; if you get beat to the punch, you don't get points/credit, which is the "incentive" for answering (as Joel knows all too well).

I'm not a very active user yet, but I have already gotten frustrated. However, I see this "game" as good and bad. In the past, I viewed accuracy part as being important. I enjoy the challenge obtaining accuracy and I often have the patience to do so. But obviously speed is also important, and it absolutely adds to the challenge. I can already see playing the Stack Overflow "game" as helping to sharpen my speed skills.

Nevertheless, after all that, it's also alarming that questions you answer can be closed to new answers while you are entering your last few key strokes, or even deleted entirely!!

What do you think?

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For a minute I thought you were Jon B meta.stackoverflow.com/users/27414/jon-b – rlb.usa Jul 1 '10 at 16:23

migrated from stackoverflow.com Apr 28 '10 at 18:29

8 Answers

up vote 8 down vote accepted

There are many sources of motivation, and while the "points" of Stack Overflow are a major factor in what makes it addictive, they are not the only one. Other possible reasons for answering include e.g. the joy of helping others, and the usual one on the internet.

Since you cannot really "compete" with others for points and can only care about your own, let me point out that you can always get points by giving good answers to questions that don't have easy answers — and doing things that not everyone could easily do is more valuable, anyway.

The specific problem you describe (being fast matters too much) has already been much discussed from the very earliest days of Stack Overflow (search for "fastest gun in the west"). There are other problems with Stack Overflow, for example that simpler questions get more views (and hence more votes for answers therein) than harder questions, that popular (and populist) answers get more points (this is most annoying when a question about mathematics or theory has an incorrect (but "correct-looking") answer with hundreds of upvotes), and so on, but there is no easy way of fixing these, and the good things about Stack Overflow outweigh these problems, so we still use it.

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Chacha102 and Jeff A gave awesome answers too, but I'm giving this one to you ShreevatsaR because you addressed more of my points, especially with the "Fastest Gun in the West" link. I like this cartoon too: cartoonstock.com/newscartoons/cartoonists/jlv/lowres/… – JohnB May 5 '10 at 17:23
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+1 for the usual one. :D – Nathan Taylor Jul 1 '10 at 15:31

Yes, StackOverflow is a type of game.

And the person paying you to work is always the loser.

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So true, so true.. – Gnoupi Apr 28 '10 at 18:33
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Seems short-sighted. I've saved myself (and my employer) a TON of time finding quick answers on the Trilogy sites. – Kara Marfia Jul 1 '10 at 18:14
@Kara It was more of a joke.... – Chacha102 Jul 3 '10 at 1:11
Aha! I have an overactive literal gland sometimes. – Kara Marfia Jul 9 '10 at 15:05
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Programmers can make good jokes by taking things literally that other people would not. Programmers miss good jokes by taking things literally that other people would not. – Peter Ajtai Aug 10 '10 at 5:07

The World's Largest MMORPG: You're Playing it Right Now

Not every activity can be turned into a game. And perhaps not every activity should be a game.

But when it comes to community websites -- sites that get better for everyone the more users actively participate -- these are already so close to being de-facto games that it'd be downright negligent to ignore this aspect of the design. You should shape and define your community by explicitly acknowledging and embracing the game-like aspects you want to encourage, rather than pretending they don't exist.

After all, the first step in breaking our addiction to the world's largest MMORPG is to admit that we have a problem.

also see:

http://www.ted.com/talks/dan_pink_on_motivation.html

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I had it once where a question closed and the "Post Your Answer" button grayed out as I was moving to click it. As to your main point though, it definitely is, and a few people have blogged about strategies to maximize gathering rep on SO. A lot of the more problematic moves, like strategic downvoting, have been mitigated somewhat since the launch, so they're not as big of a problem anymore. The main one that still drives me crazy is editing within the 5 minute window. More often than I'd like, I'll post a correct answer, see that somebody else snuck in a patently wrong answer 20 seconds faster, and then watch them edit their wrong answer to say the same thing mine does -- I'm not particularly attached to rep, but that drives me out of my mind. On the other hand, it annoys me when I go to a question that already has answers and see an obviously inferior answer voted up/accepted because it was first. Overall it seems like speed plays too much of a factor in "winning the game", but I'm not sure how best to mitigate it

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Not only is the "editing your own answer to make it more correct by copying a correct answer that came after yours" unethical, but it also defeats the purpose of this forum in a way. That is, to have a robust set of information about a topic, yet to have the correct/more correct answers (not necessarily the oldest though!) towards the top so that the information is easier to shift through. – JohnB May 5 '10 at 17:11
@JohnB It's definitely unethical, and pointless (clearly the only point is to gain rep, you're not helping the site by duplicating an existing answer), but it doesn't really harm the site, other than making the same right answer appear multiple times. That's why, annoyed as I am, I generally don't downvote when people do that -- their answer is correct, after all – Michael Mrozek May 7 '10 at 15:20
I support your non-downvoting in that situation; but I think you should flag for a mod if you see that sort of thing. – Popular Demand Jul 1 '10 at 15:36

StackOverflow is more like the evolution from all bad Q&A places ( EvilExpertExch***g, Yahoo! Answers, nearly dead forums like P2PWrox ), having thought through everything, and done something different, revolutionary, and wonderful.

While the points do make it look like a game, it's an excellent source of motivation, and an indicator of answer trust-worthiness.

I'm sorry to hear that you are feeling flustered as a new user. The grievances you expressed are actually a common pain, even to veteran users. As the Fastest Gun in the West, have a look at this, see if it helps you.

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Who wants to join my guild?

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Nevertheless, after all that, it's also alarming that questions you answer can be closed to new answers while you are entering your last few key strokes, or even deleted entirely!!

As long as you started typing an answer you will be able to post it even if the question is closed. There is currently no limit for this; you can even take a week to finish writing it.

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You will have to answer to answer a captcha and prove you're a human if you take too long (more than an hour?), though. I've had to do this a few times, when I spent too much time answering questions on algorithms etc. :-) – ShreevatsaR Apr 28 '10 at 18:52

I can see how it would be frustrating to have a well-thought out, constructive answer foiled by someone who says "Just do A" but doesn't take the effort to explain it. I just asked a question and got 3 of the tiny answers and one well-written one. Maybe that's why the 6-minute rule?

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