Every now and then I see a "should be a wiki" comment in a question... even in the superuser private beta.
Why is that?
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Every now and then I see a "should be a wiki" comment in a question... even in the superuser private beta. Why is that? |
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The real benefit to CW is not supposed to be to shield people from down votes (like many people try to use it), it is supposed to lower the rep threshold for editing so that other people can help and add to your post. Some people like to think that CW means that 'anything goes' which is obviously not true. Community Wiki was meant for common sense situations where common sense would tell you that you really should not be earning rep, nor should the answerers. This involves things like "Hidden features of C#". Not "What is your favorite dog as a programmer?". |
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It tends to be used for polls, subjective questions or ones where the OP is asking for lists of things. |
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If there's not a foreseeable end to the questions, it's likely best as Community Wiki. You shouldn't benefit from asking a question than can never really be objectively answered. If you could, we'd all be asking "What's your favorite color?" |
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If something is more of a discussion type, feelings are that it should be flagged as community wiki. All content the can be edited by more people (+750 rep and up). No reputation can be earned, as content is publicly owned and there is no right or wrong answers. Upvoting becomes a way of agreeing, down voting of disagreeing. Badges can be achieved though by the original owner of the question or answer. If a question is wiki, all answers are too. But one can mark an answer as wiki. Both marking answers and questions is done using a checkbox near the edit box when asking or answering. The checkbox cannot be unchecked once submitted. Recommendations are somewhat of a borderline case. Obviously, somebody recommending something has put work into building up his experience and opinion about the thing he recommends. Therefore he deserves reputation, one would say. But if the thing is highly subjective, I would also tend to see it as a discussion more then a recommendation. |
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While the original intention may have been for CW to be editable content, I don't think it's worked out that way; community wiki is instead an indication that either: a discussion without pursuit of a definitive answer is taking place ("why should I..."); the views contributed are by definition subjective or opinionated ("what is your favourite..."); the topic is trivial or fun and therefore higher traffic, so shouldn't lead to rep accumulation ("do you love Jon Skeet?"). I am starting to think the use of the word 'wiki' is problematic, while 'community' is helpful. Suggestions? |
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