Is the fastest gun in the west problem solved? Is it really a problem?

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darnit, I was going to ask the same question, missed it by 3 hours I guess. I was going to call it the "Sundance Kid" problem. :-) – Jason S Jun 28 '09 at 15:12
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I don't mind seeing the early votes. I just hate it when an answer is immediately accepted. I feel like better answers aren't even attempted when that happens. – Nosredna Jun 29 '09 at 4:42
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Starting bounty because I really like Greg's solution – Pekka 웃 Sep 18 '11 at 12:40
Is it just me? I have no frakking idea what's going on here! – Lightness Races in Orbit Sep 18 '11 at 22:19
@pekka why are you dredging this up now? Random orderings of posts with the same score was, and is, the best solution. There is no FGITW problem that I am aware of after that change, and according to at least one academic study based on our data, there never was a FGITW problem to begin with.. – Jeff Atwood Sep 19 '11 at 5:49
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@Jeff I wasn't focusing on the FGITW problem at all, but on hiding vote counts on answer for some time (e.g. for as long as the question is on the front page) to avoid the bike shed effect. But this may be the wrong proposal to support in that vein, fair enough – Pekka 웃 Sep 19 '11 at 8:47
I really want to post an answer saying only 'NO.', but that doesn't have enough characters (nothing a few empty pictures can't remedy), and I would be a 'slow gun', not a fast one. (2+ years late.) – muntoo Nov 2 '11 at 4:18
Surprisingly, the "mother" question was not linked to this one. I added the link. – Daniel Daranas Dec 29 '11 at 13:59

13 Answers

up vote 87 down vote accepted

I had an idea for this that I submitted to uservoice a while ago, but I can't seem to find it now so I'll recreate it:

When casting a vote, the effect of that vote would be delayed for all other users for five minutes or something. You would be able to see the vote effect, so that you could easily confirm that your vote was actually cast. But everybody else would see the effect of that vote five minutes later.

This would allow each answer to be voted on its own merit, at least for the first few minutes. From the point of view of a user, the site would appear to work exactly the way it does now except it would look like everybody else was off having a coffee break whenever you cast a vote.

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yes, this is one of the few proposals that I liked – Jeff Atwood Jun 28 '09 at 12:40
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But the first answer would still be at the top, and if we've learned anything from elections, its that being on top is a HUGE advantage. – WindyCityEagle Jun 28 '09 at 18:57
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Perhaps the default sort could randomise the order of posts with the same number of votes. Then the only bias toward the first answer would be that it would be visible the longest. – Greg Hewgill Jun 28 '09 at 19:29
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I really like this idea, and the mixed ordering idea, also perhaps, if you can only accept an answer after an hour would help encourage higher quality answers – Sam Saffron Jun 29 '09 at 1:42
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What I don't like in this solution is that question view would be inconsistent for different users. – Sergey Jul 1 '09 at 9:56
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I disagree. This would make a great point of SO moot: Currently, garbage answers will get down immediately. – Mehrdad Afshari Jul 13 '09 at 17:57
I'd +1 but that would change the votes away from forty-two... – Tobias Kienzler Aug 2 '10 at 11:52
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I see that despite Jeff liking this proposal, it's still not implemented. I'm assuming the problem is that an answer that may only deserve a +3 score gets a +10 score because nobody knew that it was already voted up before they got to it. If so, the answer is simple, just display all answers in a random order, regardless of score, for the first hour or so after a question is posted. Then everybody can see the scores and vote up/down accordingly, and there's no inherent bias towards early answers. If an answer is accepted, of course, that could go right to the top anyway. – Sam Skuce Mar 7 '11 at 22:20
@Greg: I like your proposal, though I don't understand why all votes have to be delayed for five minutes. I suggested a modified solution below (at the bottom of this list ;) – DaveBall aka user750378 Sep 18 '11 at 22:29
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@sskuce - No answer "deserves" a +3 score and not a +10 score. Upvote if it's useful, downvote if it's not, don't vote if you're not sure. – Kevin Vermeer Oct 7 '11 at 21:17
The Gregs proposal is great, however I'd extend the 5 minutes to 1 hour. 5 minutes is still too short if we want to get higher answer quality. – Tomas Oct 13 '11 at 9:33
@sskuce, agree to the Kevin's comment, moreover, by displaying the vote count you totally negate the genial Gregs proposal. Of course there would be a bias, because the people would look at higher voted answers first, regardles of the order. – Tomas Oct 13 '11 at 9:35
Ya I call it the "Break Effect". If you are one of the first 5 posters on Break.com your comment is almost guaranteed to be one of the featured comments – puk Nov 18 '11 at 6:55

Nope

No matter what Jeff says, Fastest Gun in the West is still a massive problem:

If you are the first to post an answer you have an almost 50% chance of it getting accepted, if you post the 5th answer you only have a 2% chance of getting your answer accepted.

0   50477    46.305
1   26680    24.475
2   14516    13.316
3   7609     6.980
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OTOH, if you have four answers, at least one of them should be pretty good. People with taste are more likely to censor themselves. Fifth answers are often (but not always) redundant and clueless. – Tom Hawtin - tackline Jun 28 '09 at 12:38
I've noticed that most of my questions get 4 answers – Lucas Jones Jun 28 '09 at 12:48
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Lots of people (and Jeff) don't like this statistic, on one hand, when an answer is posted you have no idea if 10 answers or 1 answer will be posted, so the stat is valid. It basically saying that if you are first its more likely your answer will be accepted, similarly being jon skeet or better still rq, makes it much more likely your answer will get accepted. It does not take into account the number of answers or if the question is a community wiki (can not do this yet) – Sam Saffron Jun 29 '09 at 1:48
Hm, that's a good point about one-answer questions.. I've relayed that bit of your question into a comment on stackoverflow.com/questions/951056/… (yay, circular linking!) – dbr Jun 29 '09 at 1:58
How do these figures stack up for questions with exactly four answers? – Rowland Shaw Jul 15 '09 at 16:06
Note to self: read rest of answers, as Jeff answers this (albeit using 5 as the magic number) – Rowland Shaw Jul 15 '09 at 16:08
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Late to the show here, but this doesn't take into account the likelihood of the first answer being at least as good as any subsequent answers, which I would argue is also quite likely for most questions. – Rex M Sep 21 '09 at 4:34
I suspect that this understates the problem. Knowing the fastest-gun problem, people will only take the time to write a good answer if they think they can answer significantly better. So we should expect later answers to be better; and yet they are being accepted less. – Mechanical snail Jul 16 '12 at 1:48

Let's look at whether it's really a problem. To find out, we need to focus on questions that:

  • Have more than one submitted answer
  • Have one accepted answer
  • Have not been closed

Other answers haven't included these criteria, and I think that's a big problem. For example, if you don't filter out questions with only one answer, well then of course the first answer is going to be much more likely to be accepted - because duh, it's the ONLY answer.

If you're playing along at home with SQL Server, the query to find the questions I'm focusing on is:

SELECT COUNT(DISTINCT pQ.Id) AS Questions
  FROM dbo.Posts pQ
  WHERE pQ.PostTypeId = 1 
  AND (SELECT COUNT(*) FROM dbo.Posts pA WHERE pQ.Id = pA.ParentId) > 1
  AND pQ.AcceptedAnswerId IS NOT NULL
  AND pQ.ClosedDate IS NULL

Out of those 88,975 questions, how many of them had the first answer accepted? The query I used was:

SELECT COUNT(DISTINCT pQ.Id) AS Questions
  FROM dbo.Posts pQ
  INNER JOIN dbo.Posts pA1 ON pQ.AcceptedAnswerId = pA1.Id
  WHERE pQ.PostTypeId = 1 
  AND pQ.ClosedDate IS NULL
  AND NOT EXISTS (SELECT Id FROM dbo.Posts pA WHERE pQ.Id = pA.ParentId AND pA1.CreationDate > pA.CreationDate)

Turns out 49,989 of the first answers were accepted, or about 56% of the time.

The next question would be, "How often was a later answer scored higher by the viewers?" The query I used was:

SELECT COUNT(DISTINCT pQ.Id) AS Questions
  FROM dbo.Posts pQ
  INNER JOIN dbo.Posts pA1 ON pQ.AcceptedAnswerId = pA1.Id
  INNER JOIN dbo.Posts pA2 ON pA2.ParentId = pQ.Id AND pA1.CreationDate < pA2.CreationDate AND pA2.Score > pA1.Score
  WHERE pQ.PostTypeId = 1 
  AND pQ.ClosedDate IS NULL
  AND NOT EXISTS (SELECT Id FROM dbo.Posts pA WHERE pQ.Id = pA.ParentId AND pA1.CreationDate > pA.CreationDate)

Turns out 3,167 times, a later answer has a higher score than the accepted (earlier) answer.

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Do lots of people check questions already marked as answered, in order to check/vote the non-accepted answers? – Peter Boughton Jun 28 '09 at 13:06
The history of views by date isn't stored in the data dump, so I can't determine that. – Brent Ozar Jun 28 '09 at 13:22
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When looking for questions to answer I don't look at questions with accepted answers as there seems little point in adding to a discussion which is effectively over. If I find the question title interesting or intriguing then I'll view the question anyway. – ChrisF Jun 28 '09 at 15:32
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those stats say nothing about whether the first or later answers were the better answer. – Sam Hasler Jun 30 '09 at 14:30
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Sam - how do you propose to measure that statistically from the database? – Brent Ozar Jun 30 '09 at 15:02
vote counts aren't a measure of the quality of an answer? – perbert Jul 11 '09 at 19:47

I guess the question is really: is it a problem?

There are several different aims to the site:

  • Get a specific answer to a question as quickly as possible for the sake of the questioner
  • Get a full, detailed answer to a question over time for the sake of future visitors
  • Allow developers to show off :)

Getting a quick answer in serves two purposes:

  • It may serve the first site purpose in minutes (or less - I think my fastest was to have an answer posted and accepted while the question was still saying "1 minute ago").
  • It shows other potential answerers that you're answering along a particular line of thought. For instance, if I see Marc Gravell answering about a particular topic, even with just a quick answer, I probably won't bother any more; he's likely to say everything I would, unless I've got a completely different idea.

The main problem I see is that of positive feedback - an earlier answer will often get more votes (and keep getting more votes) than a better, later answer. That's not always the case, but it does happen. (And I'm fully aware that I'm usually the beneficiary of that.)

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There's "as quickly as possible" and there's "quickly". I think a 5 min delay, as suggested, would not diminish the value of SO as a place where you can get quick answers. – Assaf Lavie Jun 28 '09 at 15:29
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Delaying the effect of votes by five minutes would be reasonable - and may well reduce the problem. Not sure about delaying the actual answers themselves by five minutes - that removes the benefit of my bottom bullet, and may actually lead to more answer duplication. – Jon Skeet Jun 28 '09 at 15:42

The premise of the question is invalid: it is based on an assumption that the "fastest gun in the west" phenomenon is a problem, which I believe to be incorrect. One of the problems with forums is noone posts there because it takes a day or two (minimum) to get an answer. The fact that the system here encourages quick answers is a good thing. Usually if you have a programming related problem you need an answer now.

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Here's some other data that Sam Saffron put together

Looking only at questions with 5 answers:

0                  2524        26.196
1                  1982        20.571
2                  1918        19.907
3                  1715        17.800
4                  1496        15.527

Looking only at questions that received 2 answers within the first 5 minutes

0                  8069        35.073
1                  6508        28.288
2                  3972        17.265
3                  2094        9.102
4                  1054        4.581
5                  558         2.425

Personally, I think that looks totally reasonable

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Can you insert column headers for these figures? Frankly I have no idea what I'm looking at here... – Oliver Giesen Jun 28 '09 at 13:00
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answer #, # of questions where that is the accepted answer, percentage of total – Jeff Atwood Jun 28 '09 at 13:19
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It may look like being first is a slight advantage, but I'd add to these stats the warning that correlation does not imply causation. It is often the case that the first answer is the obvious answer to an easy question, and so the first answer does have a slightly higher likelihood of being the right answer. – Bill the Lizard Jul 31 '09 at 18:23

I'm brand new to Stack Overflow and think the speed thing is a problem. I'm enjoying answering questions and love the feedback from reputation. What I hate is writing a detailed, reasoned answer and suddenly getting an Ajax notification "there are 2 answers; reload to see them". I feel like I have to beat the timer. I'm already answering questions more quickly or leaving a short answer to go back and edit later.

I think the solution is to somehow delay votes and randomize the order for a few minutes until several answers come in. Then let the best answer win.

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Nelson, the solution to this is to write an accurate, but not detailed, answer, post it, then come back and add detail. I'll often post an answer, come back and add links and post that, then come back and add the code sample. – John Saunders Jul 31 '09 at 16:01
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Which is awkward. I'd rather just write the answer and have done with it. – David Thornley Jul 31 '09 at 16:40
This does feel irritating – Eero Aaltonen Sep 21 '12 at 12:11

I don't really think it's a problem. I'm rarely the first to answer, which means I have to write better (or at least longer ;)) answers in order to catch up. I'll never catch up with Jon Skeet rep-wise, but I've got 22k so far, and almost all of it has been earned on questions where I was not the first to answer.

It doesn't really bother me. The questions where "first answer wins" are usually the ones where only a few upvotes are going to be given anyway. In the longer-running questions, where all the real upvotes are given, there's plenty of time to jockey for position.

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Two-minute initial no-voting period?

Three-minute prohibition on edits for answers posted very quickly; say, within a minute of question posting?

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Here's a metrics question:

Of the questions that have the first 2 answers within 10 minutes, what's the upvote difference between the first and second answers, and is that upvote difference statistically significant?

I've had several occasions where I've submitted a nearly-identical answer within 60 seconds of the first one, and there were a huge difference in votes. Weird... first because I would have expected this forum to be more merit based (as long as answers come in quickly, who cares whether one arrives in 4 minutes and the other 4 minutes 30 seconds), and secondly because why should I care about votes anyway? I have this strange urge to be less rigorous, go ahead and post my quick answer first, then go back and edit it to have the right links & stuff, especially since there seems to be a time period after the initial post when corrections/additions are accepted without it being called an "edit".

I'd suggest deciding what qualities of answers you want first (correct & complete answers that are reasonably quick) and coming up with social rules to encourage those qualities. SO's pretty good but issues like this make me wonder.

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It's a slow query, but here it is. The answer, for the 155117 questions on SO with at least 2 answers within ten minutes to 30/5/2010, the first answer has a score of 0.69 more than the second answer. (I know you asked for up-votes only, but the query took 104 seconds as is!) – Mark Hurd Jun 10 '10 at 10:59

My suggestion

is similar to Greg's. But instead of delaying every vote for 5 minutes, I would:

  • show the answers immediately,
  • but show no votes at all (except your own) for the first 10 minutes or so after the question has been posted. (For viewers, instead of 0 the vote field could display votes show in 3 min).
  • Then after the 10 minutes have passed, all votes will be displayed at once, and the usual process takes place, as it is right now (no more delays).

The part of my old answer

for which I got some down-votes and the bashing comments below:

I really feel this being a big problem. That's why I try to commit my answers quickly, only with the main aspects. Afterwards, I'm re-editing it to fill in details (like source code examples) to improve its quality. But this process is:

  • not really comfortable, since I have to go over my answer at least twice and I find it kind of stressfull to be one of the fastest guns in the west (especially when some "popups" show how many others have answered in the mean time).
  • Sometimes it results in weird comments that are only valid for a couple of minutes, until I have filled in detailed examples.
  • Here is an example where I even got a down-vote that was not corrected after I re-edited my answer.
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Reading the above, I feel you are part of the problem, not suffering it? – Arjan Sep 18 '11 at 16:43
I'd say the problem is the system and the voters. Furthermore, I do improve my answers quite quickly, and when I vote answers up, I look through other answers and upvote similar ones as well, even if they don't have upvotes yet. – DaveBall aka user750378 Sep 18 '11 at 16:50
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I disagree. If you're getting "weird comments" and even downvotes, then I'd say your first answer was just not ready for posting. So, you're just trying to get to be the first answerer, as you're aware that first answers are likely to get more votes? I dislike that, a lot. – Arjan Sep 18 '11 at 17:00
I try to post only when the first answer does make sense already. I checked 10 of your answers, 9 of them edited by yourself afterwards. Maybe your first answers were just not ready for posting ;) – DaveBall aka user750378 Sep 18 '11 at 18:02
Sure I edit after posting too, sometimes even in the 5 minute grace period. But I've never received weird comments or downvotes for any first revision. And I surely don't post partial answers knowing that I am ging to improve it right away. How many of those 10 were first answers? – Arjan Sep 18 '11 at 18:07
I haven't looked for that. In fact I do like it when people improve their answers... And I think the same applies for me: I used to write very thorough answers that subsume several others and therefore were committed quite late. The others all got a lot of upvotes, mine maybe 1 or 2 by "late viewers". Only after several such situations I changed my behavior and started to list all the aspects, then commit the answer and later-on edit the answer if I want to add details to the aspects. Hope with this explanation you agree that the root cause of the problem is the voting behavior/system itself. – DaveBall aka user750378 Sep 18 '11 at 18:17
I don't see how my comments could be interpreted as bashing, but they surely were not intended that way. Sorry about that. That aside: I wonder if the quick non-revoked downvote on your example is related to this. To me, it surely is an example of FGITW: a single-line answer posted within 3 minutes after the question was asked, and then enhanced a lot 7 to 12 minutes later. But why couldn't the downvoter simply disagree with both the short and long answer? – Arjan Sep 19 '11 at 16:27
Sure, maybe he disagreed and did not comment on it. I did feel a little bashed here because I mainly want to give good answers, only secondly fast ones. Furthermore, many others have mentioned in this thread that they are using the same technique, without getting down-votes. That no longer seemed objective to me. – DaveBall aka user750378 Sep 19 '11 at 17:50

http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1112384/to-break-up-your-jquery-code-into-functions-do-you-do-it-the-same-way-as-in-java

I would argue that there are still plenty of examples where the first or second to answer are not the answers that end up getting selected or with the most votes...

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Maybe it has been suggested before, and it may not be popular, but why not set the timestamp of the answer to the last edit, and sort the answers with equal votes accordingly?

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then you'd have people game the system by editing it repeatedly to get the top position. – Chii Sep 22 '09 at 14:19

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