I was watching the top users and see the honorable Jon Skeet profile with his 136k+ reputation. This man has a lot of quality posts and I respect him a lot. He deserves the reputation he has. Like a lot of other people here.

But how do you get over 200 reps/days?

Taking a sample of Jon Skeet's profile, we can read over a course of 54 days, he manages to rep 13,076 points.

Now, if we do the maths on that:

13076 ÷ 54 = 242 reputation points/day.

How can someone have 242 reps/day when the limit is 200?


(This question was originally floated by Daok)

This question has led to a humorous Chuck-Norris-Facts style question.

link|improve this question
..and 37 silver badges too :O – OscarRyz Nov 20 '08 at 0:26
1  
yeah this guy is a machine :), lot of quality post too. – Daok Nov 20 '08 at 0:27
27  
if he is a machine he's the first one to pass the Turing Test – Sam Hasler Nov 20 '08 at 0:35
6  
He even answers questions from his phone, truly amazing fellow. :-) – John the Seagull Nov 20 '08 at 1:48
7  
With both hands tied behind his back, even. – MusiGenesis Nov 20 '08 at 1:52
11  
Yes, he has surely programmed his phone to read the questions aloud to him and then to do speech to text for the answers. – John the Seagull Nov 20 '08 at 1:55
4  
I meant he types with his toes. – MusiGenesis Nov 20 '08 at 2:00
1  
I suspected so, but my option is cooler :P – John the Seagull Nov 20 '08 at 2:00
17  
Let's compromise and assume that he has written a speech-to-text engine with his toes. – MusiGenesis Nov 20 '08 at 2:01
I sense a Chuck Norris-style Jon Skeet Facts page coming on. – Bill the Lizard Nov 20 '08 at 2:05
Sorry, Bill, you Dennis-Millered me on that one. :) – MusiGenesis Nov 20 '08 at 2:14
My fault. chucknorrisfacts.com Nice obscure reference yourself. :) – Bill the Lizard Nov 20 '08 at 2:19
12  
It's the daily rep cap plus the answer to Life, the Universe, and Everything. – Daniel Daranas Jul 29 '09 at 16:17
1  
@Daniel How true!! – gideon Oct 11 '10 at 15:59
show 5 more comments
feedback

migrated from stackoverflow.com Jul 22 '09 at 11:56

This question came from our site for professional and enthusiast programmers.

13 Answers

I think the site's new logo explains it:

link|improve this answer
5  
LOL! nice one! – Mitch Wheat Nov 20 '08 at 3:19
95  
I don't know whether I feel honoured or disturbed ;) – Jon Skeet Nov 20 '08 at 7:04
1  
What, no "offended"? :) – MusiGenesis Nov 20 '08 at 10:12
11  
Heck no. I'm still waiting for the first question with a jon-skeet tag though :) – Jon Skeet Nov 20 '08 at 11:08
15  
Your brain is awfully yellow, cylindrical and segmented. – Won't Nov 20 '08 at 13:25
Looking at Jon Skeet's profile (2009/1/10): 26084 reputation, member for 105 days. Now 26084/105 = 248 rep per day on average :D – Federico Ramponi Jan 10 '09 at 1:30
5  
My god, it's accelerating. – MusiGenesis Jan 10 '09 at 1:41
That is awesome. – Christian Nunciato Jan 16 '09 at 1:32
4  
It's still accelerating!!! I just estimated about 291 per day for the past 10 days! – gnostradamus Feb 11 '09 at 19:29
Wow that is funny!!! Jon be honored :) – Dining Philanderer Mar 24 '09 at 19:25
2  
Somehow the image reminds me a little of Monty Python. – Joey Aug 9 '09 at 13:42
2  
Is the white stuff in the background a bad Photoshop, or is it actually overflowing with skeet? – fahadsadah Jul 8 '10 at 16:38
Skeet has some wanna be competition stackoverflow.com/users/157882/balusc – John Sikora Apr 25 at 14:04
feedback

The limit of 200 is only for upvotes. After hitting the limit you still get reputation for accepted answers (+15) and accepting answers (+2).

link|improve this answer
3  
If this isn't clear in stackoverflow.com/questions/130654/… then it needs to be edited – Sam Hasler Nov 20 '08 at 0:29
19  
Jon Skeet doesn't ask questions! – Hello71 Oct 25 '10 at 2:33
3  
Not to mention bounties! – Box9 Feb 2 '11 at 12:40
feedback

Revisions

EDIT (9 Feb 2009): I should have come back to this answer a while ago - the policy was changed back again, so you can get over 200 due to accepted answers.

EDIT (29 December 2008): I've left the text below for historical record, but as of about 29th December 2008 8am UTC, the 200 cap is applied to all reputation.


Original Text

As others have said, the 200 cap doesn't apply to accepted/accepting answers. However, it's worth noting that (as far as I can tell) the 200 cap is an overall cap, not a cap on points given from voting. This makes timing important. Suppose in one day someone has 10 answers accepted and receives 40 upvotes. Two example timelines:

  • All the answers are accepted before any of the votes: 150 points for accepted answers, 50 points for votes, and then the rest of the "voting points" are "lost" due to the cap. Total = 200.

  • All the votes occur before any answers are accepted: 200 points for the votes (the rest being lost due to the cap again) and then 150 points for the accepted answers. Total = 350.

In other words, answers accepted late in the day (UTC) effectively have a higher value. Anyone accepting one of my answers before I've hit the cap aren't really doing my rep any good (assuming I'll get sufficient upvotes to hit the cap anyway). This shouldn't discourage anyone from accepting answers, however - whether mine or others. Reputation is a fun side-show, but the main event here is obviously sharing knowledge.

link|improve this answer
1  
You need a first chance acception handler that will sleep until 23:59 UTC. – Windows programmer Nov 20 '08 at 8:06
5  
Your last sentence is absolutetly right, and it's all to your honor to not be furious about the question. Thx for the infos. – Daok Nov 20 '08 at 18:03
2  
Why would I be furious about the question? I didn't catch any hint that anyone thought I'd been cheating. – Jon Skeet Nov 20 '08 at 19:52
3  
Shouldn't you get more rep points for answering a question as to how you have so many rep points? – BobbyShaftoe Dec 4 '08 at 23:30
@JonSkeet: I figure that by "question" Daok meant the general rep cap issue, so that he praised you for not being bitter about "losing" well-deserved rep due to the 200 cap system; in particular when answers from you get accepted before you hit 200 for the day. – accolade Mar 17 at 15:03
feedback

I think the better question is, what's the point exactly? I thought this was a site for programmers, not some kind of MMORPG.

link|improve this answer
The point is that it's weird to see this kind of average and I think it's a good question. If you do not like reputation you can go in other site like forums or put all your post wiki or not answer this question. Up to you my friend. – Daok Nov 20 '08 at 1:00
4  
The point is that programmers want to know how the math works for anything they're involved in. – Lance Roberts Nov 20 '08 at 1:01
61  
Are you kidding? This is the first massively multiplayer online programming question game! – Adam Davis Nov 20 '08 at 3:56
The point is to get Kudos. – DoctaJonez Nov 21 '08 at 18:44
12  
actually, SO is addicting in an MMORPG like fashion. – hasen j Nov 26 '08 at 21:30
wow, some addict found this offensive? – amdfan Dec 3 '08 at 22:47
lol - it is addicting... – koldfyre Dec 17 '08 at 20:23
1  
haha, maybe we should start linking the rep points to level and with your rep points you can powerful widgets to your page or perhaps title. then that would really make it into a mmorpg. of course JS would have to be the lich king. – melaos Dec 22 '08 at 0:25
.... isn't it? damn what do I do with my level 3,000 player now? – Mario Ortegón Feb 7 '09 at 2:45
lol @ Lance, spot on mate :D – demoncodemonkey Feb 8 '09 at 8:24
1  
Who cares if it works like an MMO as long as it produces a database of useful information? – Lucas Lindström May 26 '09 at 16:46
Games are always nice! Why not make it like a game?! Then people get help and people have fun too! – thyrgle Apr 23 '10 at 3:34
feedback

I think most people come to look at this question to figure out how they can get lots of rep. They didn't come here expecting a discussion about the limits of the rep system.

Here are the observations I made while watching Jon Skeet answer one of my questions. After watching his process, I think I now understand better how he harvests rep.

First, he answers the question first. That is, he gets an answer in before anyone else. There's a strong culture of giving rep to whomever is the first to post an answer that is right, even if it may not be the best or most complete. Jon knows this and uses it.

Second, the answer that he initially posts is correct. It's not wrong, it may not be the best, but it is definitely correct.

Third, (this is a little conjecture), he looks at other answers coming in and changes his if there is a better answer. This preserves his position as the first answerer, while benefiting from the insights of others. Please note, he doesn't copy it, but adds some more explanation / examples / value.

Finally, he iterates. He takes the time to explore the edge cases. By doing this, he adds even more value.

I think anyone with deep technical knowledge in a subject and cat-like reflexes could gain more than 200 rep per day just like Jon Skeet.

link|improve this answer
4  
He's fast--real fast. And he's good--real good. stackoverflow.com/questions/305223/jon-skeet-facts/… – mmyers Mar 24 '09 at 19:24
1  
yeah, and I think that it's great for question-askers (like me) that someone is going to put that much effort into compiling an answer. – Neil G May 21 '09 at 5:13
feedback

Update: This no longer works because of the time limit for cancelling votes.

Update #2: Even without the time limit, this will not work. Rep points lost by downvoting others are not deducted from the cap. So if you downvote 30 posts you can earn a maximum of 200 - 30 = 170. If you could undo the downvotes you would only get back to the original 200.


There's a hack that can increase it slightly. Downvote the max number of posts (I think it's 30) at the start of the day, gain rep from your upvoted answers until you hit the cap, then cancel your downvotes and you get your 30 points back.

link|improve this answer
1  
except for the fact that there's quite a strict time-limit during which you can cancel a vote. – Bobby Jack Nov 20 '08 at 0:36
-1 for encouraging hacks, Sorry :( – Robert Gould Nov 20 '08 at 1:13
14  
We're programmers, we don't just encourage hacks, we create them! – Lance Roberts Nov 20 '08 at 1:26
The hack is a waste of time when you can just post good answers that people frequently accept. – Bill the Lizard Nov 20 '08 at 2:06
1  
If this is a true hack please don't downvote it. Hiding the truth is not the way. – Daniel Auger Nov 20 '08 at 7:05
5  
+0 for security through obscurity. -0 to complement it. – Windows programmer Nov 20 '08 at 8:09
1  
I'm pretty sure this has been fixed. – amdfan Dec 3 '08 at 22:48
+1 ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, – Click Upvote Feb 2 '09 at 12:55
Yikes, that's scary! – notnot Feb 13 '09 at 18:29
2  
Ok, My downvote for today, stars here ;) PS:Kidding! – Lakshman Prasad Apr 2 '09 at 9:16
feedback

I have seen more post like "plz send me the repzz". Most of then got closed fast but not this one.

But let not forgot that the main focus of the site should be to provide quality answers and questions. And mr Jon Skeet has proven to be a champion on this.

Maybe an idea for a new gold badge:

Energetic: earning 200+ rep in 10 or more days in a row ;-).

link|improve this answer
5  
Energetic would be a silver badge, right? – Karl Nov 24 '08 at 19:01
feedback

He was probably one of the first members, before the cap was introduced, and before the rule was introduced that answers questions with 30+ answers didn't count for rep points.

link|improve this answer
1  
This. Most of the 10K+ users were here during the beta and before the 200 cap. Plus, before it opened to the world, it was much easier to get points (fewer questions, very interested parties, lot's of playing around). Check out the points on early questions. – Adam Davis Nov 20 '08 at 3:14
3  
Wrong. Jon wasn't a beta tester. Check his user page, he doesn't have the Beta badge. He got all of those points under the 200 point cap. – Bill the Lizard Nov 20 '08 at 3:25
Wowzers. Impressive, grasshopper! – Adam Davis Nov 20 '08 at 3:51
4  
All wrong. When the 200 cap was introduced it was done so retroactively and a lot of users dropped in rep because of it. (This is possible because they keep a complete record of when every vote was cast.) – Sam Hasler Nov 20 '08 at 15:11
2  
FWIW I don't think a time-based rep cap is a particularly good idea. A per-question cap would be more appropriate IMO. But hey... – Jon Skeet Nov 20 '08 at 19:52
Ah, but a time-based rep makes it tougher to find some mechanism by which to gain sufficient rep as to become a danger to the site quickly. So, if we were doing that I'd say it should be a reward for having 5000+ rep. – Brian Nov 24 '08 at 19:06
1  
Brian: My suggestion on UserVoice is to have a question-based cap - so no-one could get more than 100 rep from any one question. That would stop you from getting lots of power just from a couple of soft-but-popular answers. – Jon Skeet Nov 24 '08 at 20:38
feedback

You have to be able to write near-perfect English that is easy to understand with no spelling or grammar errors very quickly.

You have to post lots of good answers. Most high-rep users have many answers with 4 or 5 votes; pending a lot of time on one great answer does not give us much payback.

You need to be an expert in something that a lot of users are interested in.

If you are not quick enough for post the first answer, look at posting the best answers to 2 or 3 questions with bounties each day. Also consider questions that get lots of views.

You have to learn which answers get the up votes and change your behaviour, so you write more answers like them.

You have to do the above most days for a long time; a lot of up votes come on answers you wrote many months ago.

However you could just try to be as helpful as possible and not care about rep. You will still earn a lot of rep, but you will have a lot more fun while doing it and you will be creating more value.

link|improve this answer
feedback

Question: If you get 30 upvotes Monday, and no votes Tuesday, will your 100 "extra" reputation points carry over?

link|improve this answer
I wish! Today I crashsed into the 200 barrier for the first time. I 'lost' over 150 potential rep. This after days on which I had nothing interesting to say. Not that I need the rep, but after all, we are keeping score... – Norman Ramsey Apr 24 '09 at 2:08
feedback

This is my summary page for today 2. feb 2009. Has something happened to the CAP ?

0   Questions 	0 	Answer responses
6   Answers 	9 	Comment responses
7   Comments 	0 	Edits to your posts
215     Reputation earned 	1 	Badges achieved

I did no fancy up/downvoting of any sort.

link|improve this answer
No, but the rep rolls over in UTC and your summary page is in your local time. So you have roughly 23/24 chance that they don't match ;-). – Gamecat Feb 26 '09 at 14:55
feedback

I recently read the faq and after reading this question i read again :)

Now here is your answer

13076 ÷ 54 = 242 reputation points/day is not possible normally

Now read the some text from faq

A maximum of 40 votes can be cast per user per day, however, to reach the maximum you must vote on at least 10 questions. You can earn a maximum of 200 reputation per day. Please note that votes for posts marked “community wiki” do not generate any reputation, while accepted answers and bounty awards are not subject to the daily reputation limit.

now for example

A user have 13076 rep.. have gain daily 200 rep.. and his 100 answers accepted and achieve 15 bounties

So its hopefully clear how user gain more than 200 reputation per day

Thanks

link|improve this answer
feedback

I think this limit discourages the users from being answering, i suggest that the upvotes increment the reputation in less points, say,

  • for first 15, 10 points
  • for next 15, 5 points,
  • for next 15, 2 points

and so on.

link|improve this answer
feedback

You must log in to answer this question.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged