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42

Anyone who has spent any substantial time on meta will recognise this censoring behaviour. It's not new. As well as complete thread deletions, Jeff is quite willing to delete comments he finds unpalatable. I myself have been on the receiving end of several of these 'clean-ups'. I expect, if this discussion continues, this question itself will be deleted. As ...


20

Deleting the most highvoted question I've ever seen (over +300 when I last saw it) is slap in the face of the members who argued against it - over 300 some long time members. Why bother to complain when in the end of the day everything is thrown to the trash? The message sent is clear: "We make changes. You have no right to argue". OK, I can live with ...


19

There's a difference between discussion and, well, ranting. It's one thing when you dislike a feature or change, and point out that "Yeah, I don't think this was a useful idea", and then proceed to explain the pros and cons, as well as alternatives. When the discussion devolves into insulting and attacking, becoming so filled with hate and anger such that ...


15

The per-site meta FAQ is a shortened one that mainly emphasizes the differences to the main site. So I would argue that the main site rules about civility still apply to the per-site meta, even if they are not listed again. I think keeping the per-site meta to listing the differences is more useful, else nobody will read the whole thing anyway. And civility ...


12

A great many features of the site are unlocked via privileges -- and the best documentation of those features is often the descriptions there. For example, under the set bounties privilege you'll find the following text block: What happens when I place a bounty? The question is immediately bumped to the top of the active question list. The ...


10

The faq-official tag is a bit antiquated. A FAQ is considered official when it's tagged faq. This is a moderator-only tag, so if you find a question that you think deserves it, flag it for moderator attention and, if we agree, we'll add the tag. In order to speed up the process, the proposed FAQ question should be Community Wiki and should have a thorough, ...


8

@George, I would respectfully ask you how you learned to use Stack Exchange? And the other millions of uses who use the site? Rumors that we are just innately more capable than everyone else have been greatly exagerated. Stack Exchange is like a well-designed video game. When was the last time you had to read the documentation to play a video game? You ...


8

The question referred to turned into an extremely subjective and argumentative discussion, is not permitted on the site. In more detail: The problem with that question in particular is that the system they are currently implementing is not feature complete, therefore discussing whether the old feature was better than an incomplete feature is ...


8

Good catch. The meta.SO FAQ is wrong (I requested a fix). Meta.SO is not for questions about Area 51. We are trying to contain questions and discussions about the site creation process completely within Area 51 itself. That means any questions about an individual proposal, the proposal-creation process, and Area 51 should be asked at ...


7

A 0.6% exposure to the FAQ sounds about right. The truth is that the vast, vast, vast majority of users really don't care about this stuff. The typical user arrives at a Stack Exchange site looking for the best answers; A few might vote up posts they find useful; Even fewer might ask their own question or contribute an answer of their own. Way, way, way ...


7

In my experience, giving folks who are already prone to arguing semantics more words to (mis-)interpret doesn't tend to lead anywhere good. We're in the middle of reworking the FAQ right now. As always, the goal is to distill a huge amount of information - some of it born from lengthy policy discussions here on Meta, observations as to what the community ...


6

Who is policing the police? Regarding what can and what cannot be discussed here, especially with regard to (constructive?) criticism, the range of topics is critically curtailed by the fact that it is very delicate (difficult, impossible) to offer criticism to a host under his own roof. What we need here is an impartial, third party web site for ...


6

I think there are different classifications: Feature requests which are invalid due to them not being good ideas Feature requests which are invalid due to them not being worth the time to develop Feature requests which are invalid due to the solution already being readily available outside of StackOverflow (such as through a popular web browser extension). ...


6

Why is the policy on book recommendations not clearly stated in the FAQ? Because it has nothing to do with books... It's about shopping: What’s the point of a bunch of labor intensive questions that provide only temporary benefit to a limited (some might say Too Localized) audience? Read that blog post - it's focused on a particularly troublesome ...


6

To answer your meta-question, nobody expects you to know, on first arrival, exactly what is on and off topic on SO. That's why we have community moderation. When the community, who as a whole usually knows what's allowed and what's not, sees something that doesn't belong, it closes it. No harm done. You haven't been banned, shamed, hurt, or penalized for not ...


6

If you're confused about symbols, pretty much every symbol will have a hover tooltip that explains what it does or why it's there. If you want a quick reference, here: As for the colors, I don't see how they're that difficult to figure out that they warrant space in the FAQ. The FAQ is meant to hold the most frequently asked questions, and I believe the ...


5

The FAQ is searchable. Just open all the headings. This can be done quickly by just clicking the links on the right. As a bonus, we give you a badge for doing so! Or, as Bart mentions, you can click the "Show More" link at the bottom, and then "Expand All", and now you can search using your browser's "Find" command: And while you're at it, you might ...


5

It is stated in the FAQ. We feel the best Stack Overflow questions have a bit of source code in them, but if your question generally covers … a specific programming problem a software algorithm software tools commonly used by programmers practical, answerable problems that are unique to the programming profession Recommendations for ...


5

So, SO really needs a wiki and more importantly they need to keep it current so that it is versioned along with the site. SO does not need a wiki. The information (more or less) exists; what SO needs is better cataloging of that information. JIT-style documentation is nice, but only if you're about to use it right then. If you need to look something up, ...


5

Meta is the place to ask about UI changes, feature requests, etc. However, this question was not a question or a discussion it was a complaint about changes that had been made. It labeled the change as a bug and was stubbornly focused on reverting back to a previous state rather than looking at new solutions. I agree with Pekka that closing or locking ...


4

The problem is that there are two HTML tags that use the same CSS ID ("search"). This should be fixed the next time they deploy. Jeff Atwood's answer to my question is the following one: We have id="search" there and also in the header. I changed it so it will now be http://english.stackexchange.com/faq#searching instead of ...


4

I'm saddened, but unsurprised, that this question has been dismissed rather curtly. It makes some valid points behind a rather bad presentation. First, if you do nothing else, please prominently post link to the Community FAQ somewhere (anywhere) in the Official FAQ. Let's say you're looking for something in the official FAQ linked at the top of every ...


4

If we were gonna go that way, it would make more sense to set these up like we do close reasons: post notices displayed apart from the comments, and not attributed to one person. But my hope is that the folks using this actually learn to defend that they're saying in the face of disagreement - perhaps using discussions here as part of that. AakashM ...


4

This surprised me, as I find almost everything Shog writes to be well thought out and correct, however this statement goes against what I thought was true about meta voting. Careful; I've been known to write patently ridiculous things just to see if folks are paying attention, or to get them to make an argument for something they otherwise assumed would ...


3

First of all, suggested edits are - on the whole - made to improve the post, so it should be treated as such primarily. When to approve From my own experience, the kind of useful edits breaks down like this: The bulk of edits are purely code formatting; new users tend to paste their code without realizing that it looks horrendous without a fixed font. ...


3

I started something a long time ago on WikiBooks: http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/The_StackExchange_User_Guide (yes, I know - there is supposed to be a space between "Stack" and "Exchange") Perhaps we could encourage the community to start adding some more content?


3

Stack Overflow's FAQ states clearly that: If your motivation for asking the question is “I would like to participate in a discussion about __”, then you should not be asking here. [...] To prevent your question from being flagged and possibly removed, avoid asking subjective questions where… every answer is equally valid: “What’s your ...


3

faq-proposed. I don't know that's there's a specific format, but the question should be separate from the answer, with both clear and well-laid-out like any other post.


3

The rest of the FAQ is more or less imported. Personal attacks are not tolerated anywhere. On meta, you tend to see a slight amount of abrasiveness allowed, but it should not be much. Meta is meant to be a more informal environment -- joking and heated discussions are both OK, but the discussions should not get too abrasive. Main is not a place for ...


3

Common sense sort of rules the day here. If a post is a feature-request, or a discussion that is prefaced by the OP's own opinion about the matter, or the OP is ranting, feel free to downvote if you disagree. But it's pointless to downvote a user's support post when they ask something like "Why was my answer deleted," if the question is asked clearly, ...



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