Hot answers tagged terminology
53
Referring to the person who asked the question:
OP
Asker
Question author (or "original author", or just "author")
Person who asked the question
Blankman
Referring to the person who answered the question:
OP
Answerer
Answer author (or "original author", or just "author")
Person who answered the question
Jon Skeet
26
Very interesting question: is it better to have the right terms, or is it better to have the terms the people are searching for.
I'd say it is better to have the right term. And maybe have a question tagged c#3.5 which states that there is no c#3.5 but instead .net 3.5, so people searching for c#3.5 would find this question where they can learn that the ...
14
I just want to point out we need a clear unambiguous definition of when a question can be called a "list question" or alternatively why we shouldn't use it as a definition.
It's not a definition, a condemnation, or even really a classification.
It's... Shorthand. For straw-polls, GTKYs, discussion threads and the like. Questions that are geared toward ...
9
Meh...
Give users the opportunity to write a descriptive title, and they'll ask, "Plz help!"
Give users the opportunity to write a descriptive question, and they'll ask, "[80 lines of irrelevant code] why doesn't my code work .?"
Give users the opportunity to choose a category, and they'll pick the first one they recognize. Or just the first one in the ...
8
A "list" or "poll" question is a question that cannot be answered definitively. List/poll questions are asking for a list, not a single answer.
The FAQ illustrates this concept nicely:
To prevent your question from being flagged and possibly removed,
avoid asking subjective questions where …
every answer is equally valid: “What’s your ...
8
The sentiment is good, but this might be a potential source of confusion that we just have to cope with.
"Nominate" isn't really the right word, and no other alternatives spring to my mind. Note that any proposed solution would ideally do natural double duty as noun and verb: "That post has four close nominations," sounds weird.
Changing the term for ...
7
Instead of saying You could ask on Math.SE, try using a little bit of ownership in the pitch and say You could ask our Math community on Stack Exchange instead. That opens up a little more conversation as to what both mean, and the actual sub domain becomes kind of incidental.
Technically speaking, they are sub domains, so I'm not sure if there's any ...
7
Searching for SCITE turns up this question wherein Mehrdad seemingly coins the term.
We all know search sucks, but it's not completely useless :-)
AFAIK, the idea is that you copy the FGITW's answer, then vote them down, thus earning votes and the misplaced-respect of your peers. Although I would have thought that the fastest cheater would do better than ...
7
I don't have any inside insight beyond what's in the FAQ, but to me "Area 51" suggests a place where interesting ideas are developed and tested. I guess I'm thinking more of military rather than alien uses.
I don't know if I'd consider the aliens a problem. Twitter has birds and whales and such, and they're doing ok.
6
Only noticed someone tagging a couple of posts with scite-problem on questions about FGITW.
So SCITE is probably about Seven Chinese In The East.
Or:
Slowest Cowboy In The East
Stupid Clauses In The EULA
Some Clueless Idiot Teasing Ernest Borgnine
Then again, it could be the seven cities in the East short changing internationlists taking earned ...
6
A markup language is "a notation used to annotate a document's content to give information regarding the structure of the text or instructions for how it is to be displayed".
"Markdown" is the name one one such markup language, which is used by StackOverflow.
6
"SO Proper" is typically said in the following contexts:
A user asking a question in chat that should probably be composed and asked on Stack Overflow, as that's the 'proper' place to ask non-trivial questions. E.g. "You should ask that on SO proper ..."
A user asking a similar question as a comment, or an answer to an existing question, though here it's ...
5
Diamond moderators are either community elected or appointed. There's a list of all diamond moderators here. The term diamond refers the fact that they have a diamond (♦) next to their names.
Diamond moderators aside, Stack Overflow is community moderated.
At 10000 rep, users gain access to moderator tools, so the term moderator can also refer to a user ...
4
See the full usage document linked from the legal link in the footer:
Guidelines for the Use of the Stack Exchange Trademarks
The excerpt (below) is a little more rigidly formal than using (unofficial) terms like "the Trilogy" but this is how the name use is described under...
Stack Overflow Internet Services Inc. is the official name of the company, ...
4
The problem with these metaphors is that everybody understands them in different ways. Depending on who you ask,
tag
label
category
folder
section
group
…
may all mean the same thing, or mean n+1 different things. So unless there is substancial evidence that a majority of people use the word (say) "label" for what SO's tags actually are, changing ...
4
If it helps to clarify the question I'd encourage you to correct someone's terminology. In the case of C# 3.5, I'd correct it to say something like "C# under .NET 3.5", since you don't really know what version of C# specifically they are using. I think the discrepancy in the tagging is a perfect example of why you should feel free to do this. If the ...
3
Probably during the US workday on 3/18, which would be starting around 16:00 UTC, as this is probably a manual process.
I just posted a bounty and want to know when I need to award it by.
It really doesn't matter, since all reputation will be gone anyway.
3
List questions are generally just recommendations in a bad disguise (though not always), generally taking the form "What are some X?" or "What is a good resource for Y?"
List questions are so-called because they result in the answers being an itemized list. Often they'll receive 10 or more one-line answers that have no explanation. For example:
What are ...
3
Markdown is, obviously, the Markdown engine that Stack Exchange uses to let you format your posts and make them look nice. Markup is just another word sometimes used synonymously to refer to Markdown features here, mostly because when you add bold, italics, and other things to your content, it's normally referred to as "marking up" the content (HTML is a ...
2
English Language & Usage is the closest possibility. Vocabulary questions are off-topic on both SO and Programmers.
Your example question describes a concept, not necessarily vocabulary. For the record, the answer to your example question is "yes." See also http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Self-hosting
To summarize, the SE network is not a dictionary, ...
2
When talking about the unanswered tab you said:
I see questions with answers! Dumb website, not actually doing what I asked!
But when I go to the same location, I see dead people questions with no answers, just like the tab promised. A quick and totally scientific sample of four of the 14424 pages showed that all the questions had no answers.
So it ...
2
Developers have to be absolutely sharp on terminology!
It shows their level of meta/self consciousness. How else could they write clean code?
I saw a lot of developers who were first confused about what to implement, then used the wrong words for the wrong thing and then..., well, you could clearly see the result in their code.
I had some folks (Europe, ...
2
It is simply the Stack Exchange Network now. Stack Overflow, Server Fault, and Super User were the first members.
From another meta post:
Stack Exchange is no longer a separate product: it's now the name for the entire network, of which Stack Overflow, Server Fault, and Super User are the founding members.
1
You should tidy up the terminology and tags - having a series of tags for the same subject obstructs searches and encourages the use of multiple tags. Unambiguous tags help here. Terminology and phrasing in a question should also be tidied up to help clarify the question. Bear in mind that not all people on SO are necessarily good technical authors nor ...
1
List questions look for search result answers rather than expert answers.
Generally, the items listed in the FAQ are problematic because they are seeking answers from a community of experts that could be found just as easily with a search engine query. Book recommendations tend to get closed, for instance, because you can often type the same question into ...
1
Well, they had to call it something. Do you have a better suggestion?
Regardless, yes, perhaps, the alien theme is a bit tech-oriented, but as far as I can tell, it's not getting in the way of the site content -- in fact, I think the designer did an excellent job of keeping the design neutral and in the background so users can focus on the content, which is ...
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