| bio | website | none |
|---|---|---|
| location | Grand Rapids, MI | |
| age | 33 | |
| visits | member for | 1 year, 11 months |
| seen | Apr 15 at 17:32 | |
| stats | profile views | 71 |
I am a online application developer by trade, but I started out as a network administrator. I currently work in the nonprofit sector, as well as some freelancing on my own.
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Apr 1 |
comment |
So, how do you feel about “so” on SO? ^ this. I will remove it if I am already editing for some other reason. |
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Mar 13 |
awarded | Necromancer |
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Feb 22 |
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How often do downvoters come back and explain? I downvote randomly, and never leave a comment. If the person asks for a reason in the comments, I never explain myself, I just laugh and laugh and laugh and laugh until tears leak from my eyes and my bladder slips a little. The feeling of power and vengeance I get from reckless downvoting makes me drunk with pleasure. My friends staged an intervention, but I downvoted them and left them sitting in my living room tearing at their hair and wondering why. I downvote because it makes me feel alive. You'll never take it from me. Never. |
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Feb 6 |
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Replace accept rate with citizenship level I am definitely more likely to help a user with a decent accept rate, or put more in to the answer. At the very least, seeing that a user accepts answers shows that they'll even SEE my answer. A 0% accept rate leads me to conclude that they cast a wide net in the heat of problem-solving, then resolved their issue through some other mechanism. By the time they see my answer (if ever), it is useless to them -- they're back casting a new net on a new problem. Depending on how broad their question was, I may have literally wasted my time. I hate feeling like I am wasting time. |
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Sep 12 |
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If you advocate PDO, answer with PDO Thanks for the response. I appreciate answers that do include a disclaimer, or even the ambitious "double-answer" (what I do, myself), then there's those that only answer the question and don't mention the better practice. Fair to downvote those, in your view? |
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Sep 12 |
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If you advocate PDO, answer with PDO @Jim Would you say that the group of people faced with that situation are very likely to overlap with those that don't understand the difference? I'd say not -- if a beginner is in an esoteric situation, he's probably facing an XY problem. He can and should upgrade, he's probably creating the problem rather than being constrained to it. A more advanced user is more likely to be in that position for a reason, but they'll already know what to do. Our biggest answer-reading demographic is not so much the latter; they'd read the docs |
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Sep 12 |
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If you advocate PDO, answer with PDO I did search, and read all of those threads. ;) I wanted to discuss the philosophy of the concept, especially the idea that StackOverflow is (or rather, can be) a major influence on the adoption of new language features, and whether answers using older practices can delay the adoption |
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Sep 12 |
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If you advocate PDO, answer with PDO The point "StackOverflow exerts a major influence over the adoption of one particular practice or another by the content of answers" is also important -- our role as teachers, I feel, demands that we teach them how to fish, not hand them McDonald's fillet of fish. That might mean that we don't tell them how to fix their broken code with bad practices, but instead lead them down a totally new path using best practices. |
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Sep 12 |
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If you advocate PDO, answer with PDO philosophy because I don't propose that we force anything. However, we can use the downvote system to encourage good practice over bad, and I still think that the analogy with the bottle holds true. You make a point about an answer that does not directly address the narrow problem in a question, BUT, I think it is fallacious to say they "won't understand" PDO. They're learning -- they have to learn something new no matter what. When we contribute to the 3mil + Google results with wrong information, how useful is it that we answered that one guy's specific question? |
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Sep 12 |
revised |
If you advocate PDO, answer with PDO edited body |
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Sep 12 |
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If you advocate PDO, answer with PDO Oh, yep, good call. I picked the wrong example. Will correct -- it isn't hard to find. I've done it myself! |
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Sep 12 |
asked | If you advocate PDO, answer with PDO |
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Aug 11 |
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What formatting example should replace “his suicide note” in the Markdown help? Needs more whitespace. |
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Aug 11 |
answered | What formatting example should replace “his suicide note” in the Markdown help? |
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Aug 2 |
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When voting to close, should one answer the question too (if possible) Thanks for the answers, and the links, cv-pls |
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Aug 2 |
accepted | When voting to close, should one answer the question too (if possible) |
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Aug 2 |
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When voting to close, should one answer the question too (if possible) IMO, I think few users seem to understand that a close vote is not final, which makes the close vote final, in essence. |
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Aug 2 |
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Someone answers “I don't know how to do X” I think this is exactly why we don't allow subjective/list-of-things/what-is-the-best -type questions on SO -- "I don't know" is a perfectly valid answer to a non-objective question. "Use a different language" is also valid and not satisfying. This was a predicted problem, and the problem has already been addressed by our enforced policy barring subjective questions; nothing to see here. |
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Aug 2 |
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When voting to close, should one answer the question too (if possible) @Mysticial - Fair point, but then if you see the CV after you answer and agree with the CV, should you remove your answer? I would guess not, but then that seems contrary to voting to close. Updated question. |
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Aug 2 |
revised |
When voting to close, should one answer the question too (if possible) added 210 characters in body |