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I'm trying to put more time into Stack Overflow, and I'm wondering - as a developer with a day job - how do you incorporate Stack Overflow into your schedule?

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  • 14
    I quit my job to contribute to Stack Overflow.
    – m4n0
    Nov 3, 2016 at 13:09
  • 6
    @ManojKumar do you work for SO now, or are you independently wealthy? :)
    – pattivacek
    Nov 3, 2016 at 15:28
  • 1
    @patrickvacek I work for SO for free independent of wealth and never had a job to quit. :)
    – m4n0
    Nov 4, 2016 at 9:36
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    Id like to contribute more but I feel like all the good questions are either buried or been asked already. In short it used to be much easier to find a good question to answer back in the day; now it requires not just knowledge but time as well.
    – Knu
    Nov 5, 2016 at 2:00

6 Answers 6

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StackOverflow for me is a displacement activity. I do it when I have a mental block on something more important or urgent, and I need a distraction. Unless things are really bad, in which case I might turn to Facebook.

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    yeah it's pretty nice if you need a context switch. And more useful than other things. You can help others and even learn new things with that.
    – Hayt
    Nov 3, 2016 at 13:35
  • Developers story will become the next Facebook soon.
    – Enzokie
    Nov 3, 2016 at 13:52
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In short: whenever there is time.


It kind of depends. Usually you at some points have some "downtime" while working (when not doing pair programming or similar). Sometimes you can do other small projects but sometimes you know this downtime is only for a few minutes or not enough to do anything constructive inside your company. I usually then do a quick check on the tags I know I can contribute something and look at the most recent questions to see if there is something I can do.

Well to be fair such "a few minutes" sometimes can turn into half an hour or so when you want to provide a quality answer and get lost in researching ;)

Even when you cannot answer, you can upvote/downvote or flag questions when needed. Small things also help the community not only answers.

I don't force myself to be on Stack Overflow though. If I have things to do and no downtime in any way or I need to stay focused on the topic even with downtime, I avoid the context switch and may just not be on here for that time.

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    Yeah I tend to stay away from writing answers which still require research, too often I have to give up halfway through it because I simply have to get back to work :) But that leaves only the kind of questions which tend to already be duplicates. Having a job revolving around billable hours is a reputationless existence :)
    – Gimby
    Nov 2, 2016 at 16:14
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    @Gimby yeah I can see your point there. On the other side though when you have to do research yourself you are also learning things in the progress, which benefits you. I learned quite a few new things from stackoverflow by looking for questions I can answer.
    – Hayt
    Nov 3, 2016 at 13:35
  • Couldn't agree more, but that's more of a sales pitch to yourself to do go visit SO outside of working hours ;)
    – Gimby
    Nov 3, 2016 at 13:51
  • Also depends on the company how much educating yourself during downtime is tolerated / encouraged. At some places it's fine when you watch a cppcon talk while you have to wait 30 minutes for a build to finish to test it. But yeah, sales pitch ;)
    – Hayt
    Nov 3, 2016 at 13:55
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    @Gimby: When encountering such questions, I've marked them for later and then checked them back at home. Some time they've been answered by then and I have nothing to add, some time they've been answered but the present answers do not satisfy me and some time the OP is still waiting. Nov 4, 2016 at 9:49
  • @MatthieuM. Nice and easy way to dedicate some home time within limits to SO. I'll give it a try.
    – Gimby
    Nov 4, 2016 at 10:02
11

The majority of my contributions happen during the following times:

  1. When compiling or waiting for a master set of tests to pass.
  2. That five minutes before a meeting when I'm not going to get something done anyways.
  3. After I look up a question, sometimes I pause to give back right then and there.
  4. On the train to/from work.

That said, I know that I'm bored at work or disengaged the minute my activity spikes. It's a good internal indicator to fix my situation.

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  • #3 gets me often
    – Travis J
    Nov 5, 2016 at 1:58
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In addition the ways that other people mentioned, I frequently contribute to Stack Overflow (and other Stack Exchange sites) when I'm researching a problem purely for my own benefit.

For instance, the other day I finally got tired of Vim indenting HTML automatically. So I researched it until I finally worked out what was causing it, and documented it.

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In my graduation time i was like coding +stackOverflow even i spent way too much time at so and so chat. Even i was kind of member of php chat room cv ring (i have casted app. 5k close and delete vote)Than with time things started to change which are.

  1. I got some experience as well as knowledge so i find 9/10 users who ask questions do not even read documentation properly which frustrates me.

  2. I dont like new updates in so website i loved old one a lot also i am getting bore from everything except chat where most of regulars left.

So with time you lost interest in everything so you dont need to manage time. Also i never login while i am working i feel its kind of unethical we are not getting paid for writing answers here its our personal affair.

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I don't. I visit it IF I can't fix something myself and would waste more time trying to solve than to look it up, or can share some interesting out-of-the-ordinary problem. Problem is: it's littered with old and/or incorrect stuff, which makes it a bit of a waste of time sometimes. On the other hand: I did learn some good stuff here and there. Mostly details or little irritating problems that need a hack. To really learn and master bigger topics and frameworks, you obviously go elsewhere.

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    Problem is: it's littered with old and/or incorrect stuff, which makes it a bit of a waste of time sometimes. Have you considered taking steps to alleviate or outright fix that old and incorrect stuff? Nov 2, 2016 at 14:08
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    From time to time, one can make a contribution on here to indeed fix some obsolete or plain wrong advice. Doesn't make those posts or comments disappear though. The result is even longer posts and an endless list of remarks and answers, many of which are not correct or incomplete. That kills the whole benefit of what a site like this should bring: a fast and correct answer when someone is in a pickle and can't get out of it on their own. I understand where you are coming from, but it's still a bit of a naive remark.
    – Mishegaz
    Nov 2, 2016 at 14:12
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    Sorry to be so naive. There is an apparent contradiction in your argument, though: if (if) SO is about bringing fast and correct answers when someone is in a pickle, then some of the answers that helped people 5 years ago are probably out-of-date now... but they did a perfect job back then. Since we cannot predict the future, I believe you need to include time passing and technology marching on in your evaluation. Nov 2, 2016 at 14:15
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    just indicating from your answer you just seem to be more like one using stackoverflow for information and not being one to provide information to the site. Nothing wrong with that but I kind of assume OP meant how this goes when you want to improve stackoverflow and "give back" to the community.
    – Hayt
    Nov 2, 2016 at 14:16
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    Frédéric Hamidi: obviously you are right there. Many answers did do a great job back then, and are not so great anymore and mis-inform people now. And so we are back to the core problem. And flowing that into what Hayt said: sure it's a bit of the point that the community on SO gives back. No problem there, nothing against that. Now, lately, I try to be a bit more involved, and try to give answers myself. I only asked about 3/4 questions on here though, and if you go check those out, you will notice that eventually, I found the solution myself and shared it here (giving back ;))
    – Mishegaz
    Nov 2, 2016 at 14:18
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    Loving it. It's always the same old folk with 10 million rep answering on here. Dude with 58 rep coming out of left field with a flame thrower, we need more of this kind of thing.
    – McNab
    Nov 2, 2016 at 14:23
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    Also: SO taking the "easier" path and mostly handing the responsibility of updating ALL info and answers on the site to the current technology to the community itself is a bit of a cop-out. Now, that itself wouldn't be a disaster if it was working. But it isn't. So in short, I think they should try to do more themselves as well. But yes Hayt, I do agree fully with the fact that more people getting help from users on SO, should also give back and contribute. Myself included. Trying to do that more now, in at least the same degree that I got help here.
    – Mishegaz
    Nov 2, 2016 at 14:25
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    You don't have to though. But if you feel yourself like you should go ahead. It's like with open source etc though. You have many users who never contribute and a "few" who do though. I guess the question though was about how you incorporate working full time and giving back to stackoverflow at the same time.
    – Hayt
    Nov 2, 2016 at 14:34
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    That's why nobody will blame you for not being able to contribute. I guess a lot of the people on here (even the ones contributing) have stuff to do. Though sometimes people have some downtime. And instead of doing something non-constructive people could also "browse" stackoverflow. And the more reputation you get the more there is to do for you. But yeah that's what makes stackoverflow so good. Up and downvotes are actually important and when you at least leave an upvote when an answer has helped you, you award the person who did the work for the answer and maybe he will answer more.
    – Hayt
    Nov 2, 2016 at 14:48
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    This answer has absolutely nothing to do with the question asked, And seems to be based on a misconception of the wording of the question. The question is asking how Stack Overflow contributors schedule their time appropriately to be able to spend more time contributing while also having a full time development job. This answer is about.... nothing relevant.
    – user4639281
    Nov 2, 2016 at 15:34
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    Another reason not to post too much here: the SO Police
    – Mishegaz
    Nov 2, 2016 at 15:37
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    Seriously? You don't like incomplete answers that don't answer the question, remarks, etc. Then you go and post an incomplete answer that doesn't answer the question, and you complain about people telling you that your answer doesn't answer the question? Good luck with that.
    – user4639281
    Nov 2, 2016 at 15:42
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    If you do have the time, please feel free to leave comments on incorrect answers, and especially to downvote them (if you make it to the point of gaining the ability to downvote)!
    – jscs
    Nov 2, 2016 at 16:29
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    "Obsolete" information is far less a problem than you make it out to be, assuming that there is a reasonable search function. Since Google has solved that problem for the Internet pretty much definitively, I'd say that this is a non-issue. Sure, we've lots of old Q&A about deprecated and "obsolete" technologies. But as you said, this information was once quite useful to you, and it is still definitely useful to a small subset of people tasked with maintaining legacy systems. If you need new information, ask a new question. If you're browsing simply to learn new stuff, you only see new Q&A. Nov 3, 2016 at 13:12
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    "To really learn and master bigger topics and frameworks, you obviously go elsewhere." You're right that you won't master a topic just by reading SO posts—as you pointed out the site is for Q&A, it's not a textbook. But as you start answering more and more questions, and explaining topics to other people, and doing the research to support your posts, you'll find yourself developing more in-depth knowledge and expertise than you would get through almost any other medium.
    – nbrooks
    Nov 3, 2016 at 13:48

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