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Over the years, users have told us that Stack Overflow is an indispensable tool for coders all around the world. Programmers know that when they get a Stack Overflow search result, it's likely the search is over. Following that link almost always gets a step closer to understanding whatever programming problem they face. Failing that, they can ask some of the world's most helpful and skilled developers directly. It’s hard to imagine what it was like to write code before Stack Overflow was created just over a decade ago in 2008.

If you weren't programming in the BSO (Before Stack Overflow) era, you don't know what a golden age we live in. It's not that the information wasn't available at all, but rather it was difficult to make the right connections:

Who were you DenverCoder9?

In those days programmers used a variety of incantations such as AltaVista, WebCrawler, ICQ, Gopher, IRC, LISTSERV, Usenet, man and even O'Reilly to summon answers. How many times did I come to work early in order to borrow a copy of UNIX in a Nutshell from a possessive co-worker? (Yes, Jim, I knew you didn't have those shell commands memorized. I saw you furtively flipping through that book when you didn't think anyone was watching.) Oh how I revelled when I drove home from the university bookstore with the student edition of Borland C++ and its glorious manuals! Now I had the knowledge!

Helping people wasn't paradise back then either. Answer once in one forum only to see the same question in another a little later. (Probably from the same asker since you could never be sure where the best place to ask was.) Compiling a FAQ might have helped people, but nobody says "I loved the FAQ! It solved my problem." Instead, they are all like "I read the FAQ, but it didn't help." Or they don't read the FAQ and just ask their frequently asked question. Nobody upvoted the FAQ.

It seems a shame that it took two decades from the invention of the Web before a fully-featured, public Q&A engine was built. Just think of all the time (and trees) we could all have saved by having easy access to canonical library of answers. In an effort to (retroactively) make the world a better place, we're cutting that dark time in half. We’re proud to announce a new Time Machine feature that lets you experience Stack Overflow when it should have been around: not 2008, but 1998.

Y2K baby!

As you enjoy surfing the site, let us know in the answers below if you spot any questions that could have been answered in 1998 when we had:

  • JavaScript but not jQuery
  • C++ but not Boost
  • Ruby but not Rails
  • Java but not Eclipse
  • C but not C#
  • Python but not Django
  • Visual Studio but not .NET

And if you spot any bugs, let us know what version of Netscape Navigator you are on and we'll get our webmaster on it right away. (Sorry, but we don't yet support Communicator you trailblazers.)

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    Appropriately, I got confused about the time to post this. It's been April 1 for several hours in Tonga and Kiritimati (Christmas Island) Mar 31, 2019 at 15:56
  • 57
    Do you support NCSA Mosaic? Mar 31, 2019 at 16:01
  • 59
    What, no visitor counters or little image badges saying the site is best viewed in Netscape or Internet Explorer? Edit: Gah! I found the Netscape badge. Well done.
    – j08691
    Mar 31, 2019 at 16:04
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    First I thought my browser was hacked but second late it is 1. april fool Mar 31, 2019 at 16:04
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    @PikachuthePurpleWizard It’s “under construction”. Mar 31, 2019 at 16:28
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    @j08691 I’m missing the “web ring”. :-/ Mar 31, 2019 at 16:30
  • 39
    i hope this wasnt your new CEOs idea Mar 31, 2019 at 17:37
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    awsome awesomeness is awesome
    – flaschbier
    Mar 31, 2019 at 18:01
  • 6
    "python but not django" - heaven!
    – paul23
    Mar 31, 2019 at 18:25
  • 12
    How do I get Trumpet Winsock installed again? Mar 31, 2019 at 19:01
  • 21
    Comic sans?? Anything but comic sans!
    – rsjaffe
    Mar 31, 2019 at 19:52
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    @j08691 There's a separate visitor counter (with a Matrixy color scheme) in the upper right corner of every question page.
    – svick
    Mar 31, 2019 at 20:08
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    Oh that Times New Roman is just... brutal.
    – Chris O
    Mar 31, 2019 at 20:18
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    Maybe throw in some marching ants?
    – RickyA
    Mar 31, 2019 at 21:17
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    My favourite part of the whole thing: "Proudly built in Notepad". Painfully accurate. Apr 1, 2019 at 6:56

49 Answers 49

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Kind of pedantic, but #tm-scroll could use a will-change: transform.

Visually authentically awful though. 👌

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Tbh, wouldn't mind this as an option. The work's already been done

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    I'm glad you like it! Unfortunately, half (or more) of developing a feature is maintenance. We've failed to recall that truth far too many times. Apr 1, 2019 at 1:30
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    Ah, I guess usually with my html projects, I don't change the structure very much, so the CSS stays consistent Apr 1, 2019 at 1:33
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    Oh. I forgot to point you at this excellent answer. Apr 1, 2019 at 1:35
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    @trainboy2019 Meh, I don't still trust CSS, I just like to stick to plain HTML!! it keeps the user experience fluid. And "Everything" can be achieved using html then why complicate things. Apr 1, 2019 at 2:04
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In those days programmers used a variety of incantations such as AltaVista, WebCrawler, ICQ, Gopher, IRC, LISTSERV, Usenet, man and even O'Reilly to summon answers.

I started my degree as the Internet was appearing.

My best resources were the library (books & Dr. Dobb's magazines) or to buy books from University book shop. In later years Compuserve was also helpful - sometimes :)

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    ...and Archie and Veronica help me a lot during college. Funny you should mention Dr. Dobb's, I also learned a lot just from flipping through the ads.
    – Chris O
    Apr 1, 2019 at 13:07
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RIP Perl, we loved you well. Thanks for all your help with those big genomes we didn't know how to evaluate.

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    I'll be honest, I wanted to include nothing but Perl references in the announcement, but I didn't want it to be that sad. I miss Perl. Apr 1, 2019 at 1:16
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    I work in a microbiology lab. Perl is, sadly, alive and well for me...
    – fluffy
    Apr 1, 2019 at 2:57
  • Unfortunately, it's not dead.
    – Kaii
    Apr 1, 2019 at 11:21
  • You guys would be amazed by the quantity of software that still uses perl. Perl isn't dead, just dormant. Apr 2, 2019 at 2:32
  • What's Perl?............
    – user1945782
    Apr 2, 2019 at 7:31
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This made me happy. Fantastic. Tugged on all the right heartstrings.

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I heard two C++ experts talking about some new feature being added to C++9x. They were calling it templates! What exactly are templates and how to use them?

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    templates are a proposed magic to replace #define T int ... #include "stack.h" ... #undef T ... stack(int) stack; stack.push_back(3); if (stack.overflow()) exit(1); Replace with basically the same thing but no #define T. Seems like a wasteful language feature to me. Apr 1, 2019 at 18:08
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This is yet another proof, that developer's working time is 90% "self education". [read leisure time]

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I hope this wasnt your new CEOs idea,it's easy to switch with theme by click the clock icon to switch to the original theme.

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enter image description here

I want to remove a Minesweeper from my son's computer. but he hid the game on another disk. Help me find

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    It's on A:. But I do't know which floppy.
    – Joshua
    Apr 1, 2019 at 20:31
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    Sorry, but this just isn't a good enough joke. If this had have been more legitimate, then we wouldn't be able to see a ~ in the command line prompt. :o/ ;o)
    – user1945782
    Apr 2, 2019 at 7:25
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Anyone who marked-up in the 90s will realise that there's a distinct problem with SOs rendition of a 90s site - it's just too damned clean! It really does need to have attributes used in place of CSS. The longer you can make your inline styles, and the more stomach curdling you can make the graphics, the better.

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    This is a fair point! I look at this and think.. Nope, not ugly enough. I can find things and stand to scroll down... Apr 1, 2019 at 18:21
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What awards did stackoverflow win and where are the badges? ^^

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Fortunately (for the Dutchies) we have http://www.leejoo.nl/, an incredible site with lots of tips and tricks for webdevelopers. Such as shortkeys for Frontpage 2000, a Frame Generator, A resolution tester and much more!!

Unfortunately... this website isn't an April Fool, it's a real website that tries to help people building their website...

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  • Oh! That's awful! They even use tables to lay out their mark-up... :o(
    – user1945782
    Apr 2, 2019 at 7:20
  • Oh wow thanks, I had trouble finding a nice fader scroller java-applet! This website helped me.
    – Metoniem
    Apr 17, 2019 at 13:53
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Please make a browser add-on where I can keep this 1990's website layout!
Much more colourful and favourable than the new world of modern 2D monotone flat iOS7-style design! I really enjoy this early web nostalgia. Thank you!

I also like the colourful mouse cursor snowflake effect. Brilliant.

But whose genius idea was it? I really like it. It is very creative.

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Well, made my day. Didn't have any experience about the websites of 90s. And, so lazy I am that I never tried to find one also till now.

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Can we reverse engineer the floppy disks to unlock my 28.8 to 56k modem? I would really enjoy loading this site twice faster.

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Today we are enjoing a april fool time machine theme and some laughter question answer, Only because of Joel Spolsky, Jeff Atwood. Hats off sirs.

enter image description here

Joel Spolsky and Jeff Atwood sir really thank you sir.

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I'm recently resurrecting a project I started in 1997 when I was in high school. It was a music calendar and message board hacked together from Perl scripts from Matt's Script Archive. Later converted to PHP by 2001 before handing the project off to others who then let the domain name expire, which I recently was able to get back when it went up for auction on GoDaddy. I feel like I own some sort of internet artifact: a 20+ year old domain name.

As an aside... anyone remember you had to edit text files and email them back and forth to manage domains with the registrar prior to SSL being supported? Good stuff.

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Found a mis located tip box while visiting the site on Redmi 5A and Vivo V5s:
Sorry for the text in my tooltip, I wanted to write: It should point here. Mis located tooltip

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    You're saying the tooltip should go up out of the page and over browser chrome? That's nigh-impossible, for the extremely good security reason that it would allow pages to fake browser UI much more smoothly. Apr 1, 2019 at 18:13
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    @NathanTuggy The issue is the horizontal alignment. The arrow of the tooltip isn’t centered underneath the clock icon in the responsive view at the breakpoint of 640px width and less. Apr 2, 2019 at 3:22
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    I did that to point out. Else it would overlap the text.
    – Gourav
    Apr 2, 2019 at 8:47
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in 1998 when we had

  • JavaScript but not jQuery
  • C++ but not Boost
  • Ruby but not Rails
  • Java but not Eclipse
  • C but not C#
  • Python but not Django
  • Visual Studio but not .NET

In 2019, C++ still has Boost, Ruby still has Rails, Java still has Eclipse, C# is still around, Python still has Django, Visual Studio sill has .NET.

Let's face it, no one is using jQuery any more.

How did we end up in a situation when JavaScript is the only widely used language that is still evolving?

To answer the question: here's one which was asked in 2010, could well have been asked in 1998, and has an open bounty as of today: How do you get a string to a character array in JavaScript?

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    Oh I wish nobody used jQuery anymore. I wish it was true. Mar 31, 2019 at 20:26
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    That may be so, but it's important to honor ancient wisdom. Mar 31, 2019 at 21:42
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    Sorry? Since when does no one use jQuery any more? It's still incredibly widely used. I'm confused by this statement.
    – Clonkex
    Mar 31, 2019 at 22:31
  • Seriously? Eclipse?
    – eddipedia
    Apr 1, 2019 at 1:06
  • Evolution of JavaScript frameworks will slow down when the community sticks with one long enough to reach critical mass. Apr 1, 2019 at 1:40
  • "no one is using jQuery any more" That statement is so incorrect it's as if it's a nineties prediction about the state of jQuery in 2010.
    – Cerbrus
    Apr 1, 2019 at 7:56
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