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I've already seen this question: Search by poster's reputation points in the search bar? and read https://stackoverflow.com/help/searching, and it appears this is still not possible.

So here I am, requesting it to be added as a search feature. Can we please add the ability to filter searches by the rep of the asker? Pretty please?

Justification: Users with higher rep tend to ask more clear & concise questions and respond to answers appropriately. In my case I specialize in a few tags that are chock full of one time, 1 rep askers who either never respond or need to be prodded to mark answers as correct. I don't mind dealing with these questions as well but sometimes I'm not in the mood and just want to cut through to get at some higher quality content. The ability to filter for users with a minimum rep, even say "25" would cut out a lot of noise.

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  • 2
    IIRC, this has been declined multiple times in the past since it, "excludes newbies". So if you want to filter them out, you'll need to resort to a custom solution.
    – Mysticial
    Mar 28, 2018 at 19:04
  • Ok thanks, have there been any requests here on meta? I did not find any, sorry if it's a dupe. Mar 28, 2018 at 19:05
  • 1
    stackapps.com/questions/4888/…
    – Kevin B
    Mar 28, 2018 at 19:21
  • apparently everyone hates this idea. Mar 29, 2018 at 3:08

4 Answers 4

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Users with higher rep tend to ask more clear & concise questions and respond to answers appropriately.

This is the single greatest myth about the site, so I felt it appropriate to the "The" OP to illustrate this point.

Just so that this is a two-way street, I'm fairly high-rep and was at the time I wrote that, and still managed to ask this really "poor" question.

You are not obligated in any way, shape, form or fashion to answer any questions you don't feel like. The system isn't meant to make it any easier for you since you're really not meant to be judging someone based on their reputation whatsoever, but if you see a question you don't feel like answering, don't answer it.

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  • It's not a myth, it's my first-hand experience with the tags I look at. 90 - 95% of the 1 rep askers are questions that get closed. It's a headache. Mar 28, 2018 at 19:07
  • Just to play devil's advocate, one counter example isn't enough to refute a supposed correlation between rep and question quality.
    – Mysticial
    Mar 28, 2018 at 19:07
  • @Mysticial: No, it isn't. But "The" OP has twenty or so examples for one to peruse in quiet hour. The intention here was simply to demonstrate that reputation really doesn't matter when it comes to question quality. For grins I'll even throw a question I did that was poorly received, too.
    – Makoto
    Mar 28, 2018 at 19:11
  • @Makoto, the point of this request is not that high rep users don't ask crap questions. It's that low rep users do. And that is a verifiable fact. Many of them just have no idea what the rules of the site are because they haven't been around long enough to learn. It's not a dis and I'm not going to exclude them, but I've used my eyes as a filter enough times to know this is true. Sometimes I'm looking for higher quality content and a programmatic filter would just make more efficient use of my time. Mar 28, 2018 at 19:13
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    @billynoah: 90-95% of the accounts you interact with have 1 rep because 90-95% of the accounts that are asking have just started. Everyone starts with 1 rep. The vast majority of accounts aren't active here. There can be no safe correlation between reputation and question-asking ability.
    – Makoto
    Mar 28, 2018 at 19:14
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    Sure it doesn't matter. But let's assume there is a strong correlation between rep and question quality. A user acting out of self-interest who is aware of this correlation can save a lot of time by utilizing this information to filter out low rep users. Sure it goes against the spirit of the site. But every user is free to act on their own (within the rules).
    – Mysticial
    Mar 28, 2018 at 19:14
  • @Mysticial: I don't disagree. But the platform shouldn't make it any easier or incentivize this kind of behavior, since it's truly provable that it's a false flag.
    – Makoto
    Mar 28, 2018 at 19:15
  • @Makoto I actually disagree that it's a false flag (i.e. no correlation). But that's a different topic.
    – Mysticial
    Mar 28, 2018 at 19:16
  • @Mysticial - I agree and my own questions were much lower quality when I was 1 rep. There's nothing wrong with that. I'm not judging anyone for being a newbie, as you said it's where we all start. I just don't always want to slog through those questions and when you are looking at a tag that has 50 1 rep questions in a row, it starts to feel like a waste of time Mar 28, 2018 at 19:16
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    I don't disagree with that statement at all. I still want my rep filter :-) Mar 28, 2018 at 19:18
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    @billynoah: There's an official API for Stack Exchange, and you likely have a text editor. Have at.
    – Makoto
    Mar 28, 2018 at 19:19
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    @KevinB: Users with high rep may not ask because they either know the answer, or they know the kind of answer they'd get from us (including no answer at all). It's kind of a problem.
    – Makoto
    Mar 28, 2018 at 19:21
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    @billynoah If you do go with a rep filter, I suggest a threshold of 5 rep instead of 50. 5 rep is only one upvote. But from my experience, it's already enough to filter out the vast majority of the garbage out there. Most of the one-time trash users won't get past even that barrier. So 5 rep is enough to bring the signal-to-noise ratio to something a lot more tolerable.
    – Mysticial
    Mar 28, 2018 at 19:41
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    @usr2564301 Yes, there are people with more than that rep just from questions. You don't want to come across their questions, they're terrible. Some help vampires create a new account every time they have a bad question, and some use the same account.
    – Servy
    Mar 28, 2018 at 20:43
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    @usr2564301: Did you miss the example where I used "The" OP?
    – Makoto
    Mar 28, 2018 at 21:02
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If as you seem to think, only low-rep users ask poor questions (and if low-rep users only ask poor questions), those questions get quickly downvoted, so:

One alternative is to search by votes. Ex:

[python] subprocess score:1 is:question

will return the questions belonging to the tag, containing "subprocess", with a score at least of 1 (and it applies to all users, low or high rep, so you see there's no need to filter)

Another good method is to avoid the site on sunday evenings.

The only drawback is that you can't be the first one seeing the question. You have to wait for others to vote, lowering your chances to answer first.

The greatness of StackOverflow is that anyone can contribute, even starters on the site (which may have outside experience, BTW). I've seen okay questions by low-rep users, and very bad questions by high-rep users who just switched technology from to and which don't have a clue.

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  • Thanks - I've been using score filter for a while, and though this filter works fine on more active topics, unfortunately it doesn't really work if you are browsing obscure tags with not much activity. e.g., [opencart] - most of the questions, even the good ones, lack much voting activity at all. Mar 28, 2018 at 19:51
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    yeah, that's the trouble. But if there's not much activity on those tags, there aren't that many questions to filter either. Mar 28, 2018 at 19:53
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Fundamentally, we should focus on content, not users. This site exists for the benefit of all, not just for high-rep users who have been around for awhile.

A better solution would be for more people to work the review queues so that we could get rid of low-quality content faster.

Also, just as a plug, the Stack Overflow Close Vote Reviewers chat room is always glad for more people to help out with moderating content.

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The comments about not helping legitimate new users by filtering them are not thought out.

You can allow only filtering for users with some higher reputation, say 1000.

You can also add probabilistic filtering as well, the lower the user's rep then the less likely you will see a message.

You should also add filtering by the ratio of questions asked to answers accepted.

Really, the problem is there is a 100 to 1 ratio of nonsense posts to meaningful posts. It's not just posts about questions that could be easily researched or are obvious duplicates. It's more about questions that seems like it's just a bunch of bots posting random pseudo questions and the "poster" doesn't care about the answer anyway.

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