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Copy edited. Used the official name of Stack Overflow - see section "Proper Use of the Stack Exchange Name" in http://stackoverflow.com/legal/trademark-guidance (the last section).
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Peter Mortensen
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As was already mentioned above, answering is the best way to gain reputation.

Here are some "pro" tips of how to maximize your reputation points per unit of time spent on StackOverflowStack Overflow, based on personal experience (observing and answering):

  • Try not to answer questions that you do not understand. Chance is you will not get it correctly, and/or it will take unreasonable amount of time to argue with OP about "what they really wanted". If you feel like the question is unclear, consider leaving a comment, and skipping to the next question. If your comment is later answered, and the question becomes clear enough, and it's still unanswered - now it's your time to give an answer.

  • Try to only answer questions if you immediately know the answer, or can figure it out in 2-3 minutes by doing a simple googleGoogle search + maybe 1-2 minutes sandboxing in your devdevelopment environment. This way even if you don't get any reputation points (e.g.for example, someone did it faster), you've only wasted 5 minutes of your time. It's very unrewarding to spend even 0.5hr5 hour on someone's question only to find out they already accepted an answer, and never bothered to check other answers. This is relevant to the next point.

  • The faster you answer, the more reputation you can get. This is because other people visiting the question may upvote your answer. You posted late, they've already been to this question, and are definitely not coming back just to upvote your answer. There is a caveat - you answer incorrectly - you may get a lot of downvotes. So your initial answer must be fast, precise and actually address the issue in full. You may later edit it and add links to documentation, relevant articles, other StackOverflowStack Overflow answers, etc. to make it nicer. Don't even try to write a perfect answer from the first attempt. There is a high chance some other user will provide a "fast" answer, which will get upvotes, get accepted, and then you finally post your answer, to find out nobody's there to read it.

  • When answering a 1-2hrs2 hours old question, be prepared to waste your time. If a question was not answered immediately (within 10-15 minutes), and especially if it has no upvotes, or worse - a negative score, there is a high chance (I'd say 90%), you will not gain any reputation here (or get an accept 5 days after and that's it). Unless it takes you 5min5 minutes to answer (generally when it's a complicated subject, but you are an expert in this area), it's best to move on.

As was already mentioned above, answering is the best way to gain reputation.

Here are some "pro" tips of how to maximize your reputation per unit of time spent on StackOverflow, based on personal experience (observing and answering):

  • Try not to answer questions that you do not understand. Chance is you will not get it correctly, and/or it will take unreasonable amount of time to argue with OP about "what they really wanted". If you feel like the question is unclear, consider leaving a comment, and skipping to the next question. If your comment is later answered, and the question becomes clear enough, and it's still unanswered - now it's your time to give an answer.

  • Try to only answer questions if you immediately know the answer, or can figure it out in 2-3 minutes by doing a simple google search + maybe 1-2 minutes sandboxing in your dev environment. This way even if you don't get any reputation (e.g. someone did it faster), you've only wasted 5 minutes of your time. It's very unrewarding to spend even 0.5hr on someone's question only to find out they already accepted an answer, and never bothered to check other answers. This is relevant to the next point.

  • The faster you answer, the more reputation you can get. This is because other people visiting the question may upvote your answer. You posted late, they've already been to this question, and are definitely not coming back just to upvote your answer. There is a caveat - you answer incorrectly - you may get a lot of downvotes. So your initial answer must be fast, precise and actually address the issue in full. You may later edit it and add links to documentation, relevant articles, other StackOverflow answers etc. to make it nicer. Don't even try to write a perfect answer from the first attempt. There is a high chance some other user will provide a "fast" answer, which will get upvotes, get accepted, and then you finally post your answer, to find out nobody's there to read it.

  • When answering a 1-2hrs old question, be prepared to waste your time. If a question was not answered immediately (within 10-15 minutes), and especially if it has no upvotes, or worse - a negative score, there is a high chance (I'd say 90%), you will not gain any reputation here (or get an accept 5 days after and that's it). Unless it takes you 5min to answer (generally when it's a complicated subject, but you are an expert in this area), it's best to move on.

As was already mentioned above, answering is the best way to gain reputation.

Here are some "pro" tips of how to maximize your reputation points per unit of time spent on Stack Overflow, based on personal experience (observing and answering):

  • Try not to answer questions that you do not understand. Chance is you will not get it correctly, and/or it will take unreasonable amount of time to argue with OP about "what they really wanted". If you feel like the question is unclear, consider leaving a comment, and skipping to the next question. If your comment is later answered, and the question becomes clear enough, and it's still unanswered - now it's your time to give an answer.

  • Try to only answer questions if you immediately know the answer, or can figure it out in 2-3 minutes by doing a simple Google search + maybe 1-2 minutes sandboxing in your development environment. This way even if you don't get any reputation points (for example, someone did it faster), you've only wasted 5 minutes of your time. It's very unrewarding to spend even 0.5 hour on someone's question only to find out they already accepted an answer, and never bothered to check other answers. This is relevant to the next point.

  • The faster you answer, the more reputation you can get. This is because other people visiting the question may upvote your answer. You posted late, they've already been to this question and are definitely not coming back just to upvote your answer. There is a caveat - you answer incorrectly - you may get a lot of downvotes. So your initial answer must be fast, precise and actually address the issue in full. You may later edit it and add links to documentation, relevant articles, other Stack Overflow answers, etc. to make it nicer. Don't even try to write a perfect answer from the first attempt. There is a high chance some other user will provide a "fast" answer, which will get upvotes, get accepted, and then you finally post your answer, to find out nobody's there to read it.

  • When answering a 1-2 hours old question, be prepared to waste your time. If a question was not answered immediately (within 10-15 minutes), and especially if it has no upvotes, or worse - a negative score, there is a high chance (I'd say 90%), you will not gain any reputation here (or get an accept 5 days after and that's it). Unless it takes you 5 minutes to answer (generally when it's a complicated subject, but you are an expert in this area), it's best to move on.

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Victor Zakharov
  • 26.4k
  • 15
  • 13

As was already mentioned above, answering is the best way to gain reputation.

Here are some "pro" tips of how to maximize your reputation per unit of time spent on StackOverflow, based on personal experience (observing and answering):

  • Try not to answer questions that you do not understand. Chance is you will not get it correctly, and/or it will take unreasonable amount of time to argue with OP about "what they really wanted". If you feel like the question is unclear, consider leaving a comment, and skipping to the next question. If your comment is later answered, and the question becomes clear enough, and it's still unanswered - now it's your time to give an answer.

  • Try to only answer questions if you immediately know the answer, or can figure it out in 2-3 minutes by doing a simple google search + maybe 1-2 minutes sandboxing in your dev environment. This way even if you don't get any reputation (e.g. someone did it faster), you've only wasted 5 minutes of your time. It's very unrewarding to spend even 0.5hr on someone's question only to find out they already accepted an answer, and never bothered to check other answers. This is relevant to the next point.

  • The faster you answer, the more reputation you can get. This is because other people visiting the question may upvote your answer. You posted late, they've already been to this question, and are definitely not coming back just to upvote your answer. There is a caveat - you answer incorrectly - you may get a lot of downvotes. So your initial answer must be fast, precise and actually address the issue in full. You may later edit it and add links to documentation, relevant articles, other StackOverflow answers etc. to make it nicer. Don't even try to write a perfect answer from the first attempt. There is a high chance some other user will provide a "fast" answer, which will get upvotes, get accepted, and then you finally post your answer, to find out nobody's there to read it.

  • When answering a 1-2hrs old question, be prepared to waste your time. If a question was not answered immediately (within 10-15 minutes), and especially if it has no upvotes, or worse - a negative score, there is a high chance (I'd say 90%), you will not gain any reputation here (or get an accept 5 days after and that's it). Unless it takes you 5min to answer (generally when it's a complicated subject, but you are an expert in this area), it's best to move on.