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Jasper
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I do not believe this would work at all, and here's why:

Not every programmer in the world has an account on SO. Even if they did, reputation points are a measure of involvement, and to some extent popularity, not of experience, knowledge, intelligence, or the ability to ask and/or answer increasingly difficult questions. Granted, popularity often stems from those things. Reputation points themselves, however do not come directly from them, but from how they manifest in community interaction.

The point is, a brand-new user might be a programming expert who just had not bothered to make an account previously. If his question was ranked "newbie", it would never get answered, because only other (ie. actual) newbs would see it, and none of them would be able to answer it.

Conceptually, the ranked-question idea has some merit, in my opinion. But the only way to implement it would be to:

  1. Have users assign a difficulty to their own questions, or
  2. Have some moderators scrawl the site 24/7 and assign difficulties to questions.

Option 1 is not good because users could easily misuse it by giving their questions harder difficulties so that higher-ranked people would see it. They also might not know how difficult their question is relative to community standards, and might inadvertently assign the wrong difficulty.

Option 2 is just not feasible, because who would want to waste their life doing that?

Hope this helps. Ciao!

I do not believe this would work at all, and here's why:

Not every programmer in the world has an account on SO. Even if they did, reputation points are a measure of involvement, and to some extent popularity, not of experience, knowledge, intelligence, or the ability to ask and/or answer increasingly difficult questions. Granted, popularity often stems from those things. Reputation points themselves, however do not come directly from them, but from how they manifest in community interaction.

The point is, a brand-new user might be a programming expert who just had not bothered to make an account previously. If his question was ranked "newbie", it would never get answered, because only other (ie. actual) newbs would see it, and none of them would be able to answer it.

Conceptually, the ranked-question idea has some merit, in my opinion. But the only way to implement it would be to:

  1. Have users assign a difficulty to their own questions, or
  2. Have some moderators scrawl the site 24/7 and assign difficulties to questions.

Option 1 is not good because users could easily misuse it by giving their questions harder difficulties so that higher-ranked people would see it. They also might not know how difficult their question is relative to community standards, and might inadvertently assign the wrong difficulty.

Option 2 is just not feasible, because who would want to waste their life doing that?

Hope this helps. Ciao!

I do not believe this would work at all, and here's why:

Not every programmer in the world has an account on SO. Even if they did, reputation points are a measure of involvement, and to some extent popularity, not of experience, knowledge, intelligence, or the ability to ask and/or answer increasingly difficult questions. Granted, popularity often stems from those things. Reputation points themselves, however do not come directly from them, but from how they manifest in community interaction.

The point is, a brand-new user might be a programming expert who just had not bothered to make an account previously. If his question was ranked "newbie", it would never get answered, because only other (ie. actual) newbs would see it, and none of them would be able to answer it.

Conceptually, the ranked-question idea has some merit, in my opinion. But the only way to implement it would be to:

  1. Have users assign a difficulty to their own questions, or
  2. Have some moderators scrawl the site 24/7 and assign difficulties to questions.

Option 1 is not good because users could easily misuse it by giving their questions harder difficulties so that higher-ranked people would see it. They also might not know how difficult their question is relative to community standards, and might inadvertently assign the wrong difficulty.

Option 2 is just not feasible, because who would want to waste their life doing that?

Hope this helps.

Source Link
Jasper
  • 300
  • 2
  • 9

I do not believe this would work at all, and here's why:

Not every programmer in the world has an account on SO. Even if they did, reputation points are a measure of involvement, and to some extent popularity, not of experience, knowledge, intelligence, or the ability to ask and/or answer increasingly difficult questions. Granted, popularity often stems from those things. Reputation points themselves, however do not come directly from them, but from how they manifest in community interaction.

The point is, a brand-new user might be a programming expert who just had not bothered to make an account previously. If his question was ranked "newbie", it would never get answered, because only other (ie. actual) newbs would see it, and none of them would be able to answer it.

Conceptually, the ranked-question idea has some merit, in my opinion. But the only way to implement it would be to:

  1. Have users assign a difficulty to their own questions, or
  2. Have some moderators scrawl the site 24/7 and assign difficulties to questions.

Option 1 is not good because users could easily misuse it by giving their questions harder difficulties so that higher-ranked people would see it. They also might not know how difficult their question is relative to community standards, and might inadvertently assign the wrong difficulty.

Option 2 is just not feasible, because who would want to waste their life doing that?

Hope this helps. Ciao!