Timeline for On large communities decaying over time, being nice or mean, and Stack Overflow
Current License: CC BY-SA 3.0
13 events
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Dec 4, 2015 at 1:46 | comment | added | g24l | That is not such a ad idea actually. Maybe not at the programming language level itself , but segmenting it in broader categories, might actually help. I doubt how this could actually be accepted since at least for "other" reason a larger user base permits better policy opportunities. Though very interesting. | |
May 30, 2014 at 22:10 | comment | added | Chris Stratton | No - there's already a big problem with fairly arbitrary and destructive forced-migration to subsidiary sites: what is really needed is not division of the questions into yet more sites, but better tools and more utilization of site views filtered by user interest. If that really worked, then a lot of the specialist technology sites could be merged back into stackoverflow, and the whole migration/categorization issue put to rest. Plus it's easily extensible to the "community standards" issue with question quality filters. | |
May 27, 2014 at 12:17 | comment | added | Lightness Races in Orbit | @SteveJessop: Yep I read you | |
May 27, 2014 at 10:23 | comment | added | Steve Jessop | @LightnessRacesinOrbit: if people whittle their questions down that far, then they (rightly) risk a lecture on X-Y problems. I'm not saying there exists a perfect solution, merely pointing out which imperfections apply where :-) | |
May 27, 2014 at 10:21 | comment | added | Lightness Races in Orbit | @SteveJessop: Nah - if the question is about the regex itself then that belongs to the PCRE/Perl/Whatever community. If it's about some API than delegates to a regex engine, then it belongs to a language. I'd love to encourage this proper separation of concerns and teach people to properly whittle down their problems to a single technology. Granted, a whole SE site just for PCRE seems like overkill but I really don't want to see any more regex questions tagged PHP! | |
May 27, 2014 at 10:02 | comment | added | Steve Jessop | ... for another case of language mixing, regexes with any language that provides a regex library ;-) I would happily contend that PCRE is not part of the Perl language either formally or in practical use. But regardless of that hair-splitting, regexes are freely mixed with the language they're compiled and run from even though they're almost the same in all. So answers to the same question could be entirely or almost host-language-independent, or depend very much on the host language. So I think tags are a more useful way to deal with them than separate sites per language. | |
May 27, 2014 at 10:01 | comment | added | Steve Jessop | ... for another case of language mixing, SQL with almost any language used on a server. There are tasks for which the best solution might be to break out of whatever ORM you're using and just write a SQL query, the questioner doesn't know. So it would be useful to solicit both SQL answers and Python/PHP/Ruby/Java/whatever it is answers to the same question. | |
May 27, 2014 at 9:58 | comment | added | Steve Jessop | @MatthieuM: there's a large class of questions where the questioner doesn't mind what language the answer is in within limits. e.g they can link either C or C++ into their project, or they're happy for their program to run additional processes for certain computations (Python program runs some Ruby). One could argue that such questions are too broad since they admit essentially unrelated answers (a good C answer and a good C++ answer might look nothing alike), but splitting C from C++ into different sites would make that argument permanent and definitive, which might not be desirable. | |
May 27, 2014 at 8:41 | comment | added | Matthieu M. | @SteveJessop: I considered that split indeed, and viewed it as potentially negative, but you do make a good point that a primarily C++ developer and a primarily Python developer would attack the issue from different angles and seek different answers (building on their own strengths). Can you think of other cases where multiple languages come into play (apart from the css/JS duo). | |
May 27, 2014 at 8:24 | comment | added | Steve Jessop | @MatthieuM: I suspect the practical answer to that is that there would be questions on both the C++ and the Python sites about how to do that interaction, and some of them could be construed as dupes. Practically there's no difference between a C++ programmer writing a Python wrapper for their library, and a Python programmer writing a Python wrapper for a C++ library they'd like to use, so they'd ask the same questions in different places (and get answers that assume different knowledge). | |
May 27, 2014 at 6:57 | comment | added | Lightness Races in Orbit | @MatthieuM.: Yeah I don't have an answer for that. | |
May 27, 2014 at 6:25 | comment | added | Matthieu M. | While for the majority of questions I think this would work, there are some areas where this line is blurred: language interactions. Should we decide that questions about calling from C++ into Python or calling a Rust callback from Go are not appropriate ? Or does the segregation by tag we have today already suffices ? I suppose that this is something you considered (hence loosely), but I am not quite sure how you propose to get there. | |
May 26, 2014 at 18:41 | history | answered | Lightness Races in Orbit | CC BY-SA 3.0 |