Skip to main content
Post Undeleted by DalmarusStaffMod
Post Deleted by Cjxcz Odjcayrwl
replaced http://stackoverflow.com/ with https://stackoverflow.com/
Source Link

TL/DR Golden Hammer is enough, don't add Silver and Bronze ones!

If you visit Jon Skeet profileJon Skeet profile, you'll see that he doesn't get much reputation from his answers because they are in very popular tag. In fact, he gets very little reputation from statistical answer: a bit more than 20. The same was for another few randomly checked top users.

I don't see the situation being other in low popularity tags. Even if you get a single upvote and your answer is accepted, you have better average than Jon Skeet, wow!

The concept of The Golden Hammer, as I understand it, is not to be a top-N user in the given tag, it's about having really very many good answers in that tag! For thousands of good answers!

No matter if the tag has heavy traffic or not, you'd probably have to give the similar amount of answers to get the Golden Hammer. Reducing the requirements in low-traffic tags would be allowing to get it too easily. Having 'only' hundreds of answers is (and should be) not enough.

What's worse: having Golden Hammer in a niche tag will allow you to close questions in heavy-traffic tag, if the question happen to be tagged with both! It would circumvent the requirements!

Yeah, the problem is with low-popularity languages where you simply don't have enough questions. But if the topic is not explored enough, maybe giving such powers is not a good idea anyway?

A example is something a bit else. Dojo isn't a language but only a library. The questions about given library may or may not be tagged with the language tag, but tagging it with the language tag is generally appropriate, and allows golden hammer strike, in that case, for golden badgers. A plenty of library tags has golden badgers as well. So it's enough!

TL/DR Golden Hammer is enough, don't add Silver and Bronze ones!

If you visit Jon Skeet profile, you'll see that he doesn't get much reputation from his answers because they are in very popular tag. In fact, he gets very little reputation from statistical answer: a bit more than 20. The same was for another few randomly checked top users.

I don't see the situation being other in low popularity tags. Even if you get a single upvote and your answer is accepted, you have better average than Jon Skeet, wow!

The concept of The Golden Hammer, as I understand it, is not to be a top-N user in the given tag, it's about having really very many good answers in that tag! For thousands of good answers!

No matter if the tag has heavy traffic or not, you'd probably have to give the similar amount of answers to get the Golden Hammer. Reducing the requirements in low-traffic tags would be allowing to get it too easily. Having 'only' hundreds of answers is (and should be) not enough.

What's worse: having Golden Hammer in a niche tag will allow you to close questions in heavy-traffic tag, if the question happen to be tagged with both! It would circumvent the requirements!

Yeah, the problem is with low-popularity languages where you simply don't have enough questions. But if the topic is not explored enough, maybe giving such powers is not a good idea anyway?

A example is something a bit else. Dojo isn't a language but only a library. The questions about given library may or may not be tagged with the language tag, but tagging it with the language tag is generally appropriate, and allows golden hammer strike, in that case, for golden badgers. A plenty of library tags has golden badgers as well. So it's enough!

TL/DR Golden Hammer is enough, don't add Silver and Bronze ones!

If you visit Jon Skeet profile, you'll see that he doesn't get much reputation from his answers because they are in very popular tag. In fact, he gets very little reputation from statistical answer: a bit more than 20. The same was for another few randomly checked top users.

I don't see the situation being other in low popularity tags. Even if you get a single upvote and your answer is accepted, you have better average than Jon Skeet, wow!

The concept of The Golden Hammer, as I understand it, is not to be a top-N user in the given tag, it's about having really very many good answers in that tag! For thousands of good answers!

No matter if the tag has heavy traffic or not, you'd probably have to give the similar amount of answers to get the Golden Hammer. Reducing the requirements in low-traffic tags would be allowing to get it too easily. Having 'only' hundreds of answers is (and should be) not enough.

What's worse: having Golden Hammer in a niche tag will allow you to close questions in heavy-traffic tag, if the question happen to be tagged with both! It would circumvent the requirements!

Yeah, the problem is with low-popularity languages where you simply don't have enough questions. But if the topic is not explored enough, maybe giving such powers is not a good idea anyway?

A example is something a bit else. Dojo isn't a language but only a library. The questions about given library may or may not be tagged with the language tag, but tagging it with the language tag is generally appropriate, and allows golden hammer strike, in that case, for golden badgers. A plenty of library tags has golden badgers as well. So it's enough!

added 107 characters in body
Source Link
Cjxcz Odjcayrwl
  • 22.8k
  • 29
  • 44

TL/DR Golden Hammer is enough, don't add Silver and Bronze ones!

If you visit Jon Skeet profile, you'll see that he doesn't get much reputation from his answers because they are in very popular tag. In fact, he gets very little reputation from statistical answer: a bit more than 20. The same was for another few randomly checked top users.

I don't see the situation being other in low popularity tags. Even if you get a single upvote and your answer is accepted, you have better average than Jon Skeet, wow!

The concept of The Golden HammerThe Golden Hammer, as I understand it, is not to be a top-N user in the given tag, it's about having really very many good answers in that tag! For thousands of good answers!

No matter if the tag has heavy traffic or not, you'd probably have to give the similar amount of answers to get the Golden Hammer. Reducing the requirements in low-traffic tags would be allowing to get it too easily. Having 'only' hundreds of answers is (and should be) not enough.

What's worse: having Golden Hammer in a niche tag will allow you to close questions in heavy-traffic tag, if the question happen to be tagged with both! It would circumvent the requirements!

Yeah, the problem is with low-popularity languages where you simply don't have enough questions. But if the topic is not explored enough, maybe giving such powers is not a good idea anyway?

A example is something a bit else. Dojo isn't a language but only a library. The questions about given library may or may not be tagged with the language tag, but tagging it with the language tag is generally appropriate, and allows golden hammer strike, in that case, for golden badgers. A plenty of library tags has golden badgers as well. So it's enough!

TL/DR Golden Hammer is enough, don't add Silver and Bronze ones!

If you visit Jon Skeet profile, you'll see that he doesn't get much reputation from his answers because they are in very popular tag. In fact, he gets very little reputation from statistical answer: a bit more than 20. The same was for another few randomly checked top users.

I don't see the situation being other in low popularity tags. Even if you get a single upvote and your answer is accepted, you have better average than Jon Skeet, wow!

The concept of The Golden Hammer, as I understand it, is not to be a top-N user in the given tag, it's about having really very many good answers in that tag!

No matter if the tag has heavy traffic or not, you'd probably have to give the similar amount of answers to get the Golden Hammer. Reducing the requirements in low-traffic tags would be allowing to get it too easily.

What's worse: having Golden Hammer in a niche tag will allow you to close questions in heavy-traffic tag, if the question happen to be tagged with both! It would circumvent the requirements!

Yeah, the problem is with low-popularity languages where you simply don't have enough questions. But if the topic is not explored enough, maybe giving such powers is not a good idea anyway?

A example is something a bit else. Dojo isn't a language but only a library. The questions about given library may or may not be tagged with the language tag, but tagging it with the language tag is generally appropriate, and allows golden hammer strike, in that case, for golden badgers. A plenty of library tags has golden badgers as well. So it's enough!

TL/DR Golden Hammer is enough, don't add Silver and Bronze ones!

If you visit Jon Skeet profile, you'll see that he doesn't get much reputation from his answers because they are in very popular tag. In fact, he gets very little reputation from statistical answer: a bit more than 20. The same was for another few randomly checked top users.

I don't see the situation being other in low popularity tags. Even if you get a single upvote and your answer is accepted, you have better average than Jon Skeet, wow!

The concept of The Golden Hammer, as I understand it, is not to be a top-N user in the given tag, it's about having really very many good answers in that tag! For thousands of good answers!

No matter if the tag has heavy traffic or not, you'd probably have to give the similar amount of answers to get the Golden Hammer. Reducing the requirements in low-traffic tags would be allowing to get it too easily. Having 'only' hundreds of answers is (and should be) not enough.

What's worse: having Golden Hammer in a niche tag will allow you to close questions in heavy-traffic tag, if the question happen to be tagged with both! It would circumvent the requirements!

Yeah, the problem is with low-popularity languages where you simply don't have enough questions. But if the topic is not explored enough, maybe giving such powers is not a good idea anyway?

A example is something a bit else. Dojo isn't a language but only a library. The questions about given library may or may not be tagged with the language tag, but tagging it with the language tag is generally appropriate, and allows golden hammer strike, in that case, for golden badgers. A plenty of library tags has golden badgers as well. So it's enough!

Source Link
Cjxcz Odjcayrwl
  • 22.8k
  • 29
  • 44

TL/DR Golden Hammer is enough, don't add Silver and Bronze ones!

If you visit Jon Skeet profile, you'll see that he doesn't get much reputation from his answers because they are in very popular tag. In fact, he gets very little reputation from statistical answer: a bit more than 20. The same was for another few randomly checked top users.

I don't see the situation being other in low popularity tags. Even if you get a single upvote and your answer is accepted, you have better average than Jon Skeet, wow!

The concept of The Golden Hammer, as I understand it, is not to be a top-N user in the given tag, it's about having really very many good answers in that tag!

No matter if the tag has heavy traffic or not, you'd probably have to give the similar amount of answers to get the Golden Hammer. Reducing the requirements in low-traffic tags would be allowing to get it too easily.

What's worse: having Golden Hammer in a niche tag will allow you to close questions in heavy-traffic tag, if the question happen to be tagged with both! It would circumvent the requirements!

Yeah, the problem is with low-popularity languages where you simply don't have enough questions. But if the topic is not explored enough, maybe giving such powers is not a good idea anyway?

A example is something a bit else. Dojo isn't a language but only a library. The questions about given library may or may not be tagged with the language tag, but tagging it with the language tag is generally appropriate, and allows golden hammer strike, in that case, for golden badgers. A plenty of library tags has golden badgers as well. So it's enough!