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May 23, 2017 at 12:37 history edited CommunityBot
replaced http://stackoverflow.com/ with https://stackoverflow.com/
Aug 21, 2014 at 6:35 comment added ivarni I have to admit than when I google something I already know the question so I usually don't even read it. When I'm in that mode I just want my answer and I want to get back into coding ASAP before I loose my flow. In that mode I tend to only vote on answers.
Aug 21, 2014 at 6:28 comment added 0xdeadbeef The particular question cited isn't perhaps the best example. It is a question that could be trivially answered by referring to the documentation. I'm not sure if the question and/or the answer merit so many upvotes.
Aug 21, 2014 at 1:06 comment added L. Cornelius Dol "We have a badge that encourages ..." -- ha ha ha. Does anyone really care about badges?
Aug 21, 2014 at 0:39 comment added jscs Following up on Ken White's point, what we should really be encouraging is improving those mediocre questions with excellent answers so that they deserve as many upvotes. The answerers are often in the best position to do this by editing the question to reflect whatever they divined in it that led them to answer.
Aug 21, 2014 at 0:35 history edited AstroCB CC BY-SA 3.0
added 3 characters in body
Aug 21, 2014 at 0:31 answer added CRABOLO timeline score: 7
Aug 21, 2014 at 0:09 comment added Tyler Collier Thanks @KenWhite. As I'm getting more into the community, I suppose it's my responsibility to go read what I should be upvoting. I upvoted both the answer and the question because they "helped" me. I got what I needed. But perhaps I haven't been doing quite the service I intended by being too lenient.
Aug 20, 2014 at 22:13 comment added Ken White I've seen tons of posts where the question itself stinks, but someone was able to make sense of it and post a well written, complete and useful answer to it. A great answer doesn't automatically mean that the question that prompted it is worthy of an upvote, and the fact that you were able to somehow stumble on the good answer in spite of the horrible question doesn't change the quality or value of a poor question. In the link you've cited, the question isn't terribly good (and neither are the answers, frankly). I wouldn't have upvoted anything there personally.
Aug 20, 2014 at 22:07 comment added Hans Passant Both answers suck, a fairly inevitable side-effect of a sucky question. The more upvoted answer sucks less because it actually recommends reading the MySQL documentation. Prompted to by the comments btw. SO users like these kind of answers because it helps them to stop thinking about the real problem. Q&D fix, it will be somebody else's problem later. Who will probably end up posting to serverfault.com. SO legitimizes bad practices. Wonderful, isn't it? That's why you want it to get more votes, perhaps?
Aug 20, 2014 at 21:56 comment added Tyler Collier @Mysticial who is upvoting the answers? Dedicated stackoverflow-ers browsing the site who just want to reward good answers, or people coming from google for the answer? If it's the former, then your thought makes perfect sense. But if it's the latter, I think the sheer number of answer-upvotes should lead to A) answer-upvoters indicating that they were overall HELPED by the question, as it lead to them getting their answer, and/or B) people improving the question by editing it. B sounds like a good idea to help knowledge on the interwebs.
Aug 20, 2014 at 21:50 comment added Tyler Collier @HansPassant I use google to get to stackoverflow answers, not stackoverflow search. Stackoverflow intended for that to happen from the beginning, because it's a great format for quickly finding answers to specific questions. The question you linked had the same number of upvotes, but its answer had far fewer upvotes. SOMETHING is making the question I linked more useful, based on the number of votes on the answers. What is it?
Aug 20, 2014 at 19:58 comment added Hans Passant What on Earth is so great about that question? He should just have typed the title of his question in Google and would have found the already existing Q+A. These kind of questions belong in the rather awful "Can somebody Google this for me?" category. They do little but generate duplicates and steer other users the wrong way. From where they should go, which is of course MySQL's documentation.
Aug 20, 2014 at 18:07 comment added Tyler Collier JayBlanchard, I don't think I've seen that. juergen d, I think I have that badge. But I didn't know about it until I got it. Maybe the "make sure to upvote the question" popup should mention the badge? Mysticial, that's quite possible. I often barely read questions when I'm looking for answers. I just jump straight to the answer. I figure if the answer is good, and it's the question that prompted the answer and got me from Google to the answer, then the question was good.
Aug 20, 2014 at 18:04 comment added Mysticial When an answer gets a lot more votes than the question, it often means that either it was a good answer to a bad question, or a great answer to a mediocre question.
Aug 20, 2014 at 18:03 comment added juergen d We have a badge that encourages voting on questions
Aug 20, 2014 at 18:03 comment added Jay Blanchard You've never seen the "you haven't voted on a question in a while..." prompt?
Aug 20, 2014 at 18:02 history asked Tyler Collier CC BY-SA 3.0