Timeline for Mega-High Rep, 1 Question
Current License: CC BY-SA 3.0
13 events
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Oct 7, 2014 at 13:58 | comment | added | Chris Marshall | Then you guys are definitely much better coders than I am. Glad to be amongst such august company. I'll keep asking my silly questions, and we'll all be happy. Thanks! | |
Oct 7, 2014 at 13:49 | comment | added | user229044 Mod | Don't know what to tell you. My last question was two years ago. In the last 6 months I've contributed 40,000 lines of code to my primary project alone. Writing code is a big part of my life, I just don't have questions which aren't answered through a modicum of research. | |
Oct 7, 2014 at 13:36 | comment | added | Chris Marshall | I do lurk a lot. I've been a member here for a couple of years. In that time, I've probably written a couple 100KLoC, and asked 30-some questions. That's not a whole lot of questions for a lot of code. I find most of my answers on my own, or from other sources. That said, SO could definitely be a single tool. There's some seriously good stuff here, and folks can learn a great deal from this place. You don't have to "make up" questions. Anybody that is seriously working on code will be constantly running into issues. Some of these could definitely turn into questions, even if only rhetorical. | |
Oct 7, 2014 at 13:28 | comment | added | user229044 Mod | @MAGSHARE Lastly, again, I didn't assume you where "that type of person", and I don't think anybody else did. You asked why some people feel entitled to critique your questions despite having asked very few, and I offered an explanation, and part of that explanation is that asking lots of questions doesn't necessarily make you good at it. That's all. If somebody critiqued a question of yours, it was because of the question, not because of assumptions made about you. | |
Oct 7, 2014 at 13:25 | comment | added | user229044 Mod | @MAGSHARE I'm not going to artificially invent questions to ask just to "lead the way", and I don't have to. There are tons of good questions posted all the time. There are 7 million mostly good questions in the site. As with all things everywhere on the entire Internet, lurk more. The good questions are already there. The onus is on you to look at the site you're contributing to and try to make sure you contributions are on par. | |
Oct 7, 2014 at 13:21 | comment | added | user229044 Mod | @MAGSHARE Regarding your previous comment, I am a technical manager. I hire people and manage a team of developers. I look for people who can solve problems well, regardless of how you get it done. But if the only tool in your bag of tricks is to ask for the answer on Stack Overflow, there is a huge problem. You shouldn't be asking for the answer to trivial problems. I don't want devs who aren't curious enough to at least experiment their way through the small stuff. If it produces "witch doctor" code, that's good. We catch it in code-review and everybody learns. | |
Oct 7, 2014 at 13:14 | comment | added | Chris Marshall | I'm not. I think that it's interesting that it was automatically assumed that I am that type of person. I'm a senior development manager of a C++ shop, with over 30 years of experience. I write a lot of code to keep my chops up. I have seen a great deal of discussion, recently, about how to reduce the number of "bad" questions, but "bad" is in the eye of the beholder. If you guys have problems with "bad" questions, then lead from the front. Ask "good" questions, so we can see how it's done. Don't just insult us. Help us to ask better questions. | |
Oct 7, 2014 at 13:05 | comment | added | user229044 Mod | @MAGSHARE I'm sorry you took away that we think you're lazy. I don't, at all. People have to ask questions for this site to survive and thrive, we appreciate people who ask lots of good questions very much. I personally think people who ask as lot of bad questions are lazy. Everybody has moments when they overlook the obvious, but if you're the sort of person asking a question every hour, consistently getting dragged through huge comment threads asking for clarification, getting a lot of down or close votes, that's an indication that your questions might not be as good as they could be. | |
Oct 7, 2014 at 11:40 | comment | added | Chris Marshall | Thanks. I really like this place. My questions often result in high-quality answers within minutes. That's a HUGE deal. As a manager, I would value someone who asks a question, and gets high-value input in a few minutes over someone who insists on finding their own answer at the cost of hours of trial and error; often resulting in shaky, "witch doctor" results. I guess that SO is a bit of a victim of its own success. | |
Oct 7, 2014 at 10:25 | comment | added | Deduplicator | @MAGSHARE: Actually, reading it all, I don't get the impression that the commenters think you are a lazy git for asking questions. Also, you seem to ask ok quesstions after doing reasonable research, so you are welcome here (You might sometimes include a slight bit too much fluff, partly self-deprecating, but that stays at most minor). So, keep it up (especially the learning-part). (I'm certainly not an expert on asking questions myself, though ;-)) | |
Oct 7, 2014 at 9:41 | comment | added | Chris Marshall | Hmm... it's fairly clear that folks that ask many questions are considered lazy/bad programmers. I have asked questions that I have solved on my own, or that had an obvious answer that I overlooked (happens to the best of us), but I have had many answers here, as well. I'll continue to ask, but I am disappointed that y'all think I'm bad/lazy, because of this (you can rest assured that I'm smart enough not to think this of you). I can point to a pretty massive body of heterogenous FOSS code I've written, that says otherwise. | |
Oct 7, 2014 at 2:24 | history | edited | user229044Mod | CC BY-SA 3.0 |
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Oct 7, 2014 at 2:14 | history | answered | user229044Mod | CC BY-SA 3.0 |