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replaced http://stackexchange.com/ with https://stackexchange.com/
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The closest we get to hard rules are the items listed in the help center (particularly the code of conduct) and the legal terms of servicelegal terms of service.

Everything else is a convention that has been openly debated at some point on Meta.SO or Meta.SE. These conventions can change, such as the what kind of content is acceptable in an answer. Arguments are made for and against ideas, and most people accept that the more popular suggestions are what they'll follow as an informal policy.

We never get anywhere near a significant portion of the ~3.5 million registered users to participate in these discussions, but the people who care the most about site policy tend to have their say or vote. Again, little of this is considered binding, but the community does tend to gather around specific points of view.

As much as we programmers would like to have hard and fast rules for everything, that's not how the world works. For every convention, there are exceptions, and we all have to make our own decisions about what actions we think benefit the site.

The closest we get to hard rules are the items listed in the help center (particularly the code of conduct) and the legal terms of service.

Everything else is a convention that has been openly debated at some point on Meta.SO or Meta.SE. These conventions can change, such as the what kind of content is acceptable in an answer. Arguments are made for and against ideas, and most people accept that the more popular suggestions are what they'll follow as an informal policy.

We never get anywhere near a significant portion of the ~3.5 million registered users to participate in these discussions, but the people who care the most about site policy tend to have their say or vote. Again, little of this is considered binding, but the community does tend to gather around specific points of view.

As much as we programmers would like to have hard and fast rules for everything, that's not how the world works. For every convention, there are exceptions, and we all have to make our own decisions about what actions we think benefit the site.

The closest we get to hard rules are the items listed in the help center (particularly the code of conduct) and the legal terms of service.

Everything else is a convention that has been openly debated at some point on Meta.SO or Meta.SE. These conventions can change, such as the what kind of content is acceptable in an answer. Arguments are made for and against ideas, and most people accept that the more popular suggestions are what they'll follow as an informal policy.

We never get anywhere near a significant portion of the ~3.5 million registered users to participate in these discussions, but the people who care the most about site policy tend to have their say or vote. Again, little of this is considered binding, but the community does tend to gather around specific points of view.

As much as we programmers would like to have hard and fast rules for everything, that's not how the world works. For every convention, there are exceptions, and we all have to make our own decisions about what actions we think benefit the site.

replaced http://stackoverflow.com/ with https://stackoverflow.com/
Source Link

The closest we get to hard rules are the items listed in the help centerthe help center (particularly the code of conductcode of conduct) and the legal terms of service.

Everything else is a convention that has been openly debated at some point on Meta.SO or Meta.SE. These conventions can change, such as the what kind of content is acceptable in an answer. Arguments are made for and against ideas, and most people accept that the more popular suggestions are what they'll follow as an informal policy.

We never get anywhere near a significant portion of the ~3.5 million registered users to participate in these discussions, but the people who care the most about site policy tend to have their say or vote. Again, little of this is considered binding, but the community does tend to gather around specific points of view.

As much as we programmers would like to have hard and fast rules for everything, that's not how the world works. For every convention, there are exceptions, and we all have to make our own decisions about what actions we think benefit the site.

The closest we get to hard rules are the items listed in the help center (particularly the code of conduct) and the legal terms of service.

Everything else is a convention that has been openly debated at some point on Meta.SO or Meta.SE. These conventions can change, such as the what kind of content is acceptable in an answer. Arguments are made for and against ideas, and most people accept that the more popular suggestions are what they'll follow as an informal policy.

We never get anywhere near a significant portion of the ~3.5 million registered users to participate in these discussions, but the people who care the most about site policy tend to have their say or vote. Again, little of this is considered binding, but the community does tend to gather around specific points of view.

As much as we programmers would like to have hard and fast rules for everything, that's not how the world works. For every convention, there are exceptions, and we all have to make our own decisions about what actions we think benefit the site.

The closest we get to hard rules are the items listed in the help center (particularly the code of conduct) and the legal terms of service.

Everything else is a convention that has been openly debated at some point on Meta.SO or Meta.SE. These conventions can change, such as the what kind of content is acceptable in an answer. Arguments are made for and against ideas, and most people accept that the more popular suggestions are what they'll follow as an informal policy.

We never get anywhere near a significant portion of the ~3.5 million registered users to participate in these discussions, but the people who care the most about site policy tend to have their say or vote. Again, little of this is considered binding, but the community does tend to gather around specific points of view.

As much as we programmers would like to have hard and fast rules for everything, that's not how the world works. For every convention, there are exceptions, and we all have to make our own decisions about what actions we think benefit the site.

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Brad Larson Mod
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The closest we get to hard rules are the items listed in the help center (particularly the code of conduct) and the legal terms of service.

Everything else is a convention that has been openly debated at some point on Meta.SO or Meta.SE. These conventions can change, such as the what kind of content is acceptable in an answer. Arguments are made for and against ideas, and most people accept that the more popular suggestions are what they'll follow as an informal policy.

We never get anywhere near a significant portion of the ~3.5 million registered users to participate in these discussions, but the people who care the most about site policy tend to have their say or vote. Again, little of this is considered binding, but the community does tend to gather around specific points of view.

As much as we programmers would like to have hard and fast rules for everything, that's not how the world works. For every convention, there are exceptions, and we all have to make our own decisions about what actions we think benefit the site.