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added a thought in the opposite direction
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Lutz Prechelt
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My point of view:

The point of building "a library of detailed answers" (as opposed to, say, a carefully curated FAQ page where there is only one answer for any question) is that usually "There is more than one way to do it" and StackOverflow wants to educate about all of them. (This is a key point: SO is about education, not information.)

The point of voting is to mark some of these answers as very useful, some as somewhat useful, and some as not useful/misleading/problematic/wrong.

The point of keeping answers with negative scores, then, is that the comprehensive education must include everything that somebody once thought might be a good idea, even if it is not. Not only because somebody else might think so again, but also because finding out (or reading, in a comment) why a wrong answer is wrong can be a useful intellectual exercise.

The bottom line: Removing wrong answers, once they have proper negative score, would reduce the value of StackOverflow, not increase it.

Oh, and yes: This is an argument for not removing all answers with negative scores. It is not an argument for keeping all of them; some will be bad enough to not be protected by the above value proposition. (Thanks, l4mpi)

My point of view:

The point of building "a library of detailed answers" (as opposed to, say, a carefully curated FAQ page where there is only one answer for any question) is that usually "There is more than one way to do it" and StackOverflow wants to educate about all of them. (This is a key point: SO is about education, not information.)

The point of voting is to mark some of these answers as very useful, some as somewhat useful, and some as not useful/misleading/problematic/wrong.

The point of keeping answers with negative scores, then, is that the comprehensive education must include everything that somebody once thought might be a good idea, even if it is not. Not only because somebody else might think so again, but also because finding out (or reading, in a comment) why a wrong answer is wrong can be a useful intellectual exercise.

The bottom line: Removing wrong answers, once they have proper negative score, would reduce the value of StackOverflow, not increase it.

My point of view:

The point of building "a library of detailed answers" (as opposed to, say, a carefully curated FAQ page where there is only one answer for any question) is that usually "There is more than one way to do it" and StackOverflow wants to educate about all of them. (This is a key point: SO is about education, not information.)

The point of voting is to mark some of these answers as very useful, some as somewhat useful, and some as not useful/misleading/problematic/wrong.

The point of keeping answers with negative scores, then, is that the comprehensive education must include everything that somebody once thought might be a good idea, even if it is not. Not only because somebody else might think so again, but also because finding out (or reading, in a comment) why a wrong answer is wrong can be a useful intellectual exercise.

The bottom line: Removing wrong answers, once they have proper negative score, would reduce the value of StackOverflow, not increase it.

Oh, and yes: This is an argument for not removing all answers with negative scores. It is not an argument for keeping all of them; some will be bad enough to not be protected by the above value proposition. (Thanks, l4mpi)

flag is a poor choice of word; changed to "mark"
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Carrie Kendall
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My point of view:

The point of building "a library of detailed answers" (as opposed to, say, a carefully curated FAQ page where there is only one answer for any question) is that usually "There is more than one way to do it" and StackOverflow wants to educate about all of them. (This is a key point: SO is about education, not information.)

The point of voting is to flagmark some of these answers as very useful, some as somewhat useful, and some as not useful/misleading/problematic/wrong.

The point of keeping answers with negative scores, then, is that the comprehensive education must include everything that somebody once thought might be a good idea, even if it is not. Not only because somebody else might think so again, but also because finding out (or reading, in a comment) why a wrong answer is wrong can be a useful intellectual exercise.

The bottom line: Removing wrong answers, once they have proper negative score, would reduce the value of StackOverflow, not increase it.

My point of view:

The point of building "a library of detailed answers" (as opposed to, say, a carefully curated FAQ page where there is only one answer for any question) is that usually "There is more than one way to do it" and StackOverflow wants to educate about all of them. (This is a key point: SO is about education, not information.)

The point of voting is to flag some of these answers as very useful, some as somewhat useful, and some as not useful/misleading/problematic/wrong.

The point of keeping answers with negative scores, then, is that the comprehensive education must include everything that somebody once thought might be a good idea, even if it is not. Not only because somebody else might think so again, but also because finding out (or reading, in a comment) why a wrong answer is wrong can be a useful intellectual exercise.

The bottom line: Removing wrong answers, once they have proper negative score, would reduce the value of StackOverflow, not increase it.

My point of view:

The point of building "a library of detailed answers" (as opposed to, say, a carefully curated FAQ page where there is only one answer for any question) is that usually "There is more than one way to do it" and StackOverflow wants to educate about all of them. (This is a key point: SO is about education, not information.)

The point of voting is to mark some of these answers as very useful, some as somewhat useful, and some as not useful/misleading/problematic/wrong.

The point of keeping answers with negative scores, then, is that the comprehensive education must include everything that somebody once thought might be a good idea, even if it is not. Not only because somebody else might think so again, but also because finding out (or reading, in a comment) why a wrong answer is wrong can be a useful intellectual exercise.

The bottom line: Removing wrong answers, once they have proper negative score, would reduce the value of StackOverflow, not increase it.

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Lutz Prechelt
  • 39.1k
  • 12
  • 5

My point of view:

The point of building "a library of detailed answers" (as opposed to, say, a carefully curated FAQ page where there is only one answer for any question) is that usually "There is more than one way to do it" and StackOverflow wants to educate about all of them. (This is a key point: SO is about education, not information.)

The point of voting is to flag some of these answers as very useful, some as somewhat useful, and some as not useful/misleading/problematic/wrong.

The point of keeping answers with negative scores, then, is that the comprehensive education must include everything that somebody once thought might be a good idea, even if it is not. Not only because somebody else might think so again, but also because finding out (or reading, in a comment) why a wrong answer is wrong can be a useful intellectual exercise.

The bottom line: Removing wrong answers, once they have proper negative score, would reduce the value of StackOverflow, not increase it.