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Timeline for No Thanks, Damn It!

Current License: CC BY-SA 3.0

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Jul 18, 2021 at 23:20 comment added BartoszKP @JeffreyBlattman If it's not, than surely you took time to get to know with site's standards - it's a polite thing to do, right? :)
Jul 12, 2021 at 23:56 comment added Jeffrey Blattman "Adding "thank you" to a post that doesn't adhere to site's standards is false courtesy."- my courtesy isn't false.
Apr 25, 2018 at 14:36 comment added BartoszKP @Mario No, I'm not saying that it must sound like anything. It's a requirement, it is what it is. "please" word also rarely makes sense in questions/post.
Apr 25, 2018 at 14:18 comment added user604234 @BartoszKP So what you say here is that if I make a technical requirement it is A MUST to sound like a COMMAND? Why don't remove also the "please" word? It doesn't makes sense to have any words ("please" in this example) that creates a tonal expression. All questions should have only technically words and this is very bad!
Apr 25, 2018 at 14:10 comment added BartoszKP @Mario No, no, no. It's not "my question", it's a question posted on SO that belongs to everyone, with "me" being the author, but that's purely incidental. With this kind of objective perspective you really do not need to thank people for paying attention to the constraints of the problem you present.
Apr 25, 2018 at 13:33 comment added user604234 I don't think that this applies when you have an extra requirement for those who respond like: "Please keep <this> in mind when you respond to my question. Thanks!" In this context the "thanks" is a tuple "please (a kind requirement) - thanks". The Stackoverflow seems to be "like" an enciclopedia but it's not exactly one, so in this context the "Thank you" it is so natural.
Jul 6, 2017 at 1:01 comment added Lightness Races in Orbit @OyvindAndersson: Your call. Have a nice day!
Jul 5, 2017 at 19:15 comment added Oyvind Andersson @LightnessRacesinOrbit No, I don't wish that. Disagreed. Thanks.
Jul 3, 2017 at 23:02 comment added Lightness Races in Orbit @ryvantage: A good question doesn't say "I tried this..." and list a bunch of attempts: it presents a [MCVE] and states a problem. That the closest we can get to this with some users is "I tried this..." is unfortunate but not the end goal.
Jul 3, 2017 at 23:01 comment added Lightness Races in Orbit @OyvindAndersson: It is agreed upon. Bartosz is correct. You may wish to accrue more experience with Stack Overflow before making policy comments. Thanks.
Jul 3, 2017 at 21:41 comment added heez This seems like a petty attempt at removing a natural human element for a site that is driven by humans, i.e. it's unnecessary. Posts that include "thanks" add about as much noise as a dog whistle. Furthermore, the behavior model expects users to "Be nice." yet saying "Hi" and "Thanks" are prohibited - this is splitting hairs IMO. I say lighten up and embrace the human experience. But alas, I understand why this would be annoying, especially to developers ;)
Jul 2, 2017 at 21:13 comment added BSMP For you, perhaps. Still it's not agreed upon @OyvindAndersson - This is a site rule.
Jul 2, 2017 at 18:06 comment added Oyvind Andersson @BartoszKP Nope. For you, perhaps. Still it's not agreed upon - and again, luck is on the table.
Jun 12, 2017 at 12:43 comment added BartoszKP @OyvindAndersson That's all irrelevant. If we agree that this is the current policy, we will remove "Thanks" and "Hi", and we will need no more luck than fixing typos, commas and removing tags from titles.
Jun 12, 2017 at 12:02 comment added Oyvind Andersson "Stack Overflow, as a Q&A site, strives to be a technical resource akin to encyclopedias" Good luck with that. You are dealing with humans, from novice to expert level, and as a Q&A site allowing anyone to ask questions, a simple "Thanks" is quite simply a generalized formality in any Q&A session. Take any live Q&A panel as an example, where most people would end with "Thanks" or start with "Thank you for...". My point is, you will be very busy editing Q's in the future. I agree with formalities unrelated to the question to be unnessecary, but "Thanks." and/or "Hi" is not.
Mar 20, 2017 at 9:16 history edited CommunityBot
replaced http://meta.stackoverflow.com/ with https://meta.stackoverflow.com/
May 28, 2016 at 22:41 comment added Braiam "@JarrodRoberson, a man of many obsessions" :P
Dec 27, 2015 at 21:58 history edited BartoszKP CC BY-SA 3.0
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May 8, 2015 at 19:59 comment added user177800 I had a obsession fighting against these as well, but tagging in the title is my new obsession!
May 8, 2015 at 19:55 comment added user177800 in some cultures "thanks in advance" is offensive as it implied that the reader has some obligation to help, it is like verbal arm bending in a way.
May 3, 2015 at 0:22 comment added BartoszKP @ryvantage You are right, but I believe that's why MichaelT has put "strives to be" instead of "is a" in his comment. The core idea behind the site, IMHO, should be accumulating knowledge in a form as encyclopaedic as possible. I agree that some aspects are and always will be social-media like, but if it is not absolutely necessary (like discussions in comments) social-media likeness should be IMHO, in general, avoided.
May 1, 2015 at 5:05 comment added ryvantage "Stack Overflow, as a Q&A site, strives to be a technical resource akin to encyclopedias." seems more like a social media than an encyclopedia to me. There are so many aspects of this site that would be precluded in an akin-to-an-encyclopedia resource, like the use of "I tried this..." Even the comments feature, mostly unregulated and hardly filtered for quality, would not fit into such a category. Don't get me wrong, I agree that "thank you" detracts from the purpose of the questions but there is an undeniable aspect of this site that is personal and begs for pleasantries.
Apr 8, 2015 at 8:23 comment added BartoszKP @justcool393 Yeah, there were many ideas along these lines (block from asking until X rep, until N days, until whatever) but from what I recall none of this is going to happen, as the fact that anyone always can ask a question straight away is seen as one of the most important merits of SO.
Apr 7, 2015 at 17:58 comment added Justine Krejcha sucks, and the new question page just reads like something to click through. But what's kind of stupid about all of this is that for all of the people complaining about a few extra words in a post, if all of them dedicated half as much time to the close vote queue rather than doing this, it would be practically empty.
Apr 7, 2015 at 17:58 comment added Justine Krejcha Maybe we should just block new users from asking questions completely for 2 weeks then. Because that will surely improve the quality of the site.. Right now, neither the 'ask question' page, the page that is before it for new users, or any direct links from these pages talks about this 'rule'. This RTFM mentality is toxic to the site and we shouldn't expect all new users to know the rules. I will say though, I got a kick at how the answer acts likes it such an unpopular opinion to get rid of taglines in posts. As it is, the documentation honestly
Apr 7, 2015 at 12:30 comment added BartoszKP @justcool393 I, and seemingly many other people, didn't have any problem with lurking for a few weeks before writing my first post here. I do this with every other site I join, until I feel that I, at least partially, understand how things work. Rushing in into a new, unknown place, not caring about the rules and customs that are commonly accepted there is just plainly rude and stupid.
Apr 7, 2015 at 5:36 comment added Justine Krejcha "The only courtesy needed here is taking time to learn about our rules and guidelines". Honestly, I think this is a point where SO (and SE as a whole) has failed. It doesn't do a really good job of explaining that EVERYTHING is nuanced, what we should and shouldn't do. People get pissed off at new people for things that are small violations. And this is a Q&A site, people are just looking to get their questions answered. It shouldn't force you to click through all of the items in the help center and meta SE. People come for the Q&A, not the community. Oh, and thanks.
Mar 20, 2015 at 22:58 history edited BartoszKP CC BY-SA 3.0
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Mar 20, 2015 at 22:24 comment added BartoszKP @jpmc26 IMHO your interpretation of the question is a bit extreme, and while I agree that the reason I've stated in my comment is different I don't regard it as "very, very different". And anyway it's still not the point, and definitely not a point worth discussing with so many comments :) And, again, even if you don't find the other reasons important, caring about the language is still something that gives improvement and ultimately, big or small, that's what we want. Cheers!
Mar 20, 2015 at 22:24 comment added nick @jpmc26 Exactly how I feel. You phrased it perfectly. It's true, a "thank you" generally indicates the user is new and the question might be low quality. However there's no reason to close or even edit a question if there's nothing actually wrong with it (besides the thank-you). I really think we're going after the wrong thing here.
Mar 20, 2015 at 22:10 comment added jpmc26 @BartoszKP Using "thanks" as a heuristic to find questions that need addressing is fine, but that's not what's being described in this question or answer. They describe the inclusion of "thanks" as something inherently destructive, as a problem in and of itself that must be "crusaded" against, not in the context of the rest of the question being bad. Those are two very, very different things, and if we mean that "inclusion of thanks is a good heuristic for finding problem questions", then we should say that, not that it's some kind of blight to be stamped out with extreme prejudice.
Mar 20, 2015 at 9:01 comment added BartoszKP @jpmc26 You are free to go and fix problems you regard more serious :) And you can also write a call-to-action meta post describing what you think is more important. I don't have enough free time right now to go and do Great Things, but I can try to improve posts (not only removing "thanks" but doing a complete edit, where needed) from time to time, and finding "thanks" is one of ways I can find them.
Mar 20, 2015 at 8:54 comment added jpmc26 @BartoszKP I think finding and closing (or salvaging) low quality questions would do more toward that goal than actively seeking out posts that say "thank you," as would a number of other activities. If you happen across one, it's fine and maybe even good to edit it out, but this is not serious enough to go looking for it. There is no need for crusading; that is just blowing the issue completely out of proportion and distracting us from more serious problems.
Mar 20, 2015 at 8:46 comment added BartoszKP @jpmc26 Removing "thanks" is not just removing "thanks". It is also a way of communicating technical nature of this site - we want to have a knowledge repository, not a forum, not a discussion, not a message board. Salutations etc. are inherently related to these media, while lack of them is specific to technical resources. We have meta and chat for being more human.
Mar 20, 2015 at 8:43 comment added BartoszKP @AmosM.Carpenter Thanks, corrected! Feel free to just edit the post next time ;)
Mar 20, 2015 at 8:43 history edited BartoszKP CC BY-SA 3.0
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Mar 20, 2015 at 6:50 comment added jpmc26 I'm just going to say that while StackOverflow does strive to be a fantastic technical resource, it's also a social community. There is some need for courtesy. (Frankly a need for a little more than we have right now, in my opinion.) I would just remove such a note if it were bad grammar, we have bigger problems than people trying to be polite. As for "false courtesy," just close them and don't worry about whether the courtesy was false or real. The vitriol against people putting "thank you" on posts represents an enormously wrong focus on how to best spend our time improving the site.
Mar 20, 2015 at 6:01 comment added Amos M. Carpenter Agree with everything you and @MichaelT said. BUT, since it was quoted, I couldn't resist: there should be a comma after the subordinate clause, "as a Q&A site", and it should be "[...] isn't at the bottom of every Wikipedia page". Slight difference. (Ducks for cover) ;-)
Mar 20, 2015 at 5:34 comment added John Saunders @ssaltman: this is not a message board. It's not a forum. It's a very different site - it is a Q&A site which is not just focused on the Q and the A but also on all the future readers who will find the "A" while searching for the "Q". That's different from the purpose of a discussion forum or message board.
Mar 20, 2015 at 5:32 comment added John Saunders @nick: it doesn't make it unreadable. But it's unnecessary fluff and counter to the goals of this site. By removing it (and adding a comment saying why I removed it), I not only improve the site IMHO, but also educate other readers. The most important thing I can teach them is that Stack Overflow is not like other sites they've been on. They are "not in Kansas anymore".
Mar 19, 2015 at 23:10 comment added ssaltman Wow. You can edit it, moderate it, do whatever you want, but it's a message board and no amount of moderation will change that. Glad you have time to waste deleting "thanks" from posts. Thanks in advance!
Mar 19, 2015 at 22:53 comment added nick When did StackOverlow get so anal about this kind of thing? This is a site where folks can get help and help others. I don't see how a "thank you" causes a question/answer/comment to become instantly unreadable.
Mar 19, 2015 at 8:33 history edited ajay CC BY-SA 3.0
typo of courtesies
Mar 17, 2015 at 22:27 comment added Captain Sensible @ryanyuyu I did not mention removing "thanks" in my comment. I talked about explaining the site's standards and also giving the user posting the comment the -option- of abandoning what he/she is doing.
Mar 17, 2015 at 18:02 vote accept John Saunders
Mar 17, 2015 at 17:22 comment added Eugene Podskal @Dpeif By "these "Thanks"" I meant exactly those posts where "Thanks" are surrounded by an awful mess of bad formatting, typos and completely irrelevant information. I do not say that people who create such posts do not deserve any help(guidance, edits etc.), I say that instead of motivating or inspiring such "Thanks" just dishearten me. Editing, moderating and guiding someone takes a lot of effort - usually more than answering. I gladly edit, fix typos and ask for clarifications in posts where I can see some potential, and where I can't - I downvote or(and) close, or just move on.
Mar 17, 2015 at 16:11 comment added Dpeif it surprises me that a comment saying "Seeing these 'Thanks' can easily remove any desire to help" got any upvotes on a Stack site. i thought this was discussing "should we expend the effort to start editing posts in this way?", not "should we help people who say 'thank you in advance'?" If you're browsing posts to find the most palatable grammar to answer, you're probably not helping as many people as you could. @BartoszKP and others have a valid point, but i wouldn't extend it that far.
Mar 17, 2015 at 15:46 history edited BartoszKP CC BY-SA 3.0
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Mar 17, 2015 at 15:27 history edited BartoszKP CC BY-SA 3.0
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Mar 17, 2015 at 14:11 comment added ryanyuyu @DiegoDeberdt It is too risky/technically difficult to safely remove "thanks" while guaranteeing that the rest of the post is not accidentally corrupted.
Mar 17, 2015 at 13:59 comment added Captain Sensible Why can't the user posting a comment that says "thank you" not automatically be shown a message explaining the site's standards and given the option to abandon posting the comment?
Mar 17, 2015 at 13:53 comment added Eugene Podskal +1, especially for "Adding "thank you" to a post that doesn't adhere to site's standards is false courtesy." Thanks to someone who will have to clean the formatting? Or to someone who will have to fix typos? Or to someone who will have to add an umpteenth comment with request for at least some relevant info? No, such things do not look like courtesy but more like a smirk. Seeing these "Thanks" can easily remove any desire to help.
Mar 17, 2015 at 11:32 history edited BartoszKP CC BY-SA 3.0
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Mar 17, 2015 at 11:26 history answered BartoszKP CC BY-SA 3.0