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Let's grab a sample of questions closed between 30 and 60 days ago. That oughta include most of what you're talking about. On Stack Overflow, there are 21118 of these, including deleted.

Ok, now let's look at the ones that weren't deleted by Community, were closed within 1 hour of creation, and currently score <= 0:

  • 2983 questions
  • 1092 deleted
  • 943 with at least one answer (includes deleted)
  • 2234 closed as duplicates (yes, some duplicates are also answered and/or deleted)

Right. Now, you're interested in the ones with answers.

  • 187 of these questions are not closed as duplicates
  • 37 are deleted
  • 122 have at least one answer scoring > 0
  • 83 have an accepted answer
  • 107 have at least one answer that would score > 0 even without the asker's vote.

If you're interested in more details on this, you might as well use SEDEyou might as well use SEDE - there aren't really that many of these, and hence I'm not going to risk exposing asker votes by breaking this down any further.

My take-away here is that the Roomba can be substantially improved by careful targeting of duplicates, but going after answered (in a sense, upvoted or accepted) questions is probably not worth the risk.

Let's grab a sample of questions closed between 30 and 60 days ago. That oughta include most of what you're talking about. On Stack Overflow, there are 21118 of these, including deleted.

Ok, now let's look at the ones that weren't deleted by Community, were closed within 1 hour of creation, and currently score <= 0:

  • 2983 questions
  • 1092 deleted
  • 943 with at least one answer (includes deleted)
  • 2234 closed as duplicates (yes, some duplicates are also answered and/or deleted)

Right. Now, you're interested in the ones with answers.

  • 187 of these questions are not closed as duplicates
  • 37 are deleted
  • 122 have at least one answer scoring > 0
  • 83 have an accepted answer
  • 107 have at least one answer that would score > 0 even without the asker's vote.

If you're interested in more details on this, you might as well use SEDE - there aren't really that many of these, and hence I'm not going to risk exposing asker votes by breaking this down any further.

My take-away here is that the Roomba can be substantially improved by careful targeting of duplicates, but going after answered (in a sense, upvoted or accepted) questions is probably not worth the risk.

Let's grab a sample of questions closed between 30 and 60 days ago. That oughta include most of what you're talking about. On Stack Overflow, there are 21118 of these, including deleted.

Ok, now let's look at the ones that weren't deleted by Community, were closed within 1 hour of creation, and currently score <= 0:

  • 2983 questions
  • 1092 deleted
  • 943 with at least one answer (includes deleted)
  • 2234 closed as duplicates (yes, some duplicates are also answered and/or deleted)

Right. Now, you're interested in the ones with answers.

  • 187 of these questions are not closed as duplicates
  • 37 are deleted
  • 122 have at least one answer scoring > 0
  • 83 have an accepted answer
  • 107 have at least one answer that would score > 0 even without the asker's vote.

If you're interested in more details on this, you might as well use SEDE - there aren't really that many of these, and hence I'm not going to risk exposing asker votes by breaking this down any further.

My take-away here is that the Roomba can be substantially improved by careful targeting of duplicates, but going after answered (in a sense, upvoted or accepted) questions is probably not worth the risk.

clarification copied into post from comments
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gnat
  • 6.2k
  • 10
  • 109
  • 177

Let's grab a sample of questions closed between 30 and 60 days ago. That oughta include most of what you're talking about. On Stack Overflow, there are 21118 of these, including deleted.

Ok, now let's look at the ones that weren't deleted by Community, were closed within 1 hour of creation, and currently score <= 0:

  • 2983 questions
  • 1092 deleted
  • 943 with at least one answer (includes deleted)
  • 2234 closed as duplicates (yes, some duplicates are also answered and/or deleted)

Right. Now, you're interested in the ones with answers.

  • 187 of these questions are not closed as duplicates
  • 37 are deleted
  • 122 have at least one answer scoring > 0
  • 83 have an accepted answer
  • 107 have at least one answer that would score > 0 even without the asker's vote.

If you're interested in more details on this, you might as well use SEDE - there aren't really that many of these, and hence I'm not going to risk exposing asker votes by breaking this down any further.

My take-away here is that the Roomba can be substantially improved by careful targeting of duplicates, but going after answered (in a sense, upvoted or accepted) questions is probably not worth the risk.

Let's grab a sample of questions closed between 30 and 60 days ago. That oughta include most of what you're talking about. On Stack Overflow, there are 21118 of these, including deleted.

Ok, now let's look at the ones that weren't deleted by Community, were closed within 1 hour of creation, and currently score <= 0:

  • 2983 questions
  • 1092 deleted
  • 943 with at least one answer (includes deleted)
  • 2234 closed as duplicates (yes, some duplicates are also answered and/or deleted)

Right. Now, you're interested in the ones with answers.

  • 187 of these questions are not closed as duplicates
  • 37 are deleted
  • 122 have at least one answer scoring > 0
  • 83 have an accepted answer
  • 107 have at least one answer that would score > 0 even without the asker's vote.

If you're interested in more details on this, you might as well use SEDE - there aren't really that many of these, and hence I'm not going to risk exposing asker votes by breaking this down any further.

My take-away here is that the Roomba can be substantially improved by careful targeting of duplicates, but going after answered questions is probably not worth the risk.

Let's grab a sample of questions closed between 30 and 60 days ago. That oughta include most of what you're talking about. On Stack Overflow, there are 21118 of these, including deleted.

Ok, now let's look at the ones that weren't deleted by Community, were closed within 1 hour of creation, and currently score <= 0:

  • 2983 questions
  • 1092 deleted
  • 943 with at least one answer (includes deleted)
  • 2234 closed as duplicates (yes, some duplicates are also answered and/or deleted)

Right. Now, you're interested in the ones with answers.

  • 187 of these questions are not closed as duplicates
  • 37 are deleted
  • 122 have at least one answer scoring > 0
  • 83 have an accepted answer
  • 107 have at least one answer that would score > 0 even without the asker's vote.

If you're interested in more details on this, you might as well use SEDE - there aren't really that many of these, and hence I'm not going to risk exposing asker votes by breaking this down any further.

My take-away here is that the Roomba can be substantially improved by careful targeting of duplicates, but going after answered (in a sense, upvoted or accepted) questions is probably not worth the risk.

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Shog9
  • 159.4k
  • 177
  • 1.2k
  • 1.2k

Let's grab a sample of questions closed between 30 and 60 days ago. That oughta include most of what you're talking about. On Stack Overflow, there are 21118 of these, including deleted.

Ok, now let's look at the ones that weren't deleted by Community, were closed within 1 hour of creation, and currently score <= 0:

  • 2983 questions
  • 1092 deleted
  • 943 with at least one answer (includes deleted)
  • 2234 closed as duplicates (yes, some duplicates are also answered and/or deleted)

Right. Now, you're interested in the ones with answers.

  • 187 of these questions are not closed as duplicates
  • 37 are deleted
  • 122 have at least one answer scoring > 0
  • 83 have an accepted answer
  • 107 have at least one answer that would score > 0 even without the asker's vote.

If you're interested in more details on this, you might as well use SEDE - there aren't really that many of these, and hence I'm not going to risk exposing asker votes by breaking this down any further.

My take-away here is that the Roomba can be substantially improved by careful targeting of duplicates, but going after answered questions is probably not worth the risk.