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May 23, 2020 at 17:27 comment added Anders Lindén I found an answer for google chrome where version 56 was the latest version where the answer was applicable. It was of high quality back then. Now when the chrome version is 83, it is uselesss. There is no reason why users below 15K reputation should not be able to flag that as deprecated.
May 23, 2020 at 17:24 comment added Anders Lindén Why should we wait for a number of downvotes to deprecate a clearly out of date answer? Downvotes should only be for answers with low quality.
Sep 1, 2017 at 9:21 comment added Raphael 15k? As a 100 rep user learning Swift, you immediately find hundreds of answers in swift that are deprecated, beyond any doubt.
Mar 20, 2017 at 9:15 history edited CommunityBot
replaced http://meta.stackoverflow.com/ with https://meta.stackoverflow.com/
Jan 7, 2016 at 17:14 comment added user50049 @Kendra has a really good point here, which is why I want to make these more of museum artifacts whenever possible. They might still be useful to someone practically, and stand an even bigger chance of being useful to someone historically, as in 'this is how they used to do it'. We don't want to lose signal here, but we very much don't want what was once great signal to be mostly noise (or just very bad information) in the faces of most folks that find it.
Jan 7, 2016 at 15:34 comment added rene @Magisch oh, those delete votes would be easy to abuse. I'm not against getting rid of stuff that is not the quality we want but giving that much power to me requires a strong believe from the community in my judgement.
Jan 7, 2016 at 15:32 comment added Kendra @Magisch And what if we find something deprecated (and by the deletion idea you propose, delete it) just to find that a number of developers work in a way-behind company and need that answer to fix the issue they've encountered? It could still happen. Marking it as deprecated leaves the answer there for users who might actually still need the old way, while telling users with the newer stuff "Hey! This probably won't work for you..." I think rene has a point with taking the changes slow to begin with.
Jan 7, 2016 at 15:27 comment added Magisch I disagree. I consider marking it deprecated already a compromise. I'd actually be in favor of giving the community the ability to delete a highly upvoted answer, maybe with 10 or 20 delete votes.
Jan 7, 2016 at 15:12 comment added rene Tnx @Kendra I updated the answer to reflect that better.
Jan 7, 2016 at 15:09 history edited rene CC BY-SA 3.0
added the let's try this first
Jan 7, 2016 at 15:03 comment added Kendra That makes sense as you've worded it in your comment. Your answer didn't read to me like a "Let's start with this, then we can make improvements from there if we see room for it." or a "Let's try this first, see how well it actually works, then maybe see about adding a few more things as we go." In light of that being your goal with this suggestion, I can certainly agree with that approach.
Jan 7, 2016 at 15:00 comment added rene @Kendra because we want something to change. I'm very much in favor of doing all that at once but I doubt we will ever get enough support for that. Instead of trying to fix everything I try a salami approach. Do this first. See how it works, that gives us time to gather evidence that the sort order can change as well and that maybe opens up the minds for getting rid of the accepted answer mark if that is still needed.
Jan 7, 2016 at 14:55 comment added Kendra Why not change the sort order? Why leave the answer, now community marked as deprecated, at the top of the list? Why in one fell swoop put the answer on the top of the list (or very nearly at the top) and yet tell future users it's outdated and they probably aren't looking for that answer? If our goal is to have answers to programming problems that are easy to find, I would think you wouldn't want something that is in most, if not all, future cases not going to work stuck at the top.
S Jan 7, 2016 at 14:52 history answered rene CC BY-SA 3.0
S Jan 7, 2016 at 14:52 history made wiki Post Made Community Wiki by rene