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Commonmark migration
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The Problem

we don’t have a consolidated place for people who don’t know what Stack Overflow is to learn more about us and how to contribute to our community

Is this an opportunity to use the new Documentation feature to document how to use Stack Overflow? Or is that perhaps too much of a stretch for something which is supposed to document code more than process. I think it could fit.

If not, including the "more info" pages from meta tag wikis as links or verbatim somewhere inside of the help center could also provide the home for this information while at the same time making it readily available to consolidate into one place (combining multiple tag wikis into a help page for example).

That would require expansion though. The current tag wiki for the questions tag is pretty abysmal from an information standpoint.

The questions tag should be used when you ask a question on meta that is referencing question(s) on the main site. For example, if you have a question about why questions on Stack Overflow are of such low quality, you should include the questions tag.

Would it be too much to go on here explaining what questions are with regards to the definition at Stack Overflow? This tag isn't just for referencing a single question (that is the tag), it is for referencing the topic of questions. How to improve them, what they are, perhaps why they are important, etc. This area could be a potential home for a lot more information that can be used elsewhere to educate users while still being logically separated.

Furthermore, following this approach new features such as Teams or Jobs could easily be kept up to date in the relevant tag both separating out information in a logical fashion while being able to be referenced in a composite elsewhere.


Questionnaire

Was there a particular blog or Meta post or other piece of content that convinced you to sign up?

What convinced me to sign up was seeing so many quality solutions that furthered the development of my current project. When I finally got truly stuck, I asked a question and signed up.

How did you learn how to contribute on Stack Overflow?

I like to consider myself able to self educate. When I first signed up to ask a question, I also then had the ability to answer. So I set out to try to learn and answer whatever the newest question list had to offer. It offered several opportunities to learn about new topics, but answering in unfamiliar areas such as LaTex for example proved to not really be possible (perhaps it was a naive endeavor - I was just trying to help and learn).

What first got you excited about Stack Overflow and made you want to contribute?

I like giving back. Stack Overflow gave me so much help with development that I wanted to also help the community that contributed to helping solve my problems.

The Problem

we don’t have a consolidated place for people who don’t know what Stack Overflow is to learn more about us and how to contribute to our community

Is this an opportunity to use the new Documentation feature to document how to use Stack Overflow? Or is that perhaps too much of a stretch for something which is supposed to document code more than process. I think it could fit.

If not, including the "more info" pages from meta tag wikis as links or verbatim somewhere inside of the help center could also provide the home for this information while at the same time making it readily available to consolidate into one place (combining multiple tag wikis into a help page for example).

That would require expansion though. The current tag wiki for the questions tag is pretty abysmal from an information standpoint.

The questions tag should be used when you ask a question on meta that is referencing question(s) on the main site. For example, if you have a question about why questions on Stack Overflow are of such low quality, you should include the questions tag.

Would it be too much to go on here explaining what questions are with regards to the definition at Stack Overflow? This tag isn't just for referencing a single question (that is the tag), it is for referencing the topic of questions. How to improve them, what they are, perhaps why they are important, etc. This area could be a potential home for a lot more information that can be used elsewhere to educate users while still being logically separated.

Furthermore, following this approach new features such as Teams or Jobs could easily be kept up to date in the relevant tag both separating out information in a logical fashion while being able to be referenced in a composite elsewhere.


Questionnaire

Was there a particular blog or Meta post or other piece of content that convinced you to sign up?

What convinced me to sign up was seeing so many quality solutions that furthered the development of my current project. When I finally got truly stuck, I asked a question and signed up.

How did you learn how to contribute on Stack Overflow?

I like to consider myself able to self educate. When I first signed up to ask a question, I also then had the ability to answer. So I set out to try to learn and answer whatever the newest question list had to offer. It offered several opportunities to learn about new topics, but answering in unfamiliar areas such as LaTex for example proved to not really be possible (perhaps it was a naive endeavor - I was just trying to help and learn).

What first got you excited about Stack Overflow and made you want to contribute?

I like giving back. Stack Overflow gave me so much help with development that I wanted to also help the community that contributed to helping solve my problems.

The Problem

we don’t have a consolidated place for people who don’t know what Stack Overflow is to learn more about us and how to contribute to our community

Is this an opportunity to use the new Documentation feature to document how to use Stack Overflow? Or is that perhaps too much of a stretch for something which is supposed to document code more than process. I think it could fit.

If not, including the "more info" pages from meta tag wikis as links or verbatim somewhere inside of the help center could also provide the home for this information while at the same time making it readily available to consolidate into one place (combining multiple tag wikis into a help page for example).

That would require expansion though. The current tag wiki for the questions tag is pretty abysmal from an information standpoint.

The questions tag should be used when you ask a question on meta that is referencing question(s) on the main site. For example, if you have a question about why questions on Stack Overflow are of such low quality, you should include the questions tag.

Would it be too much to go on here explaining what questions are with regards to the definition at Stack Overflow? This tag isn't just for referencing a single question (that is the tag), it is for referencing the topic of questions. How to improve them, what they are, perhaps why they are important, etc. This area could be a potential home for a lot more information that can be used elsewhere to educate users while still being logically separated.

Furthermore, following this approach new features such as Teams or Jobs could easily be kept up to date in the relevant tag both separating out information in a logical fashion while being able to be referenced in a composite elsewhere.


Questionnaire

Was there a particular blog or Meta post or other piece of content that convinced you to sign up?

What convinced me to sign up was seeing so many quality solutions that furthered the development of my current project. When I finally got truly stuck, I asked a question and signed up.

How did you learn how to contribute on Stack Overflow?

I like to consider myself able to self educate. When I first signed up to ask a question, I also then had the ability to answer. So I set out to try to learn and answer whatever the newest question list had to offer. It offered several opportunities to learn about new topics, but answering in unfamiliar areas such as LaTex for example proved to not really be possible (perhaps it was a naive endeavor - I was just trying to help and learn).

What first got you excited about Stack Overflow and made you want to contribute?

I like giving back. Stack Overflow gave me so much help with development that I wanted to also help the community that contributed to helping solve my problems.

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

The Problem

we don’t have a consolidated place for people who don’t know what Stack Overflow is to learn more about us and how to contribute to our community

Is this an opportunity to use the new Documentation feature to document how to use Stack Overflow? Or is that perhaps too much of a stretch for something which is supposed to document code more than process. I think it could fit.

If not, including the "more info" pages from meta tag wikis as links or verbatim somewhere inside of the help center could also provide the home for this information while at the same time making it readily available to consolidate into one place (combining multiple tag wikis into a help page for example).

That would require expansion though. The current tag wiki for the questions tagcurrent tag wiki for the questions tag is pretty abysmal from an information standpoint.

The questions tag should be used when you ask a question on meta that is referencing question(s) on the main site. For example, if you have a question about why questions on Stack Overflow are of such low quality, you should include the questions tag.

Would it be too much to go on here explaining what questions are with regards to the definition at Stack Overflow? This tag isn't just for referencing a single question (that is the tag), it is for referencing the topic of questions. How to improve them, what they are, perhaps why they are important, etc. This area could be a potential home for a lot more information that can be used elsewhere to educate users while still being logically separated.

Furthermore, following this approach new features such as Teams or Jobs could easily be kept up to date in the relevant tag both separating out information in a logical fashion while being able to be referenced in a composite elsewhere.


  

Questionnaire

Was there a particular blog or Meta post or other piece of content that convinced you to sign up?

What convinced me to sign up was seeing so many quality solutions that furthered the development of my current project. When I finally got truly stuck, I asked a question and signed up.

How did you learn how to contribute on Stack Overflow?

I like to consider myself able to self educate. When I first signed up to ask a question, I also then had the ability to answer. So I set out to try to learn and answer whatever the newest question list had to offer. It offered several opportunities to learn about new topics, but answering in unfamiliar areas such as LaTex for example proved to not really be possible (perhaps it was a naive endeavor - I was just trying to help and learn).

What first got you excited about Stack Overflow and made you want to contribute?

I like giving back. Stack Overflow gave me so much help with development that I wanted to also help the community that contributed to helping solve my problems.

The Problem

we don’t have a consolidated place for people who don’t know what Stack Overflow is to learn more about us and how to contribute to our community

Is this an opportunity to use the new Documentation feature to document how to use Stack Overflow? Or is that perhaps too much of a stretch for something which is supposed to document code more than process. I think it could fit.

If not, including the "more info" pages from meta tag wikis as links or verbatim somewhere inside of the help center could also provide the home for this information while at the same time making it readily available to consolidate into one place (combining multiple tag wikis into a help page for example).

That would require expansion though. The current tag wiki for the questions tag is pretty abysmal from an information standpoint.

The questions tag should be used when you ask a question on meta that is referencing question(s) on the main site. For example, if you have a question about why questions on Stack Overflow are of such low quality, you should include the questions tag.

Would it be too much to go on here explaining what questions are with regards to the definition at Stack Overflow? This tag isn't just for referencing a single question (that is the tag), it is for referencing the topic of questions. How to improve them, what they are, perhaps why they are important, etc. This area could be a potential home for a lot more information that can be used elsewhere to educate users while still being logically separated.

Furthermore, following this approach new features such as Teams or Jobs could easily be kept up to date in the relevant tag both separating out information in a logical fashion while being able to be referenced in a composite elsewhere.


 

Questionnaire

Was there a particular blog or Meta post or other piece of content that convinced you to sign up?

What convinced me to sign up was seeing so many quality solutions that furthered the development of my current project. When I finally got truly stuck, I asked a question and signed up.

How did you learn how to contribute on Stack Overflow?

I like to consider myself able to self educate. When I first signed up to ask a question, I also then had the ability to answer. So I set out to try to learn and answer whatever the newest question list had to offer. It offered several opportunities to learn about new topics, but answering in unfamiliar areas such as LaTex for example proved to not really be possible (perhaps it was a naive endeavor - I was just trying to help and learn).

What first got you excited about Stack Overflow and made you want to contribute?

I like giving back. Stack Overflow gave me so much help with development that I wanted to also help the community that contributed to helping solve my problems.

The Problem

we don’t have a consolidated place for people who don’t know what Stack Overflow is to learn more about us and how to contribute to our community

Is this an opportunity to use the new Documentation feature to document how to use Stack Overflow? Or is that perhaps too much of a stretch for something which is supposed to document code more than process. I think it could fit.

If not, including the "more info" pages from meta tag wikis as links or verbatim somewhere inside of the help center could also provide the home for this information while at the same time making it readily available to consolidate into one place (combining multiple tag wikis into a help page for example).

That would require expansion though. The current tag wiki for the questions tag is pretty abysmal from an information standpoint.

The questions tag should be used when you ask a question on meta that is referencing question(s) on the main site. For example, if you have a question about why questions on Stack Overflow are of such low quality, you should include the questions tag.

Would it be too much to go on here explaining what questions are with regards to the definition at Stack Overflow? This tag isn't just for referencing a single question (that is the tag), it is for referencing the topic of questions. How to improve them, what they are, perhaps why they are important, etc. This area could be a potential home for a lot more information that can be used elsewhere to educate users while still being logically separated.

Furthermore, following this approach new features such as Teams or Jobs could easily be kept up to date in the relevant tag both separating out information in a logical fashion while being able to be referenced in a composite elsewhere.

 

Questionnaire

Was there a particular blog or Meta post or other piece of content that convinced you to sign up?

What convinced me to sign up was seeing so many quality solutions that furthered the development of my current project. When I finally got truly stuck, I asked a question and signed up.

How did you learn how to contribute on Stack Overflow?

I like to consider myself able to self educate. When I first signed up to ask a question, I also then had the ability to answer. So I set out to try to learn and answer whatever the newest question list had to offer. It offered several opportunities to learn about new topics, but answering in unfamiliar areas such as LaTex for example proved to not really be possible (perhaps it was a naive endeavor - I was just trying to help and learn).

What first got you excited about Stack Overflow and made you want to contribute?

I like giving back. Stack Overflow gave me so much help with development that I wanted to also help the community that contributed to helping solve my problems.

Source Link
Travis J
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The Problem

we don’t have a consolidated place for people who don’t know what Stack Overflow is to learn more about us and how to contribute to our community

Is this an opportunity to use the new Documentation feature to document how to use Stack Overflow? Or is that perhaps too much of a stretch for something which is supposed to document code more than process. I think it could fit.

If not, including the "more info" pages from meta tag wikis as links or verbatim somewhere inside of the help center could also provide the home for this information while at the same time making it readily available to consolidate into one place (combining multiple tag wikis into a help page for example).

That would require expansion though. The current tag wiki for the questions tag is pretty abysmal from an information standpoint.

The questions tag should be used when you ask a question on meta that is referencing question(s) on the main site. For example, if you have a question about why questions on Stack Overflow are of such low quality, you should include the questions tag.

Would it be too much to go on here explaining what questions are with regards to the definition at Stack Overflow? This tag isn't just for referencing a single question (that is the tag), it is for referencing the topic of questions. How to improve them, what they are, perhaps why they are important, etc. This area could be a potential home for a lot more information that can be used elsewhere to educate users while still being logically separated.

Furthermore, following this approach new features such as Teams or Jobs could easily be kept up to date in the relevant tag both separating out information in a logical fashion while being able to be referenced in a composite elsewhere.


Questionnaire

Was there a particular blog or Meta post or other piece of content that convinced you to sign up?

What convinced me to sign up was seeing so many quality solutions that furthered the development of my current project. When I finally got truly stuck, I asked a question and signed up.

How did you learn how to contribute on Stack Overflow?

I like to consider myself able to self educate. When I first signed up to ask a question, I also then had the ability to answer. So I set out to try to learn and answer whatever the newest question list had to offer. It offered several opportunities to learn about new topics, but answering in unfamiliar areas such as LaTex for example proved to not really be possible (perhaps it was a naive endeavor - I was just trying to help and learn).

What first got you excited about Stack Overflow and made you want to contribute?

I like giving back. Stack Overflow gave me so much help with development that I wanted to also help the community that contributed to helping solve my problems.