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Example creators will continue to earn +5 reputation per-upvote

If a user ends up contributing more than 350 characters to a single example, they will earn +5 reputation per upvote

I disagree with this if it means that an example author and editor will always receive +5 until an example is deleted - it seems that there should be a limit to this if the majority of an example (say 60 or 70%) has been changed by a single person or group of people. My reasoning behind this:

  1. Currently, there are examples which are a good idea to have but end up deleted instead of edited simply because the changes needed are too substantial to warrant the original author getting credit

  2. In computer science, especially with programming languages and computer systems, it is common for the lead author to be the person who contributed most

  3. This seems like it will lead to a FGITW race to create examples (with only minor explanations like those in the os module topic) due to the chance for rep gain - even if only <1% of the example is from the original author

So if a person edits a post (not at the 350 character count but at say the 70% level) would it not be better to shift the authorship to this new author or at least off the old author (or authors in the case of multiple edits being changed by a single edit* or just later edits)?

* Post now deleted as dupe so no chance of meta-effect


Update/Note: Going through the chat log, I found that @JonEricson basically gave an answer on the thought process for SO employees when it came to instances where an example needed completely rewritten, in chatin chat, such that:

If you are rewriting the example, the incentive is to create a new example (and optionally remove the old one).

This answers the question of what to do when it is a single person making a large change (one which deletes 500 characters and adds on only 480). Though I would point out that the coordination for an effort like this would require a "talk page" or some other way of having a cooperative conversation within the example in order to delete and then recreate - particularly in topics that are at the example limit.

Also, the fact that it is optional to delete the old example is part of the point - what if the premise was correct but needed a lot of work? Then an edit, to me, would make more sense.

Further, it does not address the problem of multiple edits changing or removing a large percentage of the Original Author's example. Nor the need to remove or shift authorship when it gets to this point (with a suggestion of using a diff ratio since suggestions are required to be actionablesuggestions are required to be actionable) so that the OP just gets no points if there is less then 350 of his own characters left or just the standard +1 or +2 as a substantial contributor if there are.

Example creators will continue to earn +5 reputation per-upvote

If a user ends up contributing more than 350 characters to a single example, they will earn +5 reputation per upvote

I disagree with this if it means that an example author and editor will always receive +5 until an example is deleted - it seems that there should be a limit to this if the majority of an example (say 60 or 70%) has been changed by a single person or group of people. My reasoning behind this:

  1. Currently, there are examples which are a good idea to have but end up deleted instead of edited simply because the changes needed are too substantial to warrant the original author getting credit

  2. In computer science, especially with programming languages and computer systems, it is common for the lead author to be the person who contributed most

  3. This seems like it will lead to a FGITW race to create examples (with only minor explanations like those in the os module topic) due to the chance for rep gain - even if only <1% of the example is from the original author

So if a person edits a post (not at the 350 character count but at say the 70% level) would it not be better to shift the authorship to this new author or at least off the old author (or authors in the case of multiple edits being changed by a single edit* or just later edits)?

* Post now deleted as dupe so no chance of meta-effect


Update/Note: Going through the chat log, I found that @JonEricson basically gave an answer on the thought process for SO employees when it came to instances where an example needed completely rewritten, in chat, such that:

If you are rewriting the example, the incentive is to create a new example (and optionally remove the old one).

This answers the question of what to do when it is a single person making a large change (one which deletes 500 characters and adds on only 480). Though I would point out that the coordination for an effort like this would require a "talk page" or some other way of having a cooperative conversation within the example in order to delete and then recreate - particularly in topics that are at the example limit.

Also, the fact that it is optional to delete the old example is part of the point - what if the premise was correct but needed a lot of work? Then an edit, to me, would make more sense.

Further, it does not address the problem of multiple edits changing or removing a large percentage of the Original Author's example. Nor the need to remove or shift authorship when it gets to this point (with a suggestion of using a diff ratio since suggestions are required to be actionable) so that the OP just gets no points if there is less then 350 of his own characters left or just the standard +1 or +2 as a substantial contributor if there are.

Example creators will continue to earn +5 reputation per-upvote

If a user ends up contributing more than 350 characters to a single example, they will earn +5 reputation per upvote

I disagree with this if it means that an example author and editor will always receive +5 until an example is deleted - it seems that there should be a limit to this if the majority of an example (say 60 or 70%) has been changed by a single person or group of people. My reasoning behind this:

  1. Currently, there are examples which are a good idea to have but end up deleted instead of edited simply because the changes needed are too substantial to warrant the original author getting credit

  2. In computer science, especially with programming languages and computer systems, it is common for the lead author to be the person who contributed most

  3. This seems like it will lead to a FGITW race to create examples (with only minor explanations like those in the os module topic) due to the chance for rep gain - even if only <1% of the example is from the original author

So if a person edits a post (not at the 350 character count but at say the 70% level) would it not be better to shift the authorship to this new author or at least off the old author (or authors in the case of multiple edits being changed by a single edit* or just later edits)?

* Post now deleted as dupe so no chance of meta-effect


Update/Note: Going through the chat log, I found that @JonEricson basically gave an answer on the thought process for SO employees when it came to instances where an example needed completely rewritten, in chat, such that:

If you are rewriting the example, the incentive is to create a new example (and optionally remove the old one).

This answers the question of what to do when it is a single person making a large change (one which deletes 500 characters and adds on only 480). Though I would point out that the coordination for an effort like this would require a "talk page" or some other way of having a cooperative conversation within the example in order to delete and then recreate - particularly in topics that are at the example limit.

Also, the fact that it is optional to delete the old example is part of the point - what if the premise was correct but needed a lot of work? Then an edit, to me, would make more sense.

Further, it does not address the problem of multiple edits changing or removing a large percentage of the Original Author's example. Nor the need to remove or shift authorship when it gets to this point (with a suggestion of using a diff ratio since suggestions are required to be actionable) so that the OP just gets no points if there is less then 350 of his own characters left or just the standard +1 or +2 as a substantial contributor if there are.

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

Example creators will continue to earn +5 reputation per-upvote

If a user ends up contributing more than 350 characters to a single example, they will earn +5 reputation per upvote

I disagree with this if it means that an example author and editor will always receive +5 until an example is deleted - it seems that there should be a limit to this if the majority of an example (say 60 or 70%) has been changed by a single person or group of people. My reasoning behind this:

  1. Currently, there are examples which are a good idea to have but end up deleted instead of edited simply because the changes needed are too substantial to warrant the original author getting credit

  2. In computer science, especially with programming languages and computer systems, it is common for the lead author to be the person who contributed most

  3. This seems like it will lead to a FGITW race to create examples (with only minor explanations like those in the os module topicthose in the os module topic) due to the chance for rep gain - even if only <1% of the example is from the original author

So if a person edits a post (not at the 350 character count but at say the 70% level) would it not be better to shift the authorship to this new author or at least off the old author (or authors in the case of multiple edits being changed by a single editcase of multiple edits being changed by a single edit* or just later edits)?

* Post now deleted as dupe so no chance of meta-effect


Update/Note: Going through the chat log, I found that @JonEricson basically gave an answer on the thought process for SO employees when it came to instances where an example needed completely rewritten, in chat, such that:

If you are rewriting the example, the incentive is to create a new example (and optionally remove the old one).

This answers the question of what to do when it is a single person making a large change (one which deletes 500 characters and adds on only 480). Though I would point out that the coordination for an effort like this would require a "talk page" or some other way of having a cooperative conversation within the example in order to delete and then recreate - particularly in topics that are at the example limit.

Also, the fact that it is optional to delete the old example is part of the point - what if the premise was correct but needed a lot of work? Then an edit, to me, would make more sense.

Further, it does not address the problem of multiple edits changing or removing a large percentage of the Original Author's example. Nor the need to remove or shift authorship when it gets to this point (with a suggestion of using a diff ratio since suggestions are required to be actionable) so that the OP just gets no points if there is less then 350 of his own characters left or just the standard +1 or +2 as a substantial contributor if there are.

Example creators will continue to earn +5 reputation per-upvote

If a user ends up contributing more than 350 characters to a single example, they will earn +5 reputation per upvote

I disagree with this if it means that an example author and editor will always receive +5 until an example is deleted - it seems that there should be a limit to this if the majority of an example (say 60 or 70%) has been changed by a single person or group of people. My reasoning behind this:

  1. Currently, there are examples which are a good idea to have but end up deleted instead of edited simply because the changes needed are too substantial to warrant the original author getting credit

  2. In computer science, especially with programming languages and computer systems, it is common for the lead author to be the person who contributed most

  3. This seems like it will lead to a FGITW race to create examples (with only minor explanations like those in the os module topic) due to the chance for rep gain - even if only <1% of the example is from the original author

So if a person edits a post (not at the 350 character count but at say the 70% level) would it not be better to shift the authorship to this new author or at least off the old author (or authors in the case of multiple edits being changed by a single edit* or just later edits)?

* Post now deleted as dupe so no chance of meta-effect


Update/Note: Going through the chat log, I found that @JonEricson basically gave an answer on the thought process for SO employees when it came to instances where an example needed completely rewritten, in chat, such that:

If you are rewriting the example, the incentive is to create a new example (and optionally remove the old one).

This answers the question of what to do when it is a single person making a large change (one which deletes 500 characters and adds on only 480). Though I would point out that the coordination for an effort like this would require a "talk page" or some other way of having a cooperative conversation within the example in order to delete and then recreate - particularly in topics that are at the example limit.

Also, the fact that it is optional to delete the old example is part of the point - what if the premise was correct but needed a lot of work? Then an edit, to me, would make more sense.

Further, it does not address the problem of multiple edits changing or removing a large percentage of the Original Author's example. Nor the need to remove or shift authorship when it gets to this point (with a suggestion of using a diff ratio since suggestions are required to be actionable) so that the OP just gets no points if there is less then 350 of his own characters left or just the standard +1 or +2 as a substantial contributor if there are.

Example creators will continue to earn +5 reputation per-upvote

If a user ends up contributing more than 350 characters to a single example, they will earn +5 reputation per upvote

I disagree with this if it means that an example author and editor will always receive +5 until an example is deleted - it seems that there should be a limit to this if the majority of an example (say 60 or 70%) has been changed by a single person or group of people. My reasoning behind this:

  1. Currently, there are examples which are a good idea to have but end up deleted instead of edited simply because the changes needed are too substantial to warrant the original author getting credit

  2. In computer science, especially with programming languages and computer systems, it is common for the lead author to be the person who contributed most

  3. This seems like it will lead to a FGITW race to create examples (with only minor explanations like those in the os module topic) due to the chance for rep gain - even if only <1% of the example is from the original author

So if a person edits a post (not at the 350 character count but at say the 70% level) would it not be better to shift the authorship to this new author or at least off the old author (or authors in the case of multiple edits being changed by a single edit* or just later edits)?

* Post now deleted as dupe so no chance of meta-effect


Update/Note: Going through the chat log, I found that @JonEricson basically gave an answer on the thought process for SO employees when it came to instances where an example needed completely rewritten, in chat, such that:

If you are rewriting the example, the incentive is to create a new example (and optionally remove the old one).

This answers the question of what to do when it is a single person making a large change (one which deletes 500 characters and adds on only 480). Though I would point out that the coordination for an effort like this would require a "talk page" or some other way of having a cooperative conversation within the example in order to delete and then recreate - particularly in topics that are at the example limit.

Also, the fact that it is optional to delete the old example is part of the point - what if the premise was correct but needed a lot of work? Then an edit, to me, would make more sense.

Further, it does not address the problem of multiple edits changing or removing a large percentage of the Original Author's example. Nor the need to remove or shift authorship when it gets to this point (with a suggestion of using a diff ratio since suggestions are required to be actionable) so that the OP just gets no points if there is less then 350 of his own characters left or just the standard +1 or +2 as a substantial contributor if there are.

replaced http://academia.stackexchange.com/ with https://academia.stackexchange.com/
Source Link

Example creators will continue to earn +5 reputation per-upvote

If a user ends up contributing more than 350 characters to a single example, they will earn +5 reputation per upvote

I disagree with this if it means that an example author and editor will always receive +5 until an example is deleted - it seems that there should be a limit to this if the majority of an example (say 60 or 70%) has been changed by a single person or group of people. My reasoning behind this:

  1. Currently, there are examples which are a good idea to have but end up deleted instead of edited simply because the changes needed are too substantial to warrant the original author getting credit

  2. In computer science, especially with programming languages and computer systems, it is common for the lead author to be the person who contributed mostcommon for the lead author to be the person who contributed most

  3. This seems like it will lead to a FGITW race to create examples (with only minor explanations like those in the os module topic) due to the chance for rep gain - even if only <1% of the example is from the original author

So if a person edits a post (not at the 350 character count but at say the 70% level) would it not be better to shift the authorship to this new author or at least off the old author (or authors in the case of multiple edits being changed by a single edit* or just later edits)?

* Post now deleted as dupe so no chance of meta-effect


  

Update/Note: Going through the chat log, I found that @JonEricson basically gave an answer on the thought process for SO employees when it came to instances where an example needed completely rewritten, in chat, such that:

If you are rewriting the example, the incentive is to create a new example (and optionally remove the old one).

This answers the question of what to do when it is a single person making a large change (one which deletes 500 characters and adds on only 480). Though I would point out that the coordination for an effort like this would require a "talk page" or some other way of having a cooperative conversation within the example in order to delete and then recreate - particularly in topics that are at the example limit.

Also, the fact that it is optional to delete the old example is part of the point - what if the premise was correct but needed a lot of work? Then an edit, to me, would make more sense.

Further, it does not address the problem of multiple edits changing or removing a large percentage of the Original Author's example. Nor the need to remove or shift authorship when it gets to this point (with a suggestion of using a diff ratio since suggestions are required to be actionable) so that the OP just gets no points if there is less then 350 of his own characters left or just the standard +1 or +2 as a substantial contributor if there are.

Example creators will continue to earn +5 reputation per-upvote

If a user ends up contributing more than 350 characters to a single example, they will earn +5 reputation per upvote

I disagree with this if it means that an example author and editor will always receive +5 until an example is deleted - it seems that there should be a limit to this if the majority of an example (say 60 or 70%) has been changed by a single person or group of people. My reasoning behind this:

  1. Currently, there are examples which are a good idea to have but end up deleted instead of edited simply because the changes needed are too substantial to warrant the original author getting credit

  2. In computer science, especially with programming languages and computer systems, it is common for the lead author to be the person who contributed most

  3. This seems like it will lead to a FGITW race to create examples (with only minor explanations like those in the os module topic) due to the chance for rep gain - even if only <1% of the example is from the original author

So if a person edits a post (not at the 350 character count but at say the 70% level) would it not be better to shift the authorship to this new author or at least off the old author (or authors in the case of multiple edits being changed by a single edit* or just later edits)?

* Post now deleted as dupe so no chance of meta-effect


 

Update/Note: Going through the chat log, I found that @JonEricson basically gave an answer on the thought process for SO employees when it came to instances where an example needed completely rewritten, in chat, such that:

If you are rewriting the example, the incentive is to create a new example (and optionally remove the old one).

This answers the question of what to do when it is a single person making a large change (one which deletes 500 characters and adds on only 480). Though I would point out that the coordination for an effort like this would require a "talk page" or some other way of having a cooperative conversation within the example in order to delete and then recreate - particularly in topics that are at the example limit.

Also, the fact that it is optional to delete the old example is part of the point - what if the premise was correct but needed a lot of work? Then an edit, to me, would make more sense.

Further, it does not address the problem of multiple edits changing or removing a large percentage of the Original Author's example. Nor the need to remove or shift authorship when it gets to this point (with a suggestion of using a diff ratio since suggestions are required to be actionable) so that the OP just gets no points if there is less then 350 of his own characters left or just the standard +1 or +2 as a substantial contributor if there are.

Example creators will continue to earn +5 reputation per-upvote

If a user ends up contributing more than 350 characters to a single example, they will earn +5 reputation per upvote

I disagree with this if it means that an example author and editor will always receive +5 until an example is deleted - it seems that there should be a limit to this if the majority of an example (say 60 or 70%) has been changed by a single person or group of people. My reasoning behind this:

  1. Currently, there are examples which are a good idea to have but end up deleted instead of edited simply because the changes needed are too substantial to warrant the original author getting credit

  2. In computer science, especially with programming languages and computer systems, it is common for the lead author to be the person who contributed most

  3. This seems like it will lead to a FGITW race to create examples (with only minor explanations like those in the os module topic) due to the chance for rep gain - even if only <1% of the example is from the original author

So if a person edits a post (not at the 350 character count but at say the 70% level) would it not be better to shift the authorship to this new author or at least off the old author (or authors in the case of multiple edits being changed by a single edit* or just later edits)?

* Post now deleted as dupe so no chance of meta-effect

 

Update/Note: Going through the chat log, I found that @JonEricson basically gave an answer on the thought process for SO employees when it came to instances where an example needed completely rewritten, in chat, such that:

If you are rewriting the example, the incentive is to create a new example (and optionally remove the old one).

This answers the question of what to do when it is a single person making a large change (one which deletes 500 characters and adds on only 480). Though I would point out that the coordination for an effort like this would require a "talk page" or some other way of having a cooperative conversation within the example in order to delete and then recreate - particularly in topics that are at the example limit.

Also, the fact that it is optional to delete the old example is part of the point - what if the premise was correct but needed a lot of work? Then an edit, to me, would make more sense.

Further, it does not address the problem of multiple edits changing or removing a large percentage of the Original Author's example. Nor the need to remove or shift authorship when it gets to this point (with a suggestion of using a diff ratio since suggestions are required to be actionable) so that the OP just gets no points if there is less then 350 of his own characters left or just the standard +1 or +2 as a substantial contributor if there are.

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