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auden
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To go more into this, I think that saying other people can significantly improve documentation is true, but not fair to the original poster. What if it is originally very good? Documentation should operate off of similar principles as those of the main site. If you were able to flag examples as very low quality or for deletion, and then write your own example to replace it, that would be clearer than fixing a terrible example or even a mediocre one. The other point of view is like saying that one should edit a terrible answer to make it wonderful instead of posting your own. (Maybe an "obsolete" flag should be added so when a better example comes up, the old one can be deleted?) Edits have their place, but at some point it is better to post your own answer.

Also in this vein, number of characters is, I think, a subjective way to do it. I get edits will be reviewed, but there is always the possibility of junk somehow getting in if it looks good enough. Besides, good edits could add images, or delete unnecessary bits, or split up an example, and this is not recognized by the current system. Jeffrey brought up a good point in the comments; that'd be an interesting way to do it, but it might also have similar problems. I do not have a good suggestion for a replacement, but I'm bringing these up as things to consider.

I'd be interested to see what people think of this.

I'd be interested to see what people think of this.

To go more into this, I think that saying other people can significantly improve documentation is true, but not fair to the original poster. What if it is originally very good? Documentation should operate off of similar principles as those of the main site. If you were able to flag examples as very low quality or for deletion, and then write your own example to replace it, that would be clearer than fixing a terrible example or even a mediocre one. The other point of view is like saying that one should edit a terrible answer to make it wonderful instead of posting your own. (Maybe an "obsolete" flag should be added so when a better example comes up, the old one can be deleted?) Edits have their place, but at some point it is better to post your own answer.

Also in this vein, number of characters is, I think, a subjective way to do it. I get edits will be reviewed, but there is always the possibility of junk somehow getting in if it looks good enough. Besides, good edits could add images, or delete unnecessary bits, or split up an example, and this is not recognized by the current system. Jeffrey brought up a good point in the comments; that'd be an interesting way to do it, but it might also have similar problems. I do not have a good suggestion for a replacement, but I'm bringing these up as things to consider.

I'd be interested to see what people think of this.

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auden
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Okay, three things:

  1. This is a suggestion that I posted on the last documentation update, but it hasn't gotten much attention, so:

Maybe this is just me, but I think the number of people to approve an edit is going to be a problem.

Where it makes sense

On the more busy/commonly used documentation pages this makes sense. In fact, I'd even say increase the number of people necessary to approve an edit. The better the documentation has to be to be posted, the better. However...

Where it does not make sense

On the less busy/commonly used documentation pages, there is less traffic, therefore making it difficult to allow edits to get approved, especially as people are trying to create whole topics and establish pages that will be the foundation of that documentation section. This makes the whole experience more difficult for those who are trying to write the documentation and slows down the whole process.

My suggestions

In the humble opinion of this low-rep user, I think a few things should happen:

  1. There should be a review queue connected to the main site. Not only would this speed up edits, it gets more users on the main site involved with or aware of the documentation project.

  2. The number of users it takes to pass an edit should increase as a documentation section gets either a. more busy, or b. more "full" - as in, more pages.

  3. One thing that I think would be really helpful is a button you can use to automatically split up examples. You should be able to edit the example body and title, the overall new topic it should be moved into (with an option to move it to an already existing topic), and it should "delete" the previous location of the example, if that makes sense. With the limits on examples, I think this would be incredibly helpful.

  4. The final suggestion (okay, this is more a discussion starter, but) is this: do we really want to the rep for good documentation to be less then the rep for good answers to questions? I think it should be 10 rep for upvotes for the original poster and the editors get rep as described.

I'd be interested to see what people think of this.