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when toggle format what by license comment
May 23, 2017 at 12:38 history edited CommunityBot
replaced http://stackoverflow.com/ with https://stackoverflow.com/
Sep 22, 2016 at 7:56 comment added Steve Bennett Probably the "correct" approach would be using Operational Transforms to calculate minimum number of operations to transform the input into the output, and give reputation based on that. Moving a paragraph would be one operation, just like adding or removing a character. A complex rewrite would be many small operations - and commensurately rewarded.
Sep 17, 2016 at 11:13 comment added bwoebi @Jaydles Then you need to employ some more expensive calculation, eliminating appearances of any consecutive 30+ bytes (or such) which are equal in additions and deletions, after stripping whitespace, from the calculation. [Even with markup there shouldn't be that few bytes not matched by the consecutive 30+ byte sequences or the section is either very, very big or markup just abused.]
Sep 16, 2016 at 10:18 comment added Cerbrus @Jaydles: A "Move" can be taken into consideration. Strip all formatting from a topic, then count the occurrences of [a-z] before, and after. Get the difference per letter, add these up, and I'd say you have a more accurate count of characters changed. "I am Yoda" > Yoda, I am! should return 0. Then again, "I am Yoda" > "Yo, I'm da man!" should return just 1, which is arguably too low.
Sep 15, 2016 at 23:23 comment added Jaydles Staff I completely agree that the "net" method has problems. But regarding what goes wrong if you just count additions, I think the most common issues tended to be reordering edits (where simply moving a paragraph or code block is counted as a major "addition") or formatting (a big block of text or code is removed, and re-added with markup, etc.)
Sep 15, 2016 at 18:23 comment added Kzqai Haha, I love that this is the "Lines Of Code Count" problem writ in a different medium, that people have been fighting against for decades and decades.
Sep 15, 2016 at 11:03 comment added CPHPython @JD9999 Exactly! It's as if reducing code clutter and refactoring was ever a bad thing... Code golf users will be pretty sad.
Sep 15, 2016 at 11:01 comment added Thomas Ahle What are some ways not penalizing deletions would be gamed? Perhaps it would encourage rewriting code and/or paragraphs for no reason other than hitting the 350 char limit?
Sep 15, 2016 at 9:41 comment added JD9999 I agree with this post entirely, especially with code. If someone is doing something the long way, and you make it simpler, then you won't be considered a contributor with the new system
Sep 15, 2016 at 9:31 comment added NoDataDumpNoContribution "It seems strange that re-writing a paragraph counts as no contribution." Do it in two steps. First delete everything that is wrong. Wait until edit is approved. Then add the right information in a second edit. Never, ever mix additions and deletion in the same edit.... Okay I admit, this is just a joke. I fully agree with you. It's bad and they know it. They have been warned about it several times.
Sep 15, 2016 at 6:41 comment added Mafii This should definitely change. It was okay since adding topics was important in the first place - but this is not going to make documentation a good place removing content is as important as adding new one - if not more (same goes in coding big programs)
Sep 15, 2016 at 6:33 comment added Magisch Like I said in the other comment thread, this basicly means don't bother fixing stuff, just keep adding more. Which in turn means we're in for a whole lot of cluttered through.
Sep 15, 2016 at 3:37 history answered RobMod CC BY-SA 3.0