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replaced http://stackoverflow.com/ with https://stackoverflow.com/
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I was looking at recent changes in the C documentation, and came across the review http://stackoverflow.com/documentation/review/changes/113746?filter-tags=chttps://stackoverflow.com/documentation/review/changes/113746?filter-tags=c.

The change was made by someone with a reputation less than 100, and approved by two with reputations in the range 101..200 and one with a reputation in the range 2000..3000. The person submitting the change has created two answers, one with the tag but with zero score; the three people reviewing and approving the change have not got the tag at all.

The change is less than stellar; I plan to reverse it because (to the extent it is comprehensible) I think it is confusing o/s-level memory management with application-level memory management.

My question, though, is:

  • Should there be a way of checking that those approving edits have demonstrated at least some relevant knowledge?

For example, should reviewers have a net positive score (not zero, not negative) in the tag? That would be a simple starting point for the C documentation; I suspect it would work sanely with a majority of other documentation subjects. Is it doable? Does it mean that there should be an identified tag which controls whether you're eligible to review documentation in a particular topic?

I was looking at recent changes in the C documentation, and came across the review http://stackoverflow.com/documentation/review/changes/113746?filter-tags=c.

The change was made by someone with a reputation less than 100, and approved by two with reputations in the range 101..200 and one with a reputation in the range 2000..3000. The person submitting the change has created two answers, one with the tag but with zero score; the three people reviewing and approving the change have not got the tag at all.

The change is less than stellar; I plan to reverse it because (to the extent it is comprehensible) I think it is confusing o/s-level memory management with application-level memory management.

My question, though, is:

  • Should there be a way of checking that those approving edits have demonstrated at least some relevant knowledge?

For example, should reviewers have a net positive score (not zero, not negative) in the tag? That would be a simple starting point for the C documentation; I suspect it would work sanely with a majority of other documentation subjects. Is it doable? Does it mean that there should be an identified tag which controls whether you're eligible to review documentation in a particular topic?

I was looking at recent changes in the C documentation, and came across the review https://stackoverflow.com/documentation/review/changes/113746?filter-tags=c.

The change was made by someone with a reputation less than 100, and approved by two with reputations in the range 101..200 and one with a reputation in the range 2000..3000. The person submitting the change has created two answers, one with the tag but with zero score; the three people reviewing and approving the change have not got the tag at all.

The change is less than stellar; I plan to reverse it because (to the extent it is comprehensible) I think it is confusing o/s-level memory management with application-level memory management.

My question, though, is:

  • Should there be a way of checking that those approving edits have demonstrated at least some relevant knowledge?

For example, should reviewers have a net positive score (not zero, not negative) in the tag? That would be a simple starting point for the C documentation; I suspect it would work sanely with a majority of other documentation subjects. Is it doable? Does it mean that there should be an identified tag which controls whether you're eligible to review documentation in a particular topic?

Add a qualifying 'I think' just in case others don't.
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Jonathan Leffler
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I was looking at recent changes in the C documentation, and came across the review http://stackoverflow.com/documentation/review/changes/113746?filter-tags=c.

The change was made by someone with a reputation less than 100, and approved by two with reputations in the range 101..200 and one with a reputation in the range 2000..3000. The person submitting the change has created two answers, one with the tag;tag but with zero score; the three people reviewing and approving the change have not got the tag at all.

The change is less than stellar; I plan to reverse it because (to the extent it is comprehensible) I think it is confusing o/s-level memory management with application-level memory management.

My question, though, is:

  • Should there be a way of checking that those approving edits have demonstrated at least some relevant knowledge?

For example, should reviewers have a net positive score (not zero, not negative) in the tag? That would be a simple starting point for the C documentation; I suspect it would work sanely with a majority of other documentation subjects. Is it doable? Does it mean that there should be an identified tag which controls whether you're eligible to review documentation in a particular topic?

I was looking at recent changes in the C documentation, and came across the review http://stackoverflow.com/documentation/review/changes/113746?filter-tags=c.

The change was made by someone with a reputation less than 100, and approved by two with reputations in the range 101..200 and one with a reputation in the range 2000..3000. The person submitting the change has created two answers, one with the tag; the three people reviewing and approving the change have not got the tag at all.

The change is less than stellar; I plan to reverse it because (to the extent it is comprehensible) it is confusing o/s-level memory management with application-level memory management.

My question, though, is:

  • Should there be a way of checking that those approving edits have demonstrated at least some relevant knowledge?

For example, should reviewers have a net positive score (not zero, not negative) in the tag? That would be a simple starting point for the C documentation; I suspect it would work sanely with a majority of other documentation subjects. Is it doable? Does it mean that there should be an identified tag which controls whether you're eligible to review documentation in a particular topic?

I was looking at recent changes in the C documentation, and came across the review http://stackoverflow.com/documentation/review/changes/113746?filter-tags=c.

The change was made by someone with a reputation less than 100, and approved by two with reputations in the range 101..200 and one with a reputation in the range 2000..3000. The person submitting the change has created two answers, one with the tag but with zero score; the three people reviewing and approving the change have not got the tag at all.

The change is less than stellar; I plan to reverse it because (to the extent it is comprehensible) I think it is confusing o/s-level memory management with application-level memory management.

My question, though, is:

  • Should there be a way of checking that those approving edits have demonstrated at least some relevant knowledge?

For example, should reviewers have a net positive score (not zero, not negative) in the tag? That would be a simple starting point for the C documentation; I suspect it would work sanely with a majority of other documentation subjects. Is it doable? Does it mean that there should be an identified tag which controls whether you're eligible to review documentation in a particular topic?

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Jonathan Leffler
  • 751.8k
  • 3
  • 62
  • 107

Should people who've never asked or answered a question for C be allowed to review C documentation changes?

I was looking at recent changes in the C documentation, and came across the review http://stackoverflow.com/documentation/review/changes/113746?filter-tags=c.

The change was made by someone with a reputation less than 100, and approved by two with reputations in the range 101..200 and one with a reputation in the range 2000..3000. The person submitting the change has created two answers, one with the tag; the three people reviewing and approving the change have not got the tag at all.

The change is less than stellar; I plan to reverse it because (to the extent it is comprehensible) it is confusing o/s-level memory management with application-level memory management.

My question, though, is:

  • Should there be a way of checking that those approving edits have demonstrated at least some relevant knowledge?

For example, should reviewers have a net positive score (not zero, not negative) in the tag? That would be a simple starting point for the C documentation; I suspect it would work sanely with a majority of other documentation subjects. Is it doable? Does it mean that there should be an identified tag which controls whether you're eligible to review documentation in a particular topic?