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replaced http://stackoverflow.com/ with https://stackoverflow.com/
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Are there any stats for Documentation about the activity in a specific tag? I have observed that a niche tag like MATLABMATLAB is pretty much dead (last action on Dec 2nd). I personally lost interest in contributing to that niche a while back.

Is this a common trend for the whole docs?

UPDATE

Stats that would be interesting to look at (as suggested in the comments):

  • Number of links to Documentation in SO Q&A
  • Number of links within Documentation (proxy for repetition)
  • Contributions, i.e., edits, size of edits, new topics, ...
  • Who is contributing
  • Views per topic

It would be nice to have them over time.

Thanks to Shog9 we have some stats under his answer.

UPDATE 2

I particularly liked JonH's comment about removing reputation points gain from Docs, and I will repeat it here, as it's buried down under:

Get rid of rep on documentation immediately. I mentioned this in the initial beta. The people who want to write good docs don't need any rep. The people who don't know how to write docs want all the rep they can get so they will do anything to get it.

I think this issue, already raised here, is central to the future of Documentation.

While it is harder to control for quality without a strict set of rules, taking the reputation points incentive away might retain only the really motivated contributors, while eliminating the noise.

UPDATE 3

It's been a week, and I wonder if the Stack Overflow team has a couple of words to spare about their expectations and the general vision for Docs, given that the stats, although not conclusive, are slowing confirming the main question raised by this thread.

Adam Lear has promptly replied:

Re: update #3, yes, we have a few thoughts. We have followed this entire post and had a number of discussions internally as a result, in addition to our usual planning/status meetings and whatnot. We'll post something up in the next couple days.

And a full meta answer is now here. It basically reads as, the team is listening to our feedback and willing to correct the direction, but resources are not infinite, so it will take time. Time is also needed to see a response from the community, which is not necessarily expected to be a community of experts.

Are there any stats for Documentation about the activity in a specific tag? I have observed that a niche tag like MATLAB is pretty much dead (last action on Dec 2nd). I personally lost interest in contributing to that niche a while back.

Is this a common trend for the whole docs?

UPDATE

Stats that would be interesting to look at (as suggested in the comments):

  • Number of links to Documentation in SO Q&A
  • Number of links within Documentation (proxy for repetition)
  • Contributions, i.e., edits, size of edits, new topics, ...
  • Who is contributing
  • Views per topic

It would be nice to have them over time.

Thanks to Shog9 we have some stats under his answer.

UPDATE 2

I particularly liked JonH's comment about removing reputation points gain from Docs, and I will repeat it here, as it's buried down under:

Get rid of rep on documentation immediately. I mentioned this in the initial beta. The people who want to write good docs don't need any rep. The people who don't know how to write docs want all the rep they can get so they will do anything to get it.

I think this issue, already raised here, is central to the future of Documentation.

While it is harder to control for quality without a strict set of rules, taking the reputation points incentive away might retain only the really motivated contributors, while eliminating the noise.

UPDATE 3

It's been a week, and I wonder if the Stack Overflow team has a couple of words to spare about their expectations and the general vision for Docs, given that the stats, although not conclusive, are slowing confirming the main question raised by this thread.

Adam Lear has promptly replied:

Re: update #3, yes, we have a few thoughts. We have followed this entire post and had a number of discussions internally as a result, in addition to our usual planning/status meetings and whatnot. We'll post something up in the next couple days.

And a full meta answer is now here. It basically reads as, the team is listening to our feedback and willing to correct the direction, but resources are not infinite, so it will take time. Time is also needed to see a response from the community, which is not necessarily expected to be a community of experts.

Are there any stats for Documentation about the activity in a specific tag? I have observed that a niche tag like MATLAB is pretty much dead (last action on Dec 2nd). I personally lost interest in contributing to that niche a while back.

Is this a common trend for the whole docs?

UPDATE

Stats that would be interesting to look at (as suggested in the comments):

  • Number of links to Documentation in SO Q&A
  • Number of links within Documentation (proxy for repetition)
  • Contributions, i.e., edits, size of edits, new topics, ...
  • Who is contributing
  • Views per topic

It would be nice to have them over time.

Thanks to Shog9 we have some stats under his answer.

UPDATE 2

I particularly liked JonH's comment about removing reputation points gain from Docs, and I will repeat it here, as it's buried down under:

Get rid of rep on documentation immediately. I mentioned this in the initial beta. The people who want to write good docs don't need any rep. The people who don't know how to write docs want all the rep they can get so they will do anything to get it.

I think this issue, already raised here, is central to the future of Documentation.

While it is harder to control for quality without a strict set of rules, taking the reputation points incentive away might retain only the really motivated contributors, while eliminating the noise.

UPDATE 3

It's been a week, and I wonder if the Stack Overflow team has a couple of words to spare about their expectations and the general vision for Docs, given that the stats, although not conclusive, are slowing confirming the main question raised by this thread.

Adam Lear has promptly replied:

Re: update #3, yes, we have a few thoughts. We have followed this entire post and had a number of discussions internally as a result, in addition to our usual planning/status meetings and whatnot. We'll post something up in the next couple days.

And a full meta answer is now here. It basically reads as, the team is listening to our feedback and willing to correct the direction, but resources are not infinite, so it will take time. Time is also needed to see a response from the community, which is not necessarily expected to be a community of experts.

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

Are there any stats for Documentation about the activity in a specific tag? I have observed that a niche tag like MATLAB is pretty much dead (last action on Dec 2nd). I personally lost interest in contributing to that niche a while back.

Is this a common trend for the whole docs?

UPDATE

Stats that would be interesting to look at (as suggested in the comments):

  • Number of links to Documentation in SO Q&A
  • Number of links within Documentation (proxy for repetition)
  • Contributions, i.e., edits, size of edits, new topics, ...
  • Who is contributing
  • Views per topic

It would be nice to have them over time.

Thanks to Shog9Shog9 we have some stats under his answeranswer.

UPDATE 2

I particularly liked JonHJonH's comment about removing reputation points gain from Docs, and I will repeat it here, as it's buried down under:

Get rid of rep on documentation immediately. I mentioned this in the initial beta. The people who want to write good docs don't need any rep. The people who don't know how to write docs want all the rep they can get so they will do anything to get it.

I think this issue, already raised herehere, is central to the future of Documentation.

While it is harder to control for quality without a strict set of rules, taking the reputation points incentive away might retain only the really motivated contributors, while eliminating the noise.

UPDATE 3

It's been a week, and I wonder if the Stack Overflow team has a couple of words to spare about their expectations and the general vision for Docs, given that the stats, although not conclusive, are slowing confirming the main question raised by this thread.

Adam LearAdam Lear has promptly replied:

Re: update #3, yes, we have a few thoughts. We have followed this entire post and had a number of discussions internally as a result, in addition to our usual planning/status meetings and whatnot. We'll post something up in the next couple days.

And a full meta answer is now herehere. It basically reads as, the team is listening to our feedback and willing to correct the direction, but resources are not infinite, so it will take time. Time is also needed to see a response from the community, which is not necessarily expected to be a community of experts.

Are there any stats for Documentation about the activity in a specific tag? I have observed that a niche tag like MATLAB is pretty much dead (last action on Dec 2nd). I personally lost interest in contributing to that niche a while back.

Is this a common trend for the whole docs?

UPDATE

Stats that would be interesting to look at (as suggested in the comments):

  • Number of links to Documentation in SO Q&A
  • Number of links within Documentation (proxy for repetition)
  • Contributions, i.e., edits, size of edits, new topics, ...
  • Who is contributing
  • Views per topic

It would be nice to have them over time.

Thanks to Shog9 we have some stats under his answer.

UPDATE 2

I particularly liked JonH's comment about removing reputation points gain from Docs, and I will repeat it here, as it's buried down under:

Get rid of rep on documentation immediately. I mentioned this in the initial beta. The people who want to write good docs don't need any rep. The people who don't know how to write docs want all the rep they can get so they will do anything to get it.

I think this issue, already raised here, is central to the future of Documentation.

While it is harder to control for quality without a strict set of rules, taking the reputation points incentive away might retain only the really motivated contributors, while eliminating the noise.

UPDATE 3

It's been a week, and I wonder if the Stack Overflow team has a couple of words to spare about their expectations and the general vision for Docs, given that the stats, although not conclusive, are slowing confirming the main question raised by this thread.

Adam Lear has promptly replied:

Re: update #3, yes, we have a few thoughts. We have followed this entire post and had a number of discussions internally as a result, in addition to our usual planning/status meetings and whatnot. We'll post something up in the next couple days.

And a full meta answer is now here. It basically reads as, the team is listening to our feedback and willing to correct the direction, but resources are not infinite, so it will take time. Time is also needed to see a response from the community, which is not necessarily expected to be a community of experts.

Are there any stats for Documentation about the activity in a specific tag? I have observed that a niche tag like MATLAB is pretty much dead (last action on Dec 2nd). I personally lost interest in contributing to that niche a while back.

Is this a common trend for the whole docs?

UPDATE

Stats that would be interesting to look at (as suggested in the comments):

  • Number of links to Documentation in SO Q&A
  • Number of links within Documentation (proxy for repetition)
  • Contributions, i.e., edits, size of edits, new topics, ...
  • Who is contributing
  • Views per topic

It would be nice to have them over time.

Thanks to Shog9 we have some stats under his answer.

UPDATE 2

I particularly liked JonH's comment about removing reputation points gain from Docs, and I will repeat it here, as it's buried down under:

Get rid of rep on documentation immediately. I mentioned this in the initial beta. The people who want to write good docs don't need any rep. The people who don't know how to write docs want all the rep they can get so they will do anything to get it.

I think this issue, already raised here, is central to the future of Documentation.

While it is harder to control for quality without a strict set of rules, taking the reputation points incentive away might retain only the really motivated contributors, while eliminating the noise.

UPDATE 3

It's been a week, and I wonder if the Stack Overflow team has a couple of words to spare about their expectations and the general vision for Docs, given that the stats, although not conclusive, are slowing confirming the main question raised by this thread.

Adam Lear has promptly replied:

Re: update #3, yes, we have a few thoughts. We have followed this entire post and had a number of discussions internally as a result, in addition to our usual planning/status meetings and whatnot. We'll post something up in the next couple days.

And a full meta answer is now here. It basically reads as, the team is listening to our feedback and willing to correct the direction, but resources are not infinite, so it will take time. Time is also needed to see a response from the community, which is not necessarily expected to be a community of experts.

added link to answer
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Oleg
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Are there any stats for Documentation about the activity in a specific tag? I have observed that a niche tag like MATLAB is pretty much dead (last action on Dec 2nd). I personally lost interest in contributing to that niche a while back.

Is this a common trend for the whole docs?

UPDATE

Stats that would be interesting to look at (as suggested in the comments):

  • Number of links to Documentation in SO Q&A
  • Number of links within Documentation (proxy for repetition)
  • Contributions, i.e., edits, size of edits, new topics, ...
  • Who is contributing
  • Views per topic

It would be nice to have them over time.

Thanks to Shog9 we have some stats under his answer.

UPDATE 2

I particularly liked JonH's comment about removing reputation points gain from Docs, and I will repeat it here, as it's buried down under:

Get rid of rep on documentation immediately. I mentioned this in the initial beta. The people who want to write good docs don't need any rep. The people who don't know how to write docs want all the rep they can get so they will do anything to get it.

I think this issue, already raised here, is central to the future of Documentation.

While it is harder to control for quality without a strict set of rules, taking the reputation points incentive away might retain only the really motivated contributors, while eliminating the noise.

UPDATE 3

It's been a week, and I wonder if the Stack Overflow team has a couple of words to spare about their expectations and the general vision for Docs, given that the stats, although not conclusive, are slowing confirming the main question raised by this thread.

Adam Lear has promptly replied:

Re: update #3, yes, we have a few thoughts. We have followed this entire post and had a number of discussions internally as a result, in addition to our usual planning/status meetings and whatnot. We'll post something up in the next couple days.

EagerAnd a full meta answer is now here. It basically reads as, the team is listening to read more aboutour feedback and willing to correct the direction, but resources are not infinite, so it! will take time. Time is also needed to see a response from the community, which is not necessarily expected to be a community of experts.

Are there any stats for Documentation about the activity in a specific tag? I have observed that a niche tag like MATLAB is pretty much dead (last action on Dec 2nd). I personally lost interest in contributing to that niche a while back.

Is this a common trend for the whole docs?

UPDATE

Stats that would be interesting to look at (as suggested in the comments):

  • Number of links to Documentation in SO Q&A
  • Number of links within Documentation (proxy for repetition)
  • Contributions, i.e., edits, size of edits, new topics, ...
  • Who is contributing
  • Views per topic

It would be nice to have them over time.

Thanks to Shog9 we have some stats under his answer.

UPDATE 2

I particularly liked JonH's comment about removing reputation points gain from Docs, and I will repeat it here, as it's buried down under:

Get rid of rep on documentation immediately. I mentioned this in the initial beta. The people who want to write good docs don't need any rep. The people who don't know how to write docs want all the rep they can get so they will do anything to get it.

I think this issue, already raised here, is central to the future of Documentation.

While it is harder to control for quality without a strict set of rules, taking the reputation points incentive away might retain only the really motivated contributors, while eliminating the noise.

UPDATE 3

It's been a week, and I wonder if the Stack Overflow team has a couple of words to spare about their expectations and the general vision for Docs, given that the stats, although not conclusive, are slowing confirming the main question raised by this thread.

Adam Lear has promptly replied:

Re: update #3, yes, we have a few thoughts. We have followed this entire post and had a number of discussions internally as a result, in addition to our usual planning/status meetings and whatnot. We'll post something up in the next couple days.

Eager to read more about it!

Are there any stats for Documentation about the activity in a specific tag? I have observed that a niche tag like MATLAB is pretty much dead (last action on Dec 2nd). I personally lost interest in contributing to that niche a while back.

Is this a common trend for the whole docs?

UPDATE

Stats that would be interesting to look at (as suggested in the comments):

  • Number of links to Documentation in SO Q&A
  • Number of links within Documentation (proxy for repetition)
  • Contributions, i.e., edits, size of edits, new topics, ...
  • Who is contributing
  • Views per topic

It would be nice to have them over time.

Thanks to Shog9 we have some stats under his answer.

UPDATE 2

I particularly liked JonH's comment about removing reputation points gain from Docs, and I will repeat it here, as it's buried down under:

Get rid of rep on documentation immediately. I mentioned this in the initial beta. The people who want to write good docs don't need any rep. The people who don't know how to write docs want all the rep they can get so they will do anything to get it.

I think this issue, already raised here, is central to the future of Documentation.

While it is harder to control for quality without a strict set of rules, taking the reputation points incentive away might retain only the really motivated contributors, while eliminating the noise.

UPDATE 3

It's been a week, and I wonder if the Stack Overflow team has a couple of words to spare about their expectations and the general vision for Docs, given that the stats, although not conclusive, are slowing confirming the main question raised by this thread.

Adam Lear has promptly replied:

Re: update #3, yes, we have a few thoughts. We have followed this entire post and had a number of discussions internally as a result, in addition to our usual planning/status meetings and whatnot. We'll post something up in the next couple days.

And a full meta answer is now here. It basically reads as, the team is listening to our feedback and willing to correct the direction, but resources are not infinite, so it will take time. Time is also needed to see a response from the community, which is not necessarily expected to be a community of experts.

added Adam's comment
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