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Post Closed as "Not suitable for this site" by Robert Columbia, Michael Gaskill, Stephen RauchMod, HaveNoDisplayName, Code Lღver
replaced http://stackoverflow.com/ with https://stackoverflow.com/
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  • Tagging code units in the repository uses the same system as the Q&A (and maybe even the same tags?) - examples can belong to multiple topics.
  • You want to find code which demonstrates the use of . You open a file in a project and find that , and are also demonstrated nearby, just because they often go together in real-world code.
  • There's no way for "list of thingslist of things" style topics to emerge - all the code found in a single place ought to be semantically related (in good quality code, at least).
  • Tagging code units in the repository uses the same system as the Q&A (and maybe even the same tags?) - examples can belong to multiple topics.
  • You want to find code which demonstrates the use of . You open a file in a project and find that , and are also demonstrated nearby, just because they often go together in real-world code.
  • There's no way for "list of things" style topics to emerge - all the code found in a single place ought to be semantically related (in good quality code, at least).
  • Tagging code units in the repository uses the same system as the Q&A (and maybe even the same tags?) - examples can belong to multiple topics.
  • You want to find code which demonstrates the use of . You open a file in a project and find that , and are also demonstrated nearby, just because they often go together in real-world code.
  • There's no way for "list of things" style topics to emerge - all the code found in a single place ought to be semantically related (in good quality code, at least).
Made title more clearly describe the subject of the post
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Philip C
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An alternative direction for Stack Overflow Documentation: as a Code Repository

Improved ambiguity in "Licensing" and gave concrete colocated topic examples
Source Link
Philip C
  • 1.8k
  • 10
  • 6
  • Tagging code units in the repository uses the same system as the Q&A (and maybe even the same tags?) - examples can belong to multiple topics.
  • You want to find code which demonstrates the use of . You open a file in a project and find that several closely related topics, and are also demonstrated nearby, just because they often go together in real-world code.
  • There's no way for "list of things" style topics to emerge - all the code found in a single place ought to be semantically related (in good quality code, at least).
  • There are a number of successful version control systems already: adding to a crowded marketplace isn't easy.
  • It's resource intensive: building a version control system is not a small task.
  • How do tags/topics get applied to code?
    • Do the coders tag it (opening it up for voting to assess quality)?
    • Does an automatic system tag (some of) it?
    • Can the codebase be searched, and tags applied if the searcher finds something useful?
  • Code Licensing: Is there a one-size-fits-all approach to licensing the code added to the system, or are licenses decided on a per-project basis? How does this affect plagiarism?
  • Holy wars: Some people like Git, some like Mercurial, some like Subversion, some like ... and they all behave differently. What to choose?
  • Tagging code units in the repository uses the same system as the Q&A (and maybe even the same tags?) - examples can belong to multiple topics.
  • You want to find code which demonstrates the use of . You open a file in a project and find that several closely related topics are also demonstrated nearby, just because they often go together in real-world code.
  • There's no way for "list of things" style topics to emerge - all the code found in a single place ought to be semantically related (in good quality code, at least).
  • There are a number of successful version control systems already: adding to a crowded marketplace isn't easy.
  • It's resource intensive: building a version control system is not a small task.
  • How do tags/topics get applied to code?
    • Do the coders tag it (opening it up for voting to assess quality)?
    • Does an automatic system tag (some of) it?
    • Can the codebase be searched, and tags applied if the searcher finds something useful?
  • Licensing: Is there a one-size-fits-all approach to licensing, or are licenses decided on a per-project basis? How does this affect plagiarism?
  • Holy wars: Some people like Git, some like Mercurial, some like Subversion, some like ... and they all behave differently. What to choose?
  • Tagging code units in the repository uses the same system as the Q&A (and maybe even the same tags?) - examples can belong to multiple topics.
  • You want to find code which demonstrates the use of . You open a file in a project and find that , and are also demonstrated nearby, just because they often go together in real-world code.
  • There's no way for "list of things" style topics to emerge - all the code found in a single place ought to be semantically related (in good quality code, at least).
  • There are a number of successful version control systems already: adding to a crowded marketplace isn't easy.
  • It's resource intensive: building a version control system is not a small task.
  • How do tags/topics get applied to code?
    • Do the coders tag it (opening it up for voting to assess quality)?
    • Does an automatic system tag (some of) it?
    • Can the codebase be searched, and tags applied if the searcher finds something useful?
  • Code Licensing: Is there a one-size-fits-all approach to licensing the code added to the system, or are licenses decided on a per-project basis? How does this affect plagiarism?
  • Holy wars: Some people like Git, some like Mercurial, some like Subversion, some like ... and they all behave differently. What to choose?
Source Link
Philip C
  • 1.8k
  • 10
  • 6
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