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I know I'm in the minority here, but I still believe the essential idea behind Docs.SO is a good one. I'm relatively new to programming, and I very often find myself reading official documentation and wishing it had more code examples. "Show, don't tell" is an important principle from storytelling that also applies to documentation; even a very good explanation of what a function does is incomplete without an example showing the code in place, working. Official documentation often lacks this. More than once I have given up on a library altogether because the documentation didn't meet my needs; now I make a habit of valuing helpful docs over fast performance or good features.

Documentation.SO's current usefulness is limited by poor searchability. I understand that the site's content isn't yet considered good enough to include in Google search, but the current workflow of

  1. visit StackOverflow.com
  2. click "Documentation"
  3. search for a tag
  4. click the tag
  5. search inside the tag

is a bit painful. Having a single place where we could search all of Docs.SO would help a lot; you could then filter the results on the other end to the tags you're interested in, much like MDN does with their "Topics" filter.

I recognize and respect the frustration of my fellow StackExchange users. I've only really programmed in HTML/CSS/JavaScript with a bit of Ruby; I've heard that other areas of the site are disasters, and I hope that stuff will be fixed. But Docs.SO has created some useful pages; the one on Debugging JavaScriptDebugging JavaScript taught me a lot, and this guide to HTML's <input> elementguide to HTML's <input> element is better and more continually useful than anything I've found anywhere else.

It feels like Docs.SO isn't useful to everyone, and in particular it seems to be not-useful to veterans of StackOverflow. That's a problem. I hope StackOverflow can fix it. But it is useful to me, and I'd be sad to see it discarded.

I know I'm in the minority here, but I still believe the essential idea behind Docs.SO is a good one. I'm relatively new to programming, and I very often find myself reading official documentation and wishing it had more code examples. "Show, don't tell" is an important principle from storytelling that also applies to documentation; even a very good explanation of what a function does is incomplete without an example showing the code in place, working. Official documentation often lacks this. More than once I have given up on a library altogether because the documentation didn't meet my needs; now I make a habit of valuing helpful docs over fast performance or good features.

Documentation.SO's current usefulness is limited by poor searchability. I understand that the site's content isn't yet considered good enough to include in Google search, but the current workflow of

  1. visit StackOverflow.com
  2. click "Documentation"
  3. search for a tag
  4. click the tag
  5. search inside the tag

is a bit painful. Having a single place where we could search all of Docs.SO would help a lot; you could then filter the results on the other end to the tags you're interested in, much like MDN does with their "Topics" filter.

I recognize and respect the frustration of my fellow StackExchange users. I've only really programmed in HTML/CSS/JavaScript with a bit of Ruby; I've heard that other areas of the site are disasters, and I hope that stuff will be fixed. But Docs.SO has created some useful pages; the one on Debugging JavaScript taught me a lot, and this guide to HTML's <input> element is better and more continually useful than anything I've found anywhere else.

It feels like Docs.SO isn't useful to everyone, and in particular it seems to be not-useful to veterans of StackOverflow. That's a problem. I hope StackOverflow can fix it. But it is useful to me, and I'd be sad to see it discarded.

I know I'm in the minority here, but I still believe the essential idea behind Docs.SO is a good one. I'm relatively new to programming, and I very often find myself reading official documentation and wishing it had more code examples. "Show, don't tell" is an important principle from storytelling that also applies to documentation; even a very good explanation of what a function does is incomplete without an example showing the code in place, working. Official documentation often lacks this. More than once I have given up on a library altogether because the documentation didn't meet my needs; now I make a habit of valuing helpful docs over fast performance or good features.

Documentation.SO's current usefulness is limited by poor searchability. I understand that the site's content isn't yet considered good enough to include in Google search, but the current workflow of

  1. visit StackOverflow.com
  2. click "Documentation"
  3. search for a tag
  4. click the tag
  5. search inside the tag

is a bit painful. Having a single place where we could search all of Docs.SO would help a lot; you could then filter the results on the other end to the tags you're interested in, much like MDN does with their "Topics" filter.

I recognize and respect the frustration of my fellow StackExchange users. I've only really programmed in HTML/CSS/JavaScript with a bit of Ruby; I've heard that other areas of the site are disasters, and I hope that stuff will be fixed. But Docs.SO has created some useful pages; the one on Debugging JavaScript taught me a lot, and this guide to HTML's <input> element is better and more continually useful than anything I've found anywhere else.

It feels like Docs.SO isn't useful to everyone, and in particular it seems to be not-useful to veterans of StackOverflow. That's a problem. I hope StackOverflow can fix it. But it is useful to me, and I'd be sad to see it discarded.

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DawnPaladin
  • 1.5k
  • 7
  • 6

I know I'm in the minority here, but I still believe the essential idea behind Docs.SO is a good one. I'm relatively new to programming, and I very often find myself reading official documentation and wishing it had more code examples. "Show, don't tell" is an important principle from storytelling that also applies to documentation; even a very good explanation of what a function does is incomplete without an example showing the code in place, working. Official documentation often lacks this. More than once I have given up on a library altogether because the documentation didn't meet my needs; now I make a habit of valuing helpful docs over fast performance or good features.

Documentation.SO's current usefulness is limited by poor searchability. I understand that the site's content isn't yet considered good enough to include in Google search, but the current workflow of

  1. visit StackOverflow.com
  2. click "Documentation"
  3. search for a tag
  4. click the tag
  5. search inside the tag

is a bit painful. Having a single place where we could search all of Docs.SO would help a lot; you could then filter the results on the other end to the tags you're interested in, much like MDN does with their "Topics" filter.

I recognize and respect the frustration of my fellow StackExchange users. I've only really programmed in HTML/CSS/JavaScript with a bit of Ruby; I've heard that other areas of the site are disasters, and I hope that stuff will be fixed. But Docs.SO has created some useful pages; the one on Debugging JavaScript taught me a lot, and this guide to HTML's <input> element is better and more continually useful than anything I've found anywhere else.

It feels like Docs.SO isn't useful to everyone, and in particular it seems to be not-useful to veterans of StackOverflow. That's a problem. I hope StackOverflow can fix it. But it is useful to me, and I'd be sad to see it discarded.

I know I'm in the minority here, but I still believe the essential idea behind Docs.SO is a good one. I'm relatively new to programming, and I very often find myself reading official documentation and wishing it had more code examples. "Show, don't tell" is an important principle from storytelling that also applies to documentation; even a very good explanation of what a function does is incomplete without an example showing the code in place, working. Official documentation often lacks this. More than once I have given up on a library altogether because the documentation didn't meet my needs; now I make a habit of valuing helpful docs over fast performance or good features.

Documentation.SO's current usefulness is limited by poor searchability. I understand that the site's content isn't yet considered good enough to include in Google search, but the current workflow of

  1. visit StackOverflow.com
  2. click "Documentation"
  3. search for a tag
  4. click the tag
  5. search inside the tag

is a bit painful. Having a single place where we could search all of Docs.SO would help a lot; you could then filter the results on the other end to the tags you're interested in, much like MDN does with their "Topics" filter.

I recognize and respect the frustration of my fellow StackExchange users. I've only really programmed in HTML/CSS/JavaScript with a bit of Ruby; I've heard that other areas of the site are disasters, and I hope that stuff will be fixed. But Docs.SO has created some useful pages; the one on Debugging JavaScript taught me a lot, and this guide to HTML's <input> element is continually useful.

It feels like Docs.SO isn't useful to everyone, and in particular it seems to be not-useful to veterans of StackOverflow. That's a problem. I hope StackOverflow can fix it. But it is useful to me, and I'd be sad to see it discarded.

I know I'm in the minority here, but I still believe the essential idea behind Docs.SO is a good one. I'm relatively new to programming, and I very often find myself reading official documentation and wishing it had more code examples. "Show, don't tell" is an important principle from storytelling that also applies to documentation; even a very good explanation of what a function does is incomplete without an example showing the code in place, working. Official documentation often lacks this. More than once I have given up on a library altogether because the documentation didn't meet my needs; now I make a habit of valuing helpful docs over fast performance or good features.

Documentation.SO's current usefulness is limited by poor searchability. I understand that the site's content isn't yet considered good enough to include in Google search, but the current workflow of

  1. visit StackOverflow.com
  2. click "Documentation"
  3. search for a tag
  4. click the tag
  5. search inside the tag

is a bit painful. Having a single place where we could search all of Docs.SO would help a lot; you could then filter the results on the other end to the tags you're interested in, much like MDN does with their "Topics" filter.

I recognize and respect the frustration of my fellow StackExchange users. I've only really programmed in HTML/CSS/JavaScript with a bit of Ruby; I've heard that other areas of the site are disasters, and I hope that stuff will be fixed. But Docs.SO has created some useful pages; the one on Debugging JavaScript taught me a lot, and this guide to HTML's <input> element is better and more continually useful than anything I've found anywhere else.

It feels like Docs.SO isn't useful to everyone, and in particular it seems to be not-useful to veterans of StackOverflow. That's a problem. I hope StackOverflow can fix it. But it is useful to me, and I'd be sad to see it discarded.

Source Link
DawnPaladin
  • 1.5k
  • 7
  • 6

I know I'm in the minority here, but I still believe the essential idea behind Docs.SO is a good one. I'm relatively new to programming, and I very often find myself reading official documentation and wishing it had more code examples. "Show, don't tell" is an important principle from storytelling that also applies to documentation; even a very good explanation of what a function does is incomplete without an example showing the code in place, working. Official documentation often lacks this. More than once I have given up on a library altogether because the documentation didn't meet my needs; now I make a habit of valuing helpful docs over fast performance or good features.

Documentation.SO's current usefulness is limited by poor searchability. I understand that the site's content isn't yet considered good enough to include in Google search, but the current workflow of

  1. visit StackOverflow.com
  2. click "Documentation"
  3. search for a tag
  4. click the tag
  5. search inside the tag

is a bit painful. Having a single place where we could search all of Docs.SO would help a lot; you could then filter the results on the other end to the tags you're interested in, much like MDN does with their "Topics" filter.

I recognize and respect the frustration of my fellow StackExchange users. I've only really programmed in HTML/CSS/JavaScript with a bit of Ruby; I've heard that other areas of the site are disasters, and I hope that stuff will be fixed. But Docs.SO has created some useful pages; the one on Debugging JavaScript taught me a lot, and this guide to HTML's <input> element is continually useful.

It feels like Docs.SO isn't useful to everyone, and in particular it seems to be not-useful to veterans of StackOverflow. That's a problem. I hope StackOverflow can fix it. But it is useful to me, and I'd be sad to see it discarded.