- We have a dedicated Code Review site for this.
- Bounties are designed to attract new answers or award existing answers, not attract improvements on an answer posted by the person offering the bounty. (This doesn't preclude a new answer building off an old one with significant improvements, but that doesn't seem to be what the OP of this question is seeking.) Indeed, if the OP attracts the attention they want, it could result in downvoting of their answer if it has major problems and eventual self deletion.
- There's no criteriaThis bounty wasn't created to reward an answer. It was made for whichthe purpose of attracting attention to their own answer. It's not clear what kind of answer this bounty would even be awarded the bountyto. Bounties provide an incentive to answer by giving an extra reward. (Yes, sometimes that reward is for an excellent existing answer instead of a new one. That doesn't change their purpose or how they're supposed to function.)
- We have a dedicated Code Review site for this.
- Bounties are designed to attract new answers or award existing answers, not attract improvements on an answer posted by the person offering the bounty. (This doesn't preclude a new answer building off an old one with significant improvements, but that doesn't seem to be what the OP of this question is seeking.) Indeed, if the OP attracts the attention they want, it could result in downvoting of their answer if it has major problems and eventual self deletion.
- There's no criteria for which answer would be awarded the bounty.
- We have a dedicated Code Review site for this.
- Bounties are designed to attract new answers or award existing answers, not attract improvements on an answer posted by the person offering the bounty. (This doesn't preclude a new answer building off an old one with significant improvements, but that doesn't seem to be what the OP of this question is seeking.) Indeed, if the OP attracts the attention they want, it could result in downvoting of their answer if it has major problems and eventual self deletion.
- This bounty wasn't created to reward an answer. It was made for the purpose of attracting attention to their own answer. It's not clear what kind of answer this bounty would even be awarded to. Bounties provide an incentive to answer by giving an extra reward. (Yes, sometimes that reward is for an excellent existing answer instead of a new one. That doesn't change their purpose or how they're supposed to function.)
The OP's case
The OP linked this specific example in comments. The bounty reason entered is:
The old answers, while helpful, did not fully answer how a View should receive input from a Keyboard. The accepted answer ended up subclassing TextView rather than View, and @Carl's answer required disabling keyboard functionality with
InputType.TYPE_NULL
and putting theBaseInputConnection
into "dummy mode". I added a new answer that I believe is more versatile and follows the current documentation guidelines. However, because I will be using this in a library, I need more eyes on it to tell me if I am missing anything. Please leave a comment if there are adjustments I should make. Or if I am on the wrong track altogether, please add a new answer.
(emphasis mine)
This seems like an incorrect use of bounties to me. The bounty in this case is being used as an attempt to garner review of an existing answer. This seems wrong for multiple reasons.
- We have a decideddedicated Code Review site for this.
- Bounties are designed to attract new answers or award existing answers, not attract improvements on an answer posted by the person offering the bounty. (This doesn't preclude a new answer building off an old one with significant improvements, but that doesn't seem to be what the OP of this question is seeking.) Indeed, if the OP attracts the attention they want, it could result in downvoting of their answer if it has major problems and eventual self deletion.
- There's no criteria for which answer would be awarded the bounty.
In short, I think the OP of this question would be better served by posting on Code Review and posting an answer on this question later.
General Case
I think the OP's example points to why this feature shouldn't be implemented: the majority of cases where a paragraph break is going to be needed indicates that the bounty offerer (Is there a word for this?) is probably attempting to do something overly complicated, and in such cases, a bounty probably isn't the best way to go.
I can think of two cases when a bounty is being used somewhat more in line with the intended usage but that a long explanation would be required:
- None of the answers work for the bounty offerer's specific use case. In this case, SO's advice is to post a new question that details why the solutions in the old question don't work for them. If it doesn't attract an answer, they can add a bounty to their question a couple days later.
- The bounty offerer already owns the question, but because of details they left out, the existing answers don't work for their use case. A new question would still be appropriate in this case if the details make it significantly different, but if they don't change much, the OP could just edit in details and then off the bounty. There's no reason to put such details in the bounty message.
The bottom line: If you need to add details to the question, they belong in a question body somewhere, not the bounty reason. If that's not what you're doing and the existing reasons don't suffice, you're probably not using bounties the way they should be.
What should we do?
Instead of adding paragraph breaks, the bounty reason length should be shortened to discourage long messages. This will discourage misuse of bounties and encourage existing site policy (new questions, question edits, doing things on the appropriate SE, etc.).
The OP's case
The OP linked this specific example in comments. The bounty reason entered is:
The old answers, while helpful, did not fully answer how a View should receive input from a Keyboard. The accepted answer ended up subclassing TextView rather than View, and @Carl's answer required disabling keyboard functionality with
InputType.TYPE_NULL
and putting theBaseInputConnection
into "dummy mode". I added a new answer that I believe is more versatile and follows the current documentation guidelines. However, because I will be using this in a library, I need more eyes on it to tell me if I am missing anything. Please leave a comment if there are adjustments I should make. Or if I am on the wrong track altogether, please add a new answer.
(emphasis mine)
This seems like an incorrect use of bounties to me. The bounty in this case is being used as an attempt to garner review of an existing answer. This seems wrong for multiple reasons.
- We have a decided Code Review site for this.
- Bounties are designed to attract new answers or award existing answers, not attract improvements on an answer posted by the person offering the bounty. (This doesn't preclude a new answer building off an old one with significant improvements, but that doesn't seem to be what the OP of this question is seeking.) Indeed, if the OP attracts the attention they want, it could result in downvoting of their answer if it has major problems and eventual self deletion.
- There's no criteria for which answer would be awarded the bounty.
In short, I think the OP of this question would be better served by posting on Code Review and posting an answer on this question later.
General Case
I think the OP's example points to why this feature shouldn't be implemented: the majority of cases where a paragraph break is going to be needed indicates that the bounty offerer (Is there a word for this?) is probably attempting to do something overly complicated, and in such cases, a bounty probably isn't the best way to go.
I can think of two cases when a bounty is being used somewhat more in line with the intended usage but that a long explanation would be required:
- None of the answers work for the bounty offerer's specific use case. In this case, SO's advice is to post a new question that details why the solutions in the old question don't work for them. If it doesn't attract an answer, they can add a bounty to their question a couple days later.
- The bounty offerer already owns the question, but because of details they left out, the existing answers don't work for their use case. A new question would still be appropriate in this case if the details make it significantly different, but if they don't change much, the OP could just edit in details and then off the bounty. There's no reason to put such details in the bounty message.
The bottom line: If you need to add details to the question, they belong in a question body somewhere, not the bounty reason. If that's not what you're doing and the existing reasons don't suffice, you're probably not using bounties the way they should be.
What should we do?
Instead of adding paragraph breaks, the bounty reason length should be shortened to discourage long messages. This will discourage misuse of bounties and encourage existing site policy (new questions, question edits, doing things on the appropriate SE, etc.).
The OP's case
The OP linked this specific example in comments. The bounty reason entered is:
The old answers, while helpful, did not fully answer how a View should receive input from a Keyboard. The accepted answer ended up subclassing TextView rather than View, and @Carl's answer required disabling keyboard functionality with
InputType.TYPE_NULL
and putting theBaseInputConnection
into "dummy mode". I added a new answer that I believe is more versatile and follows the current documentation guidelines. However, because I will be using this in a library, I need more eyes on it to tell me if I am missing anything. Please leave a comment if there are adjustments I should make. Or if I am on the wrong track altogether, please add a new answer.
(emphasis mine)
This seems like an incorrect use of bounties to me. The bounty in this case is being used as an attempt to garner review of an existing answer. This seems wrong for multiple reasons.
- We have a dedicated Code Review site for this.
- Bounties are designed to attract new answers or award existing answers, not attract improvements on an answer posted by the person offering the bounty. (This doesn't preclude a new answer building off an old one with significant improvements, but that doesn't seem to be what the OP of this question is seeking.) Indeed, if the OP attracts the attention they want, it could result in downvoting of their answer if it has major problems and eventual self deletion.
- There's no criteria for which answer would be awarded the bounty.
In short, I think the OP of this question would be better served by posting on Code Review and posting an answer on this question later.
General Case
I think the OP's example points to why this feature shouldn't be implemented: the majority of cases where a paragraph break is going to be needed indicates that the bounty offerer (Is there a word for this?) is probably attempting to do something overly complicated, and in such cases, a bounty probably isn't the best way to go.
I can think of two cases when a bounty is being used somewhat more in line with the intended usage but that a long explanation would be required:
- None of the answers work for the bounty offerer's specific use case. In this case, SO's advice is to post a new question that details why the solutions in the old question don't work for them. If it doesn't attract an answer, they can add a bounty to their question a couple days later.
- The bounty offerer already owns the question, but because of details they left out, the existing answers don't work for their use case. A new question would still be appropriate in this case if the details make it significantly different, but if they don't change much, the OP could just edit in details and then off the bounty. There's no reason to put such details in the bounty message.
The bottom line: If you need to add details to the question, they belong in a question body somewhere, not the bounty reason. If that's not what you're doing and the existing reasons don't suffice, you're probably not using bounties the way they should be.
What should we do?
Instead of adding paragraph breaks, the bounty reason length should be shortened to discourage long messages. This will discourage misuse of bounties and encourage existing site policy (new questions, question edits, doing things on the appropriate SE, etc.).
The OP's case
The OP linked this specific example in comments. The bounty reason entered is:
The old answers, while helpful, did not fully answer how a View should receive input from a Keyboard. The accepted answer ended up subclassing TextView rather than View, and @Carl's answer required disabling keyboard functionality with
InputType.TYPE_NULL
and putting theBaseInputConnection
into "dummy mode". I added a new answer that I believe is more versatile and follows the current documentation guidelines. However, because I will be using this in a library, I need more eyes on it to tell me if I am missing anything. Please leave a comment if there are adjustments I should make. Or if I am on the wrong track altogether, please add a new answer.
(emphasis mine)
This seems like an incorrect use of bounties to me. The bounty in this case is being used as an attempt to garner review of an existing answer. This seems wrong for multiple reasons.
- We have a decided Code Review site for this.
- Bounties are designed to attract new answers or award existing answers, not attract improvements on an answer posted by the person offering the bounty. (This doesn't preclude a new answer building off an old one with significant improvements, but that doesn't seem to be what the OP of this question is seeking.) Indeed, if the OP attracts the attention they want, it could result in downvoting of their answer if it has major problems and eventual self deletion.
- There's no criteria for which answer would be awarded the bounty.
In short, I think the OP of this question would be better served by posting on Code Review and posting an answer on this question later.
General Case
I think the OP's example points to why this feature shouldn't be implemented: the majority of cases where a paragraph break is going to be needed indicates that the bounty offerer (Is there a word for this?) is probably attempting to do something overly complicated, and in such cases, a bounty probably isn't the best way to go.
I can think of two cases when a bounty is being used somewhat more in line with the intended usage but that a long explanation would be required:
- None of the answers work for the bounty offerer's specific use case. In this case, SO's advice is to post a new question that details why the solutions in the old question don't work for them. If it doesn't attract an answer, they can add a bounty to their question a couple days later.
- The bounty offerer already owns the question, but because of details they left out, the existing answers don't work for their use case. A new question would still be appropriate in this case if the details make it significantly different, but if they don't change much, the OP could just edit in details and then off the bounty. There's no reason to put such details in the bounty message.
The bottom line: If you need to add details to the question, they belong in a question body somewhere, not the bounty reason. If that's not what you're doing and the existing reasons don't suffice, you're probably not using bounties the way they should be.
What should we do?
Instead of adding paragraph breaks, the bounty reason length should be shortened to discourage long messages. This will discourage misuse of bounties and encourage existing site policy (new questions, question edits, doing things on the appropriate SE, etc.).