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Mureinik
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While learning Python, I ran across this question where the asker, impressively, has 3 gold, 9 silver and 3 bronze badges.

I'd always assumed each silver badge had a bronze badge that preceded it, and each gold had a silver, so gold >= silver >= bronze. But between this and getting my first Yearling badge, I can see this isn't the case.

Now, trying for more gold badges than silver/bronze may ruin the user experience of StackoverflowStack Overflow. For instance, I have one gold and one silver from visiting codereview 100 days in a row, when I could have been asking questions or, at the very least, voting.

But all the same, I wondered:

  1. Is it possible for a user to have more gold badges than silver badges/bronze badges?
  2. Do the people in charge want to make sure this does not happen?

My guess is no. I've had a look here and found nothing obvious, but I was wondering if I missed a special case.

While learning Python, I ran across this question where the asker, impressively, has 3 gold, 9 silver and 3 bronze badges.

I'd always assumed each silver badge had a bronze badge that preceded it, and each gold had a silver, so gold >= silver >= bronze. But between this and getting my first Yearling badge, I can see this isn't the case.

Now, trying for more gold badges than silver/bronze may ruin the user experience of Stackoverflow. For instance, I have one gold and one silver from visiting codereview 100 days in a row, when I could have been asking questions or, at the very least, voting.

But all the same, I wondered:

  1. Is it possible for a user to have more gold badges than silver badges/bronze badges?
  2. Do the people in charge want to make sure this does not happen?

My guess is no. I've had a look here and found nothing obvious, but I was wondering if I missed a special case.

While learning Python, I ran across this question where the asker, impressively, has 3 gold, 9 silver and 3 bronze badges.

I'd always assumed each silver badge had a bronze badge that preceded it, and each gold had a silver, so gold >= silver >= bronze. But between this and getting my first Yearling badge, I can see this isn't the case.

Now, trying for more gold badges than silver/bronze may ruin the user experience of Stack Overflow. For instance, I have one gold and one silver from visiting codereview 100 days in a row, when I could have been asking questions or, at the very least, voting.

But all the same, I wondered:

  1. Is it possible for a user to have more gold badges than silver badges/bronze badges?
  2. Do the people in charge want to make sure this does not happen?

My guess is no. I've had a look here and found nothing obvious, but I was wondering if I missed a special case.

Mod Moved Comments To Chat
it's the asker that has those badges, but the link was to an answer
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Donald Duck
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While learning Python, I ran across this questionthis question where the asker, impressively, has 3 gold, 9 silver and 3 bronze badges.

I'd always assumed each silver badge had a bronze badge that preceded it, and each gold had a silver, so gold >= silver >= bronze. But between this and getting my first Yearling badge, I can see this isn't the case.

Now, trying for more gold badges than silver/bronze may ruin the user experience of Stackoverflow. For instance, I have one gold and one silver from visiting codereview 100 days in a row, when I could have been asking questions or, at the very least, voting.

But all the same, I wondered:

  1. Is it possible for a user to have more gold badges than silver badges/bronze badges?
  2. Do the people in charge want to make sure this does not happen?

My guess is no. I've had a look here and found nothing obvious, but I was wondering if I missed a special case.

While learning Python, I ran across this question where the asker, impressively, has 3 gold, 9 silver and 3 bronze badges.

I'd always assumed each silver badge had a bronze badge that preceded it, and each gold had a silver, so gold >= silver >= bronze. But between this and getting my first Yearling badge, I can see this isn't the case.

Now, trying for more gold badges than silver/bronze may ruin the user experience of Stackoverflow. For instance, I have one gold and one silver from visiting codereview 100 days in a row, when I could have been asking questions or, at the very least, voting.

But all the same, I wondered:

  1. Is it possible for a user to have more gold badges than silver badges/bronze badges?
  2. Do the people in charge want to make sure this does not happen?

My guess is no. I've had a look here and found nothing obvious, but I was wondering if I missed a special case.

While learning Python, I ran across this question where the asker, impressively, has 3 gold, 9 silver and 3 bronze badges.

I'd always assumed each silver badge had a bronze badge that preceded it, and each gold had a silver, so gold >= silver >= bronze. But between this and getting my first Yearling badge, I can see this isn't the case.

Now, trying for more gold badges than silver/bronze may ruin the user experience of Stackoverflow. For instance, I have one gold and one silver from visiting codereview 100 days in a row, when I could have been asking questions or, at the very least, voting.

But all the same, I wondered:

  1. Is it possible for a user to have more gold badges than silver badges/bronze badges?
  2. Do the people in charge want to make sure this does not happen?

My guess is no. I've had a look here and found nothing obvious, but I was wondering if I missed a special case.

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aschultz
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Can a user have more gold badges than silver or bronze?

While learning Python, I ran across this question where the asker, impressively, has 3 gold, 9 silver and 3 bronze badges.

I'd always assumed each silver badge had a bronze badge that preceded it, and each gold had a silver, so gold >= silver >= bronze. But between this and getting my first Yearling badge, I can see this isn't the case.

Now, trying for more gold badges than silver/bronze may ruin the user experience of Stackoverflow. For instance, I have one gold and one silver from visiting codereview 100 days in a row, when I could have been asking questions or, at the very least, voting.

But all the same, I wondered:

  1. Is it possible for a user to have more gold badges than silver badges/bronze badges?
  2. Do the people in charge want to make sure this does not happen?

My guess is no. I've had a look here and found nothing obvious, but I was wondering if I missed a special case.