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Hans Passant
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Well, you can say that the answer is wrong, or imprecise. But saying that it is "misleading" is, frankly, rude.

You did not give any concrete evidence of your experience at SO, but this comment seems very relevant. I found it back on an answer you posted in the [c++] tag. There were 3 comments from SO users, all of whom pointed out that your answer was not likely to be helpful and giving guidance on how to make it better.

Fair warning on posting in [c++] btw, it is a tag that is visited by contributors that have been living and breathing C++ for 15 years or more. They do know the many traps that the language sets out for an inexperienced programmer very well, mostly by falling into them themselves. Very quick answers are entirely normal, getting a solution to a programming problem in a matter of minutes is certainly what made SO famous. Contributors tend to focus on the immediate problem first, then spend some time editing the post to make it more generally interesting. That might look like they "jump on questions", it is not exactly the right impression. They just know it.

Then there is the universal problem of trying to help somebody in the amount of space that a comment allows. Which is not often enough and does beget the kind of problems that high ranking government officials experience when they think that posting policy in a Twitter post is a good idea. There are just too many wasways to attach too much meaning to an isolated word, like "misleading" in this case. The post was misleading in the sense that the OP might easily end up chasing the wrong solution for an hour and not get anywhere. Assuming that it was intentionally misleading, no, nobody does that. There is just no point to that, trolling is not an SO problem.

You'll be ahead and get the benefit of contributing to SO, learning how to be a better programmer, when you can deal with getting it wrong. In general important, if you always get it right then you are not learning anything and the site quickly gets boring. That can only work well if SO users tell you how it is wrong. That is not criticism, it is assistance. It is helpful to you. But if you can't see it as help or beneficial to you then you are unlikely to enjoy your time here. Not entirely unusual btw. Just keep in mind that mistakes are very easy to fix, just delete the post. Next one surely will be better.

Well, you can say that the answer is wrong, or imprecise. But saying that it is "misleading" is, frankly, rude.

You did not give any concrete evidence of your experience at SO, but this comment seems very relevant. I found it back on an answer you posted in the [c++] tag. There were 3 comments from SO users, all of whom pointed out that your answer was not likely to be helpful and giving guidance on how to make it better.

Fair warning on posting in [c++] btw, it is a tag that is visited by contributors that have been living and breathing C++ for 15 years or more. They do know the many traps that the language sets out for an inexperienced programmer very well, mostly by falling into them themselves. Very quick answers are entirely normal, getting a solution to a programming problem in a matter of minutes is certainly what made SO famous. Contributors tend to focus on the immediate problem first, then spend some time editing the post to make it more generally interesting. That might look like they "jump on questions", it is not exactly the right impression. They just know it.

Then there is the universal problem of trying to help somebody in the amount of space that a comment allows. Which is not often enough and does beget the kind of problems that high ranking government officials experience when they think that posting policy in a Twitter post is a good idea. There are just too many was to attach too much meaning to an isolated word, like "misleading" in this case. The post was misleading in the sense that the OP might easily end up chasing the wrong solution for an hour and not get anywhere. Assuming that it was intentionally misleading, no, nobody does that. There is just no point to that, trolling is not an SO problem.

You'll be ahead and get the benefit of contributing to SO, learning how to be a better programmer, when you can deal with getting it wrong. In general important, if you always get it right then you are not learning anything and the site quickly gets boring. That can only work well if SO users tell you how it is wrong. That is not criticism, it is assistance. It is helpful to you. But if you can't see it as help or beneficial to you then you are unlikely to enjoy your time here. Not entirely unusual btw.

Well, you can say that the answer is wrong, or imprecise. But saying that it is "misleading" is, frankly, rude.

You did not give any concrete evidence of your experience at SO, but this comment seems very relevant. I found it back on an answer you posted in the [c++] tag. There were 3 comments from SO users, all of whom pointed out that your answer was not likely to be helpful and giving guidance on how to make it better.

Fair warning on posting in [c++], it is a tag that is visited by contributors that have been living and breathing C++ for 15 years or more. They do know the many traps that the language sets out for an inexperienced programmer very well, mostly by falling into them themselves. Very quick answers are entirely normal, getting a solution to a programming problem in a matter of minutes is certainly what made SO famous. Contributors tend to focus on the immediate problem first, then spend some time editing the post to make it more generally interesting. That might look like they "jump on questions", it is not exactly the right impression. They just know it.

Then there is the universal problem of trying to help somebody in the amount of space that a comment allows. Which is not often enough and does beget the kind of problems that high ranking government officials experience when they think that posting policy in a Twitter post is a good idea. There are just too many ways to attach too much meaning to an isolated word, like "misleading" in this case. The post was misleading in the sense that the OP might easily end up chasing the wrong solution for an hour and not get anywhere. Assuming that it was intentionally misleading, no, nobody does that. There is just no point to that, trolling is not an SO problem.

You'll be ahead and get the benefit of contributing to SO, learning how to be a better programmer, when you can deal with getting it wrong. In general important, if you always get it right then you are not learning anything and the site quickly gets boring. That can only work well if SO users tell you how it is wrong. That is not criticism, it is assistance. It is helpful to you. But if you can't see it as help or beneficial to you then you are unlikely to enjoy your time here. Not entirely unusual btw. Just keep in mind that mistakes are very easy to fix, just delete the post. Next one surely will be better.

Source Link
Hans Passant
  • 940k
  • 26
  • 93
  • 109

Well, you can say that the answer is wrong, or imprecise. But saying that it is "misleading" is, frankly, rude.

You did not give any concrete evidence of your experience at SO, but this comment seems very relevant. I found it back on an answer you posted in the [c++] tag. There were 3 comments from SO users, all of whom pointed out that your answer was not likely to be helpful and giving guidance on how to make it better.

Fair warning on posting in [c++] btw, it is a tag that is visited by contributors that have been living and breathing C++ for 15 years or more. They do know the many traps that the language sets out for an inexperienced programmer very well, mostly by falling into them themselves. Very quick answers are entirely normal, getting a solution to a programming problem in a matter of minutes is certainly what made SO famous. Contributors tend to focus on the immediate problem first, then spend some time editing the post to make it more generally interesting. That might look like they "jump on questions", it is not exactly the right impression. They just know it.

Then there is the universal problem of trying to help somebody in the amount of space that a comment allows. Which is not often enough and does beget the kind of problems that high ranking government officials experience when they think that posting policy in a Twitter post is a good idea. There are just too many was to attach too much meaning to an isolated word, like "misleading" in this case. The post was misleading in the sense that the OP might easily end up chasing the wrong solution for an hour and not get anywhere. Assuming that it was intentionally misleading, no, nobody does that. There is just no point to that, trolling is not an SO problem.

You'll be ahead and get the benefit of contributing to SO, learning how to be a better programmer, when you can deal with getting it wrong. In general important, if you always get it right then you are not learning anything and the site quickly gets boring. That can only work well if SO users tell you how it is wrong. That is not criticism, it is assistance. It is helpful to you. But if you can't see it as help or beneficial to you then you are unlikely to enjoy your time here. Not entirely unusual btw.