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Active reading. [<http://stackoverflow.com/legal/trademark-guidance> (the last section) <https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/googling#Verb>].
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Peter Mortensen
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This post has received a lot of negative attention in a relatively short period of time, but I just want to clarify that this question is about how can we effectively deal with the growing pains of such a successful site/community.

StackoverflowStack Overflow has become a successful central hub for asking and answering programming questions; zero doubt about this.

I think this could be enabled for users at like 5K rep OR we can allow it for all users, but the upper-bound is equal to the user's current rep.

Yes, I am aware that pure SOStack Overflow newbies could be 20-year professionals in the respective tag and ask an incredibly good question, but missing that question is a risk that I am willing to voluntarily take since the odds are about 1:20000.

Allow these users to ask questions but place these questions in a queue. After 1 or 2 (preferably) hours release the question to SOStack Overflow as if it is a freshly asked question. I suggest maxing users to 2two questions at a time in the queue, but I am open to all recommendations.

I think this is a good way to give new users the hint that there are quality guidelines at play here and they should use this wait time to actually do a better job of Googlinggoogling or reviewing the automated dupe suggestions.

Sometimes I feel as though users must have installed an IDE plug-in which automatically posts syntax and compilation errors directly to SOStack Overflow, but my theory has yet to be substantiated.

This post has received a lot of negative attention in a relatively short period of time but I just want to clarify that this question is about how can we effectively deal with the growing pains of such a successful site/community.

Stackoverflow has become a successful central hub for asking and answering programming questions; zero doubt about this.

I think this could be enabled for users at like 5K rep OR we can allow it for all users but the upper-bound is equal to the user's current rep.

Yes, I am aware that pure SO newbies could be 20-year professionals in the respective tag and ask an incredibly good question but missing that question is a risk that I am willing to voluntarily take since the odds are about 1:20000.

Allow these users to ask questions but place these questions in a queue. After 1 or 2 (preferably) hours release the question to SO as if it is a freshly asked question. I suggest maxing users to 2 questions at a time in the queue but I am open to all recommendations.

I think this is a good way to give new users the hint that there are quality guidelines at play here and they should use this wait time to actually do a better job of Googling or reviewing the automated dupe suggestions.

Sometimes I feel as though users must have installed an IDE plug-in which automatically posts syntax and compilation errors directly to SO but my theory has yet to be substantiated.

This post has received a lot of negative attention in a relatively short period of time, but I just want to clarify that this question is about how can we effectively deal with the growing pains of such a successful site/community.

Stack Overflow has become a successful central hub for asking and answering programming questions; zero doubt about this.

I think this could be enabled for users at like 5K rep OR we can allow it for all users, but the upper-bound is equal to the user's current rep.

Yes, I am aware that pure Stack Overflow newbies could be 20-year professionals in the respective tag and ask an incredibly good question, but missing that question is a risk that I am willing to voluntarily take since the odds are about 1:20000.

Allow these users to ask questions but place these questions in a queue. After 1 or 2 (preferably) hours release the question to Stack Overflow as if it is a freshly asked question. I suggest maxing users to two questions at a time in the queue, but I am open to all recommendations.

I think this is a good way to give new users the hint that there are quality guidelines at play here and they should use this wait time to actually do a better job of googling or reviewing the automated dupe suggestions.

Sometimes I feel as though users must have installed an IDE plug-in which automatically posts syntax and compilation errors directly to Stack Overflow, but my theory has yet to be substantiated.

Post Closed as "Duplicate" by Makoto discussion
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MonkeyZeus
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Below are some ideas I've been contemplating with for a while. It is not a suggestion to implement both but rather pick one, the other, or both if you really like it.

Below are some ideas I've been contemplating with for a while.

Below are some ideas I've been contemplating with for a while. It is not a suggestion to implement both but rather pick one, the other, or both if you really like it.

added 579 characters in body
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MonkeyZeus
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Preface

This post has received a lot of negative attention in a relatively short period of time but I just want to clarify that this question is about how can we effectively deal with the growing pains of such a successful site/community.

It is not meant to harbor an ill-will towards anyone but rather as a discussion point for maintaining longevity.

I personally have less and less ambition to visit this site as a contributor with each passing day.


Stackoverflow has become a successful central hub for asking and answering programming questions; zero doubt about this.

The issue comes into play when newcomers fail to abide by the quality guidelines set forth in this community. I feel that far too may users simply see this site as a black box for dumping their issue and waiting for a response.

This is made most evident in questions where users post only part of the issue and keep tacking on shallow reasons why a given solution does not work for them until they have a plethora of semi-valid answers. What's worse is when they decline to provide additional necessary information when requested and claim that everything is in the question already. If it was in the question then I wouldn't be asking.

I think that overall this chips away at the morale of able-minded users and definitely creates a sense of us versus them. The crummy part is that "them" is increasing exponentially faster than "us".

Below are some ideas I've been contemplating with for a while.


Implement minimum rep filtration

I can already set tag filters such as PHP, jQuery, etc...

I would love to see an option to enhance this filter to something like PHP tag + OP rep >= 4000

I think this could be enabled for users at like 5K rep OR we can allow it for all users but the upper-bound is equal to the user's current rep.

So my current max would be PHP tag + OP rep >= 10496

A newbie could do PHP tag + OP rep >= 1 until they get more rep.

This feature is aimed at veteran user comfort. Kindly, keep low quality questions out of my face, pretty please.

Yes, I am aware that pure SO newbies could be 20-year professionals in the respective tag and ask an incredibly good question but missing that question is a risk that I am willing to voluntarily take since the odds are about 1:20000.


Enforce a wait time for newbies and people with a poor question asking track record

Allow these users to ask questions but place these questions in a queue. After 1 or 2 (preferably) hours release the question to SO as if it is a freshly asked question. I suggest maxing users to 2 questions at a time in the queue but I am open to all recommendations.

I think this is a good way to give new users the hint that there are quality guidelines at play here and they should use this wait time to actually do a better job of Googling or reviewing the automated dupe suggestions.

During this time they should be allowed to remove their question from the queue.

I think moderators should be allowed to manually enforce a user to use a queue. Kind of like the week-long question ban but more of a week-long "must use the queue ban".


On a side note:

Sometimes I feel as though users must have installed an IDE plug-in which automatically posts syntax and compilation errors directly to SO but my theory has yet to be substantiated.

Stackoverflow has become a successful central hub for asking and answering programming questions; zero doubt about this.

The issue comes into play when newcomers fail to abide by the quality guidelines set forth in this community. I feel that far too may users simply see this site as a black box for dumping their issue and waiting for a response.

This is made most evident in questions where users post only part of the issue and keep tacking on shallow reasons why a given solution does not work for them until they have a plethora of semi-valid answers. What's worse is when they decline to provide additional necessary information when requested and claim that everything is in the question already. If it was in the question then I wouldn't be asking.

I think that overall this chips away at the morale of able-minded users and definitely creates a sense of us versus them. The crummy part is that "them" is increasing exponentially faster than "us".

Below are some ideas I've been contemplating with for a while.


Implement minimum rep filtration

I can already set tag filters such as PHP, jQuery, etc...

I would love to see an option to enhance this filter to something like PHP tag + OP rep >= 4000

I think this could be enabled for users at like 5K rep OR we can allow it for all users but the upper-bound is equal to the user's current rep.

So my current max would be PHP tag + OP rep >= 10496

A newbie could do PHP tag + OP rep >= 1 until they get more rep.

This feature is aimed at veteran user comfort. Kindly, keep low quality questions out of my face, pretty please.

Yes, I am aware that pure SO newbies could be 20-year professionals in the respective tag and ask an incredibly good question but missing that question is a risk that I am willing to voluntarily take since the odds are about 1:20000.


Enforce a wait time for newbies and people with a poor question asking track record

Allow these users to ask questions but place these questions in a queue. After 1 or 2 (preferably) hours release the question to SO as if it is a freshly asked question. I suggest maxing users to 2 questions at a time in the queue but I am open to all recommendations.

I think this is a good way to give new users the hint that there are quality guidelines at play here and they should use this wait time to actually do a better job of Googling or reviewing the automated dupe suggestions.

During this time they should be allowed to remove their question from the queue.

I think moderators should be allowed to manually enforce a user to use a queue. Kind of like the week-long question ban but more of a week-long "must use the queue ban".


On a side note:

Sometimes I feel as though users must have installed an IDE plug-in which automatically posts syntax and compilation errors directly to SO but my theory has yet to be substantiated.

Preface

This post has received a lot of negative attention in a relatively short period of time but I just want to clarify that this question is about how can we effectively deal with the growing pains of such a successful site/community.

It is not meant to harbor an ill-will towards anyone but rather as a discussion point for maintaining longevity.

I personally have less and less ambition to visit this site as a contributor with each passing day.


Stackoverflow has become a successful central hub for asking and answering programming questions; zero doubt about this.

The issue comes into play when newcomers fail to abide by the quality guidelines set forth in this community. I feel that far too may users simply see this site as a black box for dumping their issue and waiting for a response.

This is made most evident in questions where users post only part of the issue and keep tacking on shallow reasons why a given solution does not work for them until they have a plethora of semi-valid answers. What's worse is when they decline to provide additional necessary information when requested and claim that everything is in the question already. If it was in the question then I wouldn't be asking.

I think that overall this chips away at the morale of able-minded users and definitely creates a sense of us versus them. The crummy part is that "them" is increasing exponentially faster than "us".

Below are some ideas I've been contemplating with for a while.


Implement minimum rep filtration

I can already set tag filters such as PHP, jQuery, etc...

I would love to see an option to enhance this filter to something like PHP tag + OP rep >= 4000

I think this could be enabled for users at like 5K rep OR we can allow it for all users but the upper-bound is equal to the user's current rep.

So my current max would be PHP tag + OP rep >= 10496

A newbie could do PHP tag + OP rep >= 1 until they get more rep.

This feature is aimed at veteran user comfort. Kindly, keep low quality questions out of my face, pretty please.

Yes, I am aware that pure SO newbies could be 20-year professionals in the respective tag and ask an incredibly good question but missing that question is a risk that I am willing to voluntarily take since the odds are about 1:20000.


Enforce a wait time for newbies and people with a poor question asking track record

Allow these users to ask questions but place these questions in a queue. After 1 or 2 (preferably) hours release the question to SO as if it is a freshly asked question. I suggest maxing users to 2 questions at a time in the queue but I am open to all recommendations.

I think this is a good way to give new users the hint that there are quality guidelines at play here and they should use this wait time to actually do a better job of Googling or reviewing the automated dupe suggestions.

During this time they should be allowed to remove their question from the queue.

I think moderators should be allowed to manually enforce a user to use a queue. Kind of like the week-long question ban but more of a week-long "must use the queue ban".


On a side note:

Sometimes I feel as though users must have installed an IDE plug-in which automatically posts syntax and compilation errors directly to SO but my theory has yet to be substantiated.

deleted 5 characters in body; edited tags
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MonkeyZeus
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MonkeyZeus
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