Timeline for What should I do about a lack of good canonical questions?
Current License: CC BY-SA 4.0
7 events
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Jul 1, 2022 at 21:41 | comment | added | Karl Knechtel | "Get the agreement of authors via comments, explain your approach" seems unlikely to work in a lot of cases. Some of the best potential-canonical material is old and abandoned. | |
May 21, 2018 at 11:55 | comment | added | duplode | "if we had a clear-cut mathematical process we wouldn't need hoomans that much" -- I absolutely agree with the feeling behind that, and I get my question probably isn't really answerable. Part of my concern has to do with niche tags with only a handful of regulars. Simply posting a Meta question about a proposed canonical in such a tag seems unlikely to do much good, as on its own it won't attract the folks with relevant domain knowledge (and will likely end up ignored). | |
May 21, 2018 at 5:55 | comment | added | Kyll | @duplode Interesting question, in fact. Sadly this is domain knowledge: A popular question in a low-frequency tag may be 5 upvotes and 300 views, while in a main tag it may be hundred of votes and millions of views. I purposely left some interpretation room because, as with many things on SO, if we had a clear-cut mathematical process we wouldn't need hoomans that much. | |
May 21, 2018 at 4:03 | comment | added | duplode | Annoying fuzzy question: would you suggest any serviceable heuristic for what counts as "very popular" or "classical"? I suppose anything near the top of the "frequent" feed for a tag should count; however, I'm rather more interested on the other end of the spectrum: unremarkable questions with half a dozen or so duplicates. | |
May 20, 2018 at 21:32 | comment | added | Kyll | @Aran-Fey Old, upvoted, "classical" posts tend to carry a lot of history with them. As such it is wise to ask the community to know how to deal with that specific bad dupe instance rather than taking individual action. What happens from there (Make a new canonical, post a better answer, edit existing answers, or nothing) will depend on each post and their context. | |
May 20, 2018 at 20:59 | comment | added | Aran-Fey | I'm a bit confused by the "take it to Meta" idea. Let's assume I post a question like "What do we do about this bad dupe?" - what's Meta gonna do about it? Will they help me edit the question into shape, or what? | |
May 20, 2018 at 17:26 | history | answered | Kyll | CC BY-SA 4.0 |