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Oct 9, 2019 at 6:09 comment added Hille @JohnZabroski yep, it would be difficulty to get the data. The only way I can think of a button next to the question "did you try the code? [y/n]", which on the other hand could influence the user to try it instead of just reading it. - I like little data adventures and I think that they're doing a great job with improving the user experience. Otherwise they wouldn't get any business customers :)
Oct 8, 2019 at 15:02 comment added John Zabroski @Hille It's an interesting perspective but we dont have data to validate. An MCVE is nice but how many questions have that? I ancedotally think CSS/JS questions tend to be the best at providing MCVE because of the "live demo" feature provided by Stack Overflow. If this enriches user experience, maybe Stack Overflow should spend less money on data science to understand user experience and more money on actually improving user experience?
Oct 8, 2019 at 14:35 comment added Hille @JohnZabroski I think that most SO users do not run code which is supplied in a question as most of them are either that easy so you can find a solution by reading or so complicated that you need to put some time in it (which most of the users don't do). So I think that no one is really running the code snippets in question. But either way, the code a asker is supplying should (propper: must) be a MCVE otherwise it's difficult to help without wasting time.
Oct 8, 2019 at 14:32 comment added John Zabroski @Hille By "2.1. Less to none" Are you saying users are less likely to not likely at all to run a code sample in an answer if one is provided?
Oct 8, 2019 at 14:12 comment added Hille 2.1.Less to none (with some rare exceptions like a really interessting queston or a special case that no one have ever seen bevor)
Sep 30, 2019 at 19:36 comment added John Zabroski @PeterMortensen Yes.
Sep 27, 2019 at 20:33 comment added Peter Mortensen What is "BI"? Business intelligence?
Nov 21, 2018 at 18:52 history answered John Zabroski CC BY-SA 4.0