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May 5, 2019 at 11:34 comment added Alex Harvey @MarkBenningfield, I think you mean the curation process is not supposed to cause conflict. It does, however. And it always will, because no one is ever going to enjoy being downvoted and/or have their questions closed- especially if they're under pressure at work and really, really need help. But I think you're right that SO can't decide if it's trying to create a Q&A database; or help people; or both.
May 5, 2019 at 6:47 comment added Alexei Levenkov @EGL2-101 care to clarify what exactly you consider funny in that sentence?
May 5, 2019 at 5:31 comment added EGL 2-101 This is very funny: I want to point out that sed, along with awk, bash, et. al, are all "hacker tools from a hacker culture".
May 4, 2019 at 16:02 history edited Mark Benningfield CC BY-SA 4.0
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May 4, 2019 at 16:00 comment added Mark Benningfield @AlexHarvey: You are ascribing animus and conflict to the curation process. There is none. This goes right back to the question of whether SO exists to help/mentor users, or to build a question repository. That issue is still not settled to anyone's complete satisfaction.
May 4, 2019 at 15:53 history edited Mark Benningfield CC BY-SA 4.0
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May 4, 2019 at 15:40 comment added Alex Harvey @MarkBenningfield, it is the conflict that I don't like. Imagine how the OP feels from that question the other day. He's from a non-English speaking background. It was the first question he ever asked here. He's now had I think 8 downvotes and 10 close votes. What's he thinking? Imagine you're that guy. And he did nothing wrong at all. I would like us to be simply able to help people, without feeling pressured that we must downvote and close vote all the time.
May 4, 2019 at 15:29 comment added Mark Benningfield @AlexHarvey: I don't follow the sed tag that closely, but if it has such a high answer rate, then I guess I don't really understand what the problem is that you're trying to solve.
May 4, 2019 at 15:27 comment added Mark Benningfield @HansPassant: I'd be curious to see data on how many of the answers are posted by relatively new (possibly younger) users. Could be a confluence between the culture of new users not quite steeped in hacker culture, but looking for easy-answerable questions. Quite likely it's even more variables than that.
May 4, 2019 at 15:07 comment added Alex Harvey Yes I agree with @HansPassant. I started out in Unix culture long ago and you are right about all that, whereas it appears to be the C, C#, C++ etc types in Meta who are more concerned about "send me teh codez" whereas those of us in the sed etc queues don't see it as a massive problem- most of the time. The tension arises because enforcing the rules is the exception rather than the rule, and it therefore has the appearance of being applied selectively and unequally.
May 4, 2019 at 15:02 comment added Hans Passant This cannot explain why [sed] has such an extraordinarily good answer rate. 82.5% last week, 87.4% last month, 90.8% lifetime. Very few tags at SO get close to that. Other than [regex] :) I'm not 100% sure why, but surely it has something to do with those questions being easy to answer accurately by the hacker-culture aficionados. Not having to explain anything in such answers surely helps as well.
May 4, 2019 at 14:28 history answered Mark Benningfield CC BY-SA 4.0