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Jul 15, 2019 at 3:27 comment added Martin Interestingly, rather similar feature request was marked status-completed in January: Questions that definitely do not have the answer to my question Nick Craver said in a comment that tags "are considered and weighted, but they are not required to match". I suppose this might have changed again since then.
May 10, 2019 at 19:25 comment added Travis J If its not in the same set of tags, then it is probably not going to solve the problem. We have 10 million questions here, so sure, you can find one that will prove there is a chance... it is just ridiculously slim. The goal here is to offer users a way to see canonical material for their questions since it exists. The way to do that is to include the tags in the search.
May 10, 2019 at 16:27 comment added poke All I am saying is that the tags shouldn’t be a hard filter for otherwise valid duplicate suggestions. Make tags add weight but don’t filter explicitly for questions with matching tags.
May 10, 2019 at 16:17 comment added VLAZ @Michael didn't get into that becaues 1. content limit 2. it's a comment but these are not mutually exclusive goals. You should add at least one main tag first (e.g. java, c++, python, etc) and the system can still suggest more tags as you're writing the content. Not sure on the best implementation here but it's definitely possible. You can both be non-obtrusive about the suggestions and try to make the users consider those before posting. A simple-ish way is to split the tags into "main" (one mandatory, above body of question) and "extra" (after body) where suggestions go to "extra"
May 10, 2019 at 16:11 comment added Michael come lately @VLAZ, poke: Here's the conundrum, to make it explicit: SO wants to suggest good tags based on the content of the question. SO also wants to suggest good dups based on the the content of the question and the tags. Lastly, the asker wants (good) dups to be suggested as early in the process as possible.
May 10, 2019 at 15:59 comment added VLAZ @poke uh, correct tagging is such a pain to be sure. I'm very active in javascript and we get a ton of questions tagged both java and javascript where the users only use one language and seem to think the other is related. Other times I've seen people ask questions tagged typescript only which are literally just about JS, as they use nothing specific from TS. But I think having tag relations improvement is a different matter together - getting people to tag at first should help, not the least because it would provide better dupe search.
May 10, 2019 at 15:45 comment added poke @VLAZ Sure, absolutely, I’m just saying that even then, users may not exactly know what tags to use when. For example, I’m very active in the ASP.NET Core framework right now, and sometimes, questions do have the asp.net-core tag but not the c# tag. And this being a framework used by C# beginners as well, often there are framework-unrelated questions that fit a broader C# context. But if we now only look for asp.net-core duplicates, then we might not find a duplicate for the problem which may actually apply to all of c#.
May 10, 2019 at 15:30 comment added VLAZ @poke you bring up a good point, but I'll come at it from a different angle - I think the tags section should be moved. The reason is that tags are about as important as the title, when you think about it - the title is the essence of what your question is about, while tags are who the question is for. Having the tags section in the end makes them more of an afterthought, since it's the last thing you'd encounter after you've written your title and body. So, users should really start with a tag before even asking. They should also be able to quickly add more tags.
May 10, 2019 at 13:24 comment added poke Note that this should be somewhat flexible since very often new questions aren’t properly tagged. But yeah, there should probably be some intelligence that prevents a question being tagged with language-X to receive suggestions from language-Y.
May 10, 2019 at 11:33 comment added VLAZ On occasions, I've used answers that are in languages other than what I know and use. For example, once I found a Python question about something that I wanted to do in Java, I think. I did find it useful but I still agree that's not usually the case. And a dupe usually is about the same language, so two different languages can both have a canonical dupe target for the same concept. There are some exceptions like Is floating point math broken? but those are rare and the community can handle them.
May 10, 2019 at 11:32 comment added Luuklag I definetly second this. One of the biggest canonicals of excel-vba is stackoverflow.com/q/10714251 with a score of 472. Typing as title "How to avoid Select", with tags excel and vba in the tagbox, yields this suggestion in 18th place. Taking account of the tags couldn't result in anything but this question in the first place.
May 9, 2019 at 15:27 comment added user202729 What about [language-agnostic]?
May 8, 2019 at 19:38 comment added TylerH Agreed with this 100%. I can't count the number of times I've tried to search for something either from Google (where obviously this wouldn't help as much) or from within Stack Overflow and come across a question that looks exactly like the one I have, and then click through to find out "oh, this is in Java, not .NET" or something similar.
May 8, 2019 at 15:29 history edited double-beep CC BY-SA 4.0
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May 7, 2019 at 22:14 comment added Makyen Mod I'd really like to be able to upvote this several times. Showing suggestions that are not relevant is counterproductive (i.e. if the first couple are completely off-base, then people often won't click-through to others). The suggestion results would be significantly improved if the primary tag (i.e. the most popular tag, usually the language tag) was taken into account when showing these suggestions. Having these suggestions be relevant would make a big difference to the effectiveness of showing them.
May 7, 2019 at 20:57 history edited Zoe - Save the data dumpMod CC BY-SA 4.0
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May 7, 2019 at 20:48 comment added jpmc26 One particularly common occurrence is getting suggestions from unrelated languages. E.g. asking a Python question and getting suggestions for Java.
May 7, 2019 at 19:43 history answered Travis J CC BY-SA 4.0