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Apr 8, 2021 at 3:33 comment added mickmackusa @user3226167 I literally just practiced what I am preaching. stackoverflow.com/q/66996019/2943403
Apr 8, 2021 at 3:31 comment added user3226167 @mickmackusa improve the old content/question/title/answers to give search engines something more to chew on I really like to see people editing a question to add search terms (instead of tags)
Apr 8, 2021 at 3:27 comment added user3226167 If duplicates help people google/lead to the right answer, they help many others. I think people can judge for each question.
Apr 6, 2021 at 21:31 history edited Peter Mortensen CC BY-SA 4.0
Active reading [<http://stackoverflow.com/legal/trademark-guidance> (the last section) ].
Apr 6, 2021 at 19:47 comment added 0Valt @SlavaKnyazev - ironically, the "fragment identifier" was added by a user 5 years later, and they preserved the "hash" version (which is common, I don't know anyone who'd refer to it other than that in a context that doesn't require rigorous definition). The questions exist not because of the obscurity of "hash" against "fragment" Duplicates are defined by the applicability of their answers. You can't use any without a rewrite. One group is talking about "testing for #", the other - "extracting the value". These are very different tasks that only intersect because of the common theme.
Apr 6, 2021 at 19:37 comment added Slava Knyazev @OlegValter Another example: The portion of a url after the # is called a "fragment". In my day-to-day dev life, this doesn't seem especially well-known. Most people I know refer to it as the "hash", "hashtag" or "bookmark". As a result of the obscurity, we have 2 questions (one of which should've been closed as duplicate imo): stackoverflow.com/q/298503/4088472, stackoverflow.com/q/11662693/4088472 If the canonical question would've been "How do I access the the URI fragment?", searching for "How do I access the hash in the url" would never bring it up.
Apr 6, 2021 at 15:39 comment added 0Valt @SlavaKnyazev - I understand the example is contrived (you said so yourself), but lacking a better example, I have to give rebuttals using what's in the post. I hope on Meta, we are decent enough not to be confused by domain knowledge when they see one. What I am also worried about is that despite your intention to maintain a level of standard what, should the policy be adopted, it will cater to a lowest common denominator instead. P.s. I have a hunch those at a level where they understand what is domain knowledge or not have no issues with coming up with the correct terminology/jargon.
Apr 6, 2021 at 15:33 comment added Slava Knyazev Concat and join were a purposefully contrived example. Any real example would be specific to some domain knowledge which would make my point confusing.
Apr 6, 2021 at 15:31 history undeleted Slava Knyazev
Apr 6, 2021 at 15:28 history deleted Slava Knyazev via Vote
Apr 6, 2021 at 14:48 comment added 0Valt @mickmackusa - I didn't mean it the way we should never explain the terminology or not be searchable with plain English terms, but I wanted to stress that some familiarity with programming concepts is expected of everyone (see the search modified "join two strings": i.sstatic.net/9O7hH.png, concatenation is everywhere). For example, "list comprehension" is not a universal term, but "string", "integer", "float" are.
Apr 6, 2021 at 5:08 comment added mickmackusa There will be thousands of researchers that don't know what a "lookup"/"dictionary" is, what a "pivot" is, and what "concatenation", "truncation", "obfuscation", etc are. We must not "talk above" novices, for best stack sharing we need to communicate to newbies and veterans alike. We can never assume "common sense" -- the world has become so diverse that there is no common sense anymore.
Apr 6, 2021 at 5:05 comment added mickmackusa @10Rep I'll grant you, there are industry-specific terms that I don't expect a novice to know. I've lost count of how many times I inform a user that they are trying to "transpose" array data. This is why I am happy to add the tag and and make sure that the word "transpose" is found in either the question or an answer. I disagree with Oleg in that we shouldn't bother explaining things in most basic/novice terms. I feel this is one of the great opportunities to bridge the vernacular gap. With every new page that a researcher visits, I expect they will gain ideas on how to improve their search.
Apr 6, 2021 at 4:05 comment added 0Valt @10Rep - "how do I join two pieces of text" is not the level that I consider we should sink to. I already argued that some basic knowledge about the topic is expected of any programmer/researcher. Like knowing how basic data types are called properly as well as basic operations like concatenation. Don't get me wrong, we all need to start somewhere, but I honestly do not think SO should be the go-to resource for learning from scratch. This is better left to tutorials, blog posts, official and unofficial docs, books (ordered by increasing usefulness).
Apr 6, 2021 at 3:47 comment added 0Valt "Premise challenge" - The premise you use is flawed: duplicates are neither good nor bad by themselves, the only intrinsic property they have is that they already have answers elsewhere. Unique, well-written questions that happen to be answered in another Q&A are the only "good" duplicates there are. Keeping garbage that is just worded differently because it is better for SEO is optimizing for the wrong audience.
Apr 6, 2021 at 3:44 comment added mickmackusa @10Rep By having a "master" page that uses all of the vernacular, less-than-careful researchers will find what they are looking for AND learn all of the relevant vernacular. We don't need 10 redundant pages to serve this purpose. It is trivial to edit the question or an answer with the text "How do I join two pieces of text" (whatever in more appropriate on a case-by-case basis) so that specific phrases can be found. I have answered questions (recently) where I re-phrased the OP's question in my answer just to add more keywords (and I edited the OP's title and body).
Apr 6, 2021 at 3:43 comment added mickmackusa Anyone who has spent more than a year on SO will know that duplicates are not hammered fast enough and there is an insane amount of redundant answers here.
Apr 6, 2021 at 3:43 comment added 10 Rep @mickmackusa As a careful researcher --> let me stop you there. Not everyone on the planet is a careful researcher. Up until a few months ago, I had no idea what the word "concatenate" meant. So I searched up "How do I join two pieces of text", with no Stack results.
Apr 6, 2021 at 3:41 comment added mickmackusa @JörgWMittag Yes, they make a large pool/mess of redundant insights and I need to visit 10 different pages to be sure that I am seeing all of the unique techniques to solve a specific task. This damages my researcher experience. SO badly needs to condense its sprawling redundant content into fewer, well-constructed pages. If a "master" page doesn't have all of the different vernacular/keywords to help SEO, then add those few key words to the post(s) on the "master" page. This is a much less "expensive" endeavor versus retaining whole redundant pages.
Apr 6, 2021 at 3:39 comment added Jörg W Mittag @mickmackusa: That is exactly what duplicates do: they are different ways to phrase the same question, all pointing to all the good stuff on a single page.
Apr 6, 2021 at 3:35 comment added mickmackusa Duplicates are Good - I disagree. We absolutely don't want a blanket statement to encourage redundant content. If the dupe target is not grabbing researchers by the eyeballs, improve the old content/question/title/answers to give search engines something more to chew on. Let's not have so many identical eggs in so many baskets. As a careful researcher, I want all of the good stuff on a single page, so that I can make a quick comparison of all of the working techniques. We need: 1. Askers to research more before posting 2. Answerers to hunt more for duplicates before answering.
Apr 6, 2021 at 3:09 history answered Slava Knyazev CC BY-SA 4.0