Timeline for How can I make sure the question I'm going to post is not going to be duplicate?
Current License: CC BY-SA 4.0
7 events
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Apr 16, 2021 at 11:25 | comment | added | IInspectable | Search engines are great, almost indispensable even. Not a question. The point is, that Stack Overflow's search engine is complete garbage. Its relevance has been consistently outperformed by just about any general purpose search engine. Engines, that cannot assume that "Python" doesn't refer to a reptile, "Cargo" is not a synonym for freight, and "Windows" has nothing to do with buildings. With a search space this narrow, and historic data that spans more than a decade, one would assume that SO's search engine would reliable generate relevant results. It doesn't, it just right out sucks. | |
Apr 16, 2021 at 11:24 | comment | added | NoDataDumpNoContribution | @MisterMiyagi At least two times I was so close to ask a question but found the solution on the stackexchange network only at the last second because I missed crucial keywords and search engines don't process fuzzy walls of text well. Maybe I should have pushed the ask button and immediately voted to close as duplicate, just to have one more differently worded search target available. | |
Apr 16, 2021 at 11:11 | comment | added | user5349916 | Agreed that the number of questions makes it difficult to find duplicates. Many questions are duplicates because the issue / code is equivalent, not identical. Search engines usually do not offer that level of abstraction. Naive searches without knowing what to look for are very hard in these cases. | |
Apr 16, 2021 at 10:55 | comment | added | NoDataDumpNoContribution | @IInspectable "Millions is nothing." Then try to memorize them. They may fit into your mobile phone but certainly not in your brain. The point I wanted to make is that most people will need to rely on search engines and even the best search engines aren't good enough to reliably return relevant information. It's even worse for not so good search engines. | |
Apr 15, 2021 at 23:09 | comment | added | IInspectable | "there are millions of questions" - Millions is nothing. Seriously. That's a tiny corpus. It's a database that fits into RAM. On my mobile phone. "No search system is perfect" - Yes. But there's a wide spectrum between "being perfect" and "being completely and utterly useless". Stack Overflow's search engine has consistently been in the latter department. It gets 4 out of 5 suggested tags wrong. It never produces significant duplicate/search results. And all that within a mind-numbingly constrained search space. I'm at a total loss how SO accomplishes to get it this wrong. | |
Apr 6, 2021 at 21:35 | history | edited | Peter Mortensen | CC BY-SA 4.0 |
Active reading [<http://stackoverflow.com/legal/trademark-guidance> (the last section) ].
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Apr 6, 2021 at 9:40 | history | answered | NoDataDumpNoContribution | CC BY-SA 4.0 |