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Heretic Monkey
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Before drafting guidelines for articles... we kind of need to know where thethey fit within the Q&A structure. Why do they exist, what problem are they meant to solve, who are they meant to help, and if they don't fit within the Q&A structure, maybe the guidelines shouldn't pigeonhole it into being solutions in search of problems and instead push more in the direction of things that Q&A doesn't solve.

Currently I can't see articles as being anything other than blog posts. They're either presenting a tutorial, a solution in search of a problem, or a light form of documentation. All three of these can be useful on their own, but they also all three are in direct conflict with the core Q&A structure.

If someone were to ask a question on SO that an article existed for, what is the path forward? Closing it as a duplicate of an article isn't really on the table given that it's behind a paid partnership that may not exist forever. One could certainly answer it with a summation of the article and then link to the article as a source, however, at that point the article has failed to serve a purpose. The user who needed it didn't find it, and the user who knew it existed couldn't simply point the user to it as a resolution to the Q&A.

Before drafting guidelines for articles... we kind of need to know where the fit within the Q&A structure. Why do they exist, what problem are they meant to solve, who are they meant to help, and if they don't fit within the Q&A structure, maybe the guidelines shouldn't pigeonhole it into being solutions in search of problems and instead push more in the direction of things that Q&A doesn't solve.

Currently I can't see articles as being anything other than blog posts. They're either presenting a tutorial, a solution in search of a problem, or a light form of documentation. All three of these can be useful on their own, but they also all three are in direct conflict with the core Q&A structure.

If someone were to ask a question on SO that an article existed for, what is the path forward? Closing it as a duplicate of an article isn't really on the table given that it's behind a paid partnership that may not exist forever. One could certainly answer it with a summation of the article and then link to the article as a source, however, at that point the article has failed to serve a purpose. The user who needed it didn't find it, and the user who knew it existed couldn't simply point the user to it as a resolution to the Q&A.

Before drafting guidelines for articles... we kind of need to know where they fit within the Q&A structure. Why do they exist, what problem are they meant to solve, who are they meant to help, and if they don't fit within the Q&A structure, maybe the guidelines shouldn't pigeonhole it into being solutions in search of problems and instead push more in the direction of things that Q&A doesn't solve.

Currently I can't see articles as being anything other than blog posts. They're either presenting a tutorial, a solution in search of a problem, or a light form of documentation. All three of these can be useful on their own, but they also all three are in direct conflict with the core Q&A structure.

If someone were to ask a question on SO that an article existed for, what is the path forward? Closing it as a duplicate of an article isn't really on the table given that it's behind a paid partnership that may not exist forever. One could certainly answer it with a summation of the article and then link to the article as a source, however, at that point the article has failed to serve a purpose. The user who needed it didn't find it, and the user who knew it existed couldn't simply point the user to it as a resolution to the Q&A.

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Kevin B
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Before drafting guidelines for articles... we kind of need to know where the fit within the Q&A structure. Why do they exist, what problem are they meant to solve, who are they meant to help, and if they don't fit within the Q&A structure, maybe the guidelines shouldn't pigeonhole it into being solutions in search of problems and instead push more in the direction of things thethat Q&A doesn't solve.

Currently I can't see articles as being anything other than blog posts. They're either presenting a tutorial, a solution in search of a problem, or a light form of documentation. All three of these can be useful on their own, but they also all three are in direct conflict with the core Q&A structure.

If someone were to ask a question on SO that an article existed for, what is the path forward? Closing it as a duplicate of an article isn't really on the table given that it's behind a paid partnership that may not exist forever. One could certainly answer it with a summation of the article and then link to the article as a source, however, at that point the article has failed to serve a purpose. The user who needed it didn't find it, and the user who knew it existed couldn't simply point the user to it as a resolution to the Q&A.

Before drafting guidelines for articles... we kind of need to know where the fit within the Q&A structure. Why do they exist, what problem are they meant to solve, who are they meant to help, and if they don't fit within the Q&A structure, maybe the guidelines shouldn't pigeonhole it into being solutions in search of problems and instead push more in the direction of things the Q&A doesn't solve.

Currently I can't see articles as being anything other than blog posts. They're either presenting a tutorial, a solution in search of a problem, or a light form of documentation. All three of these can be useful on their own, but they also all three are in direct conflict with the core Q&A structure.

If someone were to ask a question on SO that an article existed for, what is the path forward? Closing it as a duplicate of an article isn't really on the table given that it's behind a paid partnership that may not exist forever. One could certainly answer it with a summation of the article and then link to the article as a source, however, at that point the article has failed to serve a purpose. The user who needed it didn't find it, and the user who knew it existed couldn't simply point the user to it as a resolution to the Q&A.

Before drafting guidelines for articles... we kind of need to know where the fit within the Q&A structure. Why do they exist, what problem are they meant to solve, who are they meant to help, and if they don't fit within the Q&A structure, maybe the guidelines shouldn't pigeonhole it into being solutions in search of problems and instead push more in the direction of things that Q&A doesn't solve.

Currently I can't see articles as being anything other than blog posts. They're either presenting a tutorial, a solution in search of a problem, or a light form of documentation. All three of these can be useful on their own, but they also all three are in direct conflict with the core Q&A structure.

If someone were to ask a question on SO that an article existed for, what is the path forward? Closing it as a duplicate of an article isn't really on the table given that it's behind a paid partnership that may not exist forever. One could certainly answer it with a summation of the article and then link to the article as a source, however, at that point the article has failed to serve a purpose. The user who needed it didn't find it, and the user who knew it existed couldn't simply point the user to it as a resolution to the Q&A.

Source Link
Kevin B
  • 95k
  • 6
  • 92
  • 142

Before drafting guidelines for articles... we kind of need to know where the fit within the Q&A structure. Why do they exist, what problem are they meant to solve, who are they meant to help, and if they don't fit within the Q&A structure, maybe the guidelines shouldn't pigeonhole it into being solutions in search of problems and instead push more in the direction of things the Q&A doesn't solve.

Currently I can't see articles as being anything other than blog posts. They're either presenting a tutorial, a solution in search of a problem, or a light form of documentation. All three of these can be useful on their own, but they also all three are in direct conflict with the core Q&A structure.

If someone were to ask a question on SO that an article existed for, what is the path forward? Closing it as a duplicate of an article isn't really on the table given that it's behind a paid partnership that may not exist forever. One could certainly answer it with a summation of the article and then link to the article as a source, however, at that point the article has failed to serve a purpose. The user who needed it didn't find it, and the user who knew it existed couldn't simply point the user to it as a resolution to the Q&A.