Timeline for Questions asking for efficient answers, considered harmful (or, how to prevent benchmark "answers")
Current License: CC BY-SA 4.0
7 events
when toggle format | what | by | license | comment | |
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Apr 10, 2023 at 12:50 | vote | accept | Ian Kemp | ||
Apr 3, 2023 at 14:26 | answer | added | user5349916 | timeline score: 11 | |
Apr 3, 2023 at 13:11 | comment | added | user5349916 | This meta-Q seems to run into the exact same issue as the other one: Citing an example that doesn't support the perceived scenario. The CPythpn+numpy scenario is sufficiently stable and well-defined for "efficient" to be actually meaningful. I've just now – 5 years later! - rerun the benchmark on a certainly different setup and the quantitative results were equivalent. In that respect I would even say the benchmark answer is the most useful of the bunch. | |
Apr 3, 2023 at 9:54 | comment | added | Tensibai | I concur with MisterMiyagi, in R it even happens a community wiki ends done to compare answer efficiency like here stackoverflow.com/a/47435067/3627607 and a wide bunch of question are about alternative ways than the OP because their way ends up taking too long. | |
Apr 3, 2023 at 9:54 | comment | added | Tsyvarev | '... or, how to prevent benchmark "answers"' - I don't think that presence/absence of the word "effective" in the question post correlates with the probability to get "benchmark answer" for that question. Even if a question post contains the word "effective" word, no one prevents to post an answer which ignores this aspect. And if a question post doesn't contain the word "effective", but has two answers with different approaches, then it is acceptable to post an answer which compares these approaches. | |
Apr 3, 2023 at 8:15 | comment | added | user5349916 | This seems very situational. For example, the Python tag often has CPython+numpy questions that regularly deal with large data amounts and provides stable performance characteristics. Would you allow for any technologies as implicitly having a legitimate need for efficiency? | |
Apr 3, 2023 at 8:04 | history | asked | Ian Kemp | CC BY-SA 4.0 |