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Jul 21, 2023 at 6:34 comment added NoDataDumpNoContribution @Makoto Comprehensive guides so to speak. I never liked that books take so long to digest them. One needs to skim read them for useful information usually unless they are the really good ones.
Jul 20, 2023 at 22:42 comment added Makoto @NoDataDumpNoContribution: I've gotten a lot of value out of Baeldung in recent months with Spring Boot questions, as I look to keep my Spring applications up to date or to solve different problems. Where I work I also get a free subscription to O'Reilly Books/tutorials which have helped a ton with getting up to speed on k8s and Ansible. Of course, there's also Jeff Geerling's books on Ansible that have helped there too.
Jul 20, 2023 at 21:58 comment added NoDataDumpNoContribution "Other sites and resources exist now that do a better job of answering the broad and tricky questions" Just to give readers some insights here, would it be possible to name a few such popular resources that do a better job at this questions?
Jul 20, 2023 at 20:23 comment added Karl Knechtel ChatGPT has accelerated an existing trend, yes. My personal take is that it probably does so preferentially in a way that benefits the site, and that this trend is inherently beneficial already. I just wrote an answer to that effect; hopefully the reasoning is clear.
Jul 20, 2023 at 16:46 comment added Cris Luengo Yeah, I know. C++ is not glacial either. We get a new standard every 3 years, with significant new features added. C++ today is not what is was in 2011, which was a totally different language from what it was before then.
Jul 20, 2023 at 16:38 comment added Makoto @CrisLuengo: Hard disagree. I still remember the 2 to 3 fiasco, and the impact of it. There's also a lot of movement in terms of the GIL as well. It's been ported to different runtimes as well (not just CPython, for instance), and those are still in active development. It's not break-neck pace, but it's definitely not glacial. :D
Jul 20, 2023 at 16:33 comment added Cris Luengo I think Python moves slower than C++. At least when it comes to the language itself.
Jul 20, 2023 at 16:32 comment added Makoto @CrisLuengo: Sure, if you're writing in languages, libraries or frameworks that are that old, I could see this as a strong argument. Not a lot of things really move that quickly when it comes to C/C++ so you'd be more likely to find a lot of valuable things on Stack Overflow about it. But if you're dealing with something like JavaScript/TypeScript, Java (these days!), Kotlin, Python, Ruby, etc, you're moving much, much faster.
Jul 20, 2023 at 16:30 comment added Cris Luengo Maybe it depends on what technologies you use. I find an answer to 95% of my programming-related questions on Stack Overflow. And they are not always 10-year-old questions. Sometimes the question I have had been posted in the last few years. For example, C++ evolves at a pace where occasionally there will be good (generic, broadly useful) new questions posted, but most of those were posted >10 years ago.
Jul 20, 2023 at 16:02 comment added Makoto @CrisLuengo: There's an angle to that, but I don't believe it as strongly. The questions that are useful and the answers that are pertinent to people are quite old, and the technologies that people may have asked about could have easily evolved and matured in that time frame. Angular is pretty infamous during this period as well as the advancements of React and Vue, along with Android's ever shifting ecosystem. So yes, there could have been value in what's already here. But I still think that there was better value elsewhere in the style people needed it.
Jul 20, 2023 at 15:43 comment added Cris Luengo "it makes sense that fewer people are coming to the site to get their questions answered. It implies they're finding it somewhere else." Or, and hear me out, it means they're finding it on SO without interacting with the site, as is intended. Shocking! There are more questions already answered on the site, so there are fewer new questions to ask!
Jul 19, 2023 at 17:52 history answered Makoto CC BY-SA 4.0