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starball
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On average, a maintainer of a project is much more likely to see a raised bug on the dedicated issue tracker for their project than on Stack Overflow. Maintainers and prolific contributors to the project are typically well equipped (and I will wager better equipped on average than the average SME in that tag on SO- no offense) to work out causes and solutions to bugs. Because of that, usually, if you want to get the bug fixed, it's a wise thing to do raise the bug in the dedicated issue tracker for the project. *takes off captain-obvious hat and does a curtsey.

I often suggest people to raise issue tickets in comments when I'm convinced that the behaviour they're observing is a bug, and I tried to search for an existing issue ticket and couldn't find one. But when I do this, I don't suggest that the asker delete their question (as I have seemseen others do). Instead, I suggest that they comment with a link to their issue ticket. Then I subscribe to the issue ticket, let it "do its thing", and then when it's nice and golden brown, I write up an answer post (cause, workarounds, "proper" solutions, etc.) and edit the question post to constrain it to the identified cause to help future searchers find it, and also know if it's likely not the problem they're facing. Ex. Adding a known version range that the bug affects to the title.

On average, a maintainer of a project is much more likely to see a raised bug on the dedicated issue tracker for their project than on Stack Overflow. Maintainers and prolific contributors to the project are typically well equipped (and I will wager better equipped on average than the average SME in that tag on SO) to work out causes and solutions to bugs. Because of that, usually, if you want to get the bug fixed, it's a wise thing to do raise the bug in the dedicated issue tracker for the project. *takes off captain-obvious hat and does a curtsey.

I often suggest people to raise issue tickets in comments when I'm convinced that the behaviour they're observing is a bug, and I tried to search for an existing issue ticket and couldn't find one. But when I do this, I don't suggest that the asker delete their question (as I have seem others do). Instead, I suggest that they comment with a link to their issue ticket. Then I subscribe to the issue ticket, let it "do its thing", and then when it's nice and golden brown, I write up an answer post (cause, workarounds, "proper" solutions, etc.) and edit the question post to constrain it to the identified cause to help future searchers find it, and also know if it's likely not the problem they're facing. Ex. Adding a known version range that the bug affects to the title.

On average, a maintainer of a project is much more likely to see a raised bug on the dedicated issue tracker for their project than on Stack Overflow. Maintainers and prolific contributors to the project are typically well equipped (and I will wager better equipped on average than the average SME in that tag on SO- no offense) to work out causes and solutions to bugs. Because of that, usually, if you want to get the bug fixed, it's a wise thing to do raise the bug in the dedicated issue tracker for the project. *takes off captain-obvious hat and does a curtsey.

I often suggest people to raise issue tickets in comments when I'm convinced that the behaviour they're observing is a bug, and I tried to search for an existing issue ticket and couldn't find one. But when I do this, I don't suggest that the asker delete their question (as I have seen others do). Instead, I suggest that they comment with a link to their issue ticket. Then I subscribe to the issue ticket, let it "do its thing", and then when it's nice and golden brown, I write up an answer post (cause, workarounds, "proper" solutions, etc.) and edit the question post to constrain it to the identified cause to help future searchers find it, and also know if it's likely not the problem they're facing. Ex. Adding a known version range that the bug affects to the title.

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starball
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(buckle your seatbelts because I take a long tangent on how and when I think bug questions can be "good for" SO, and how I deal with them)

I often suggest people to raise issue tickets in comments when I'm convinced that the behaviour they're observing is a bug, and I tried to search for an existing issue ticket and couldn't find one. But when I do this, I don't suggest that the asker delete their question (as I have seem others do). Instead, I suggest that they comment with a link to their issue ticket. Then I subscribe to the issue ticket, let it "do its thing", and then when it's nice and golden brown, I write up an answer post (cause, workarounds, "proper" solutions, etc.) and edit the question post to constrain it to the identified cause to help future searchers find it, and also know if it's likely not the problem they're facing. Ex. Adding a known version range that the bug affects to the title.

If I find my self being confident based on concrete evidence that something is a bug, and believing that explaining that evidence and where it can be found to be of value to the problem in the question post, or I don't have the ability to raise the issue ticket properly myself, but would need to give non-trivial instructions and explanation as to how to raise the issue ticket, then sometimes I post that as an answer. And then as the issue ticket progresses, keep the Q&A up to date (I subscribe to notifications). Helping people deeper understand a bug and its history can help them raise a better (more-well-informed) issue ticket.

(buckle your seatbelts because I take a long tangent on how and when I think bug questions can be "good for" SO)

I often suggest people to raise issue tickets in comments when I'm convinced that the behaviour they're observing is a bug, and I tried to search for an existing issue ticket and couldn't find one. But when I do this, I don't suggest that the asker delete their question (as I have seem others do). Instead, I suggest that they comment with a link to their issue ticket. Then I subscribe to the issue ticket, let it "do its thing", and then when it's nice and golden brown, I write up an answer post (cause, workarounds, "proper" solutions, etc.) and edit the question post to constrain it to the identified cause to help future searchers find it, and also know if it's likely not the problem they're facing. Ex. Adding a known version range that the bug affects to the title.

(buckle your seatbelts because I take a long tangent on how and when I think bug questions can be "good for" SO, and how I deal with them)

I often suggest people to raise issue tickets in comments when I'm convinced that the behaviour they're observing is a bug, and I tried to search for an existing issue ticket and couldn't find one. But when I do this, I don't suggest that the asker delete their question (as I have seem others do). Instead, I suggest that they comment with a link to their issue ticket. Then I subscribe to the issue ticket, let it "do its thing", and then when it's nice and golden brown, I write up an answer post (cause, workarounds, "proper" solutions, etc.) and edit the question post to constrain it to the identified cause to help future searchers find it, and also know if it's likely not the problem they're facing. Ex. Adding a known version range that the bug affects to the title.

If I find my self being confident based on concrete evidence that something is a bug, and believing that explaining that evidence and where it can be found to be of value to the problem in the question post, or I don't have the ability to raise the issue ticket properly myself, but would need to give non-trivial instructions and explanation as to how to raise the issue ticket, then sometimes I post that as an answer. And then as the issue ticket progresses, keep the Q&A up to date (I subscribe to notifications). Helping people deeper understand a bug and its history can help them raise a better (more-well-informed) issue ticket.

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starball
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(buckle your seatbelts because I take a long tangent on how and when I think bug questions can be "good for" SO)

From what I have seen on SO, there are plenty of fish in the sea who don't know they can raise issue tickets, and I think those people will continue being newly minted (granted, my current main tags are relatively high-use software, and the rate of minting is proportional to popularity, so take what I say with a grain of salt). Educating them about raising issue tickets is a useful thing, because:

On average, a maintainer of a project is much more likely to see a raised bug on the dedicated issue tracker for their project than on Stack Overflow. Maintainers and prolific contributors to the project are typically well equipped (and I will wager better equipped on average than the average SME in that tag on SO) to work out causes and solutions to bugs. Because of that, usually, if you want to get the bug fixed, it's a wise thing to do raise the bug in the dedicated issue tracker for the project. *takes off captain-obvious hat and does a curtsey.

 

I only comment suggesting that askers raise issue tickets when there's enough info for me to get a good idea of where the issue ticket should be filed (usually involves posting some comments giving instructions on how to further isolate the source of the problem) (filing issue tickets in the wrong place is kind of an annoyance / waste of time to everyone involved). If I can reproduce the issue myself, I sometimes just raise the issue ticket myself. If I can't reproduce the issue, but there's still some well-known troubleshooting info that I know maintainers typically ask for when faced with such bug tickets (and that I don't yet see in the question post), then I comment asking for that info. That's useful for two possible reasons: either it turns new info that I can use to find an existing issue ticket, or it saves maintainers time in triage. Yeah, yeah, I know I said that SO isn't good for issue ticket things. I push my lines a little.

The last consideration I can think of right now in terms of the "goodness" of bug-related questions on SO is how likely a Q&A pair about the bug is to have long-term value, which is mostly related to the likelihood that someone will encounter that bug again in the future. I once did some investigation for a why-am-I-getting-weird-behaviour™ question and found out that it was a bug in a beta-release channel of that software- a channel where bugs get patched and released relatively quickly in, and one where the point is for users to actively update. The bug had not yet made it into the stable release channel. I'll wager it to be very unlikely for anyone else to hit that bug again in the future, because it's very unlikely that anyone will use the affected "beta" release again in the future. I don't think I'm a good person to speak about what to do with that Q&A pair since I have a conflict of interest in it. What ended up happening is that I backlinked to the Q&A pair in the issue ticket (I usually do that unless the issue tracker has guidance that discourages such comments), and a maintainer (who has made considerable contributions to SO) voted for it to be closed (it didn't end up closing due to insufficient close-votes).

From what I have seen on SO, there are plenty of fish in the sea who don't know they can raise issue tickets, and I think those people will continue being newly minted (granted, my current main tags are relatively high-use software, and the rate of minting is proportional to popularity, so take what I say with a grain of salt). Educating them about raising issue tickets is a useful thing, because:

On average, a maintainer of a project is much more likely to see a raised bug on the dedicated issue tracker for their project than on Stack Overflow. Maintainers and prolific contributors are typically well equipped (and I will wager better equipped on average than the average SME in that tag on SO) to work out causes and solutions to bugs. Because of that, usually, if you want to get the bug fixed, it's a wise thing to do raise the bug in the dedicated issue tracker for the project. *takes off captain-obvious hat and does a curtsey.

I only comment suggesting that askers raise issue tickets when there's enough info for me to get a good idea of where the issue ticket should be filed (usually involves posting some comments giving instructions on how to further isolate the source of the problem) (filing issue tickets in the wrong place is kind of an annoyance / waste of time to everyone involved). If I can reproduce the issue myself, I sometimes just raise the issue ticket myself. If I can't reproduce the issue, but there's still some well-known troubleshooting info that I know maintainers typically ask for when faced with such bug tickets (and that I don't yet see in the question post), then I comment asking for that info. That's useful for two possible reasons: either it turns new info that I can use to find an existing issue ticket, or it saves maintainers time in triage. Yeah, yeah, I know I said that SO isn't good for issue ticket things. I push my lines a little.

(buckle your seatbelts because I take a long tangent on how and when I think bug questions can be "good for" SO)

From what I have seen on SO, there are plenty of fish in the sea who don't know they can raise issue tickets, and I think those people will continue being newly minted (granted, my current main tags are relatively high-use software, and the rate of minting is proportional to popularity, so take what I say with a grain of salt). Educating them about raising issue tickets is a useful thing, because:

On average, a maintainer of a project is much more likely to see a raised bug on the dedicated issue tracker for their project than on Stack Overflow. Maintainers and prolific contributors to the project are typically well equipped (and I will wager better equipped on average than the average SME in that tag on SO) to work out causes and solutions to bugs. Because of that, usually, if you want to get the bug fixed, it's a wise thing to do raise the bug in the dedicated issue tracker for the project. *takes off captain-obvious hat and does a curtsey.

 

I only comment suggesting that askers raise issue tickets when there's enough info for me to get a good idea of where the issue ticket should be filed (usually involves posting some comments giving instructions on how to further isolate the source of the problem) (filing issue tickets in the wrong place is kind of an annoyance / waste of time to everyone involved). If I can reproduce the issue myself, I sometimes just raise the issue ticket myself. If I can't reproduce the issue, but there's still some well-known troubleshooting info that I know maintainers typically ask for when faced with such bug tickets (and that I don't yet see in the question post), then I comment asking for that info. That's useful for two possible reasons: either it turns new info that I can use to find an existing issue ticket, or it saves maintainers time in triage. Yeah, yeah, I know I said that SO isn't good for issue ticket things. I push my lines a little.

The last consideration I can think of right now in terms of the "goodness" of bug-related questions on SO is how likely a Q&A pair about the bug is to have long-term value, which is mostly related to the likelihood that someone will encounter that bug again in the future. I once did some investigation for a why-am-I-getting-weird-behaviour™ question and found out that it was a bug in a beta-release channel of that software- a channel where bugs get patched and released relatively quickly in, and one where the point is for users to actively update. The bug had not yet made it into the stable release channel. I'll wager it to be very unlikely for anyone else to hit that bug again in the future, because it's very unlikely that anyone will use the affected "beta" release again in the future. I don't think I'm a good person to speak about what to do with that Q&A pair since I have a conflict of interest in it. What ended up happening is that I backlinked to the Q&A pair in the issue ticket (I usually do that unless the issue tracker has guidance that discourages such comments), and a maintainer (who has made considerable contributions to SO) voted for it to be closed (it didn't end up closing due to insufficient close-votes).

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starball
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starball
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