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Apr 5 at 8:15 comment added Karl Knechtel @SteveSummit Plenty of questions are on topic in more than one place.
Apr 4 at 14:25 comment added Steve Summit Although I've been active on SO for many years, on those occasions when I have a question about Unix, I always have a difficult time figuring out where to post it. stackoverflow? unix.stackexchange? superuser? I know there are finely-wrought distinctions between what the various sites are allegedly for, but I can never remember them. They're too arbitrary for my poor brain to comprehend.
Mar 23 at 10:20 comment added Mark Amery I am sympathetic to both sides of the lengthy argument about "toxic" here. I think the idea Phil is trying to express - which English has no other single word for - is that the site is not merely unpleasant & harmful but insidiously so; that it looks safe & pleasant on the surface but hurts you once you are immersed in it. (Not endorsing this view, just pondering connotations of "toxic".) But the main mental association I have with "toxic" is "toxic waste"; calling a community toxic sounds a bit like calling its members poisonous human garbage, i.e. maximally insulting & dehumanising.
Mar 22 at 11:29 comment added Phil @JaredSmith I actually prefer SO or at least what it was meant to be. I'd also prefer it if there were fewer assholes misusing the rules. I never called any person toxic, any more than you called me a nazi. I dislike the toxic behaviour that drags down the room, not the room itself.
Mar 21 at 11:06 comment added Jared Smith "but regardless, it is an aspect of this family of sites that I personally find repulsive" ok, then go somewhere else that suits your preferences better, there's nothing wrong with that and the internet has something for everybody. What is wrong is the assumption that your dislike indicates immorality on the part of the other. To be clear, none of this is intended to be a defense of actually toxic behavior like sarcasm or "RTFM"ing. Like I said, assholes gonna find a way to be assholes. I like the well-tended curated garden of SO. Maybe you prefer the wilds of r/programming. Isn't that ok?
Mar 21 at 10:59 comment added Jared Smith @Phil Some people use the rules as an excuse to be an asshole. That makes them toxic, not the rules. "Adults may disagree on whether the correct label for this is 'toxicity'" if I called you a Nazi we might disagree about the finer nuances of the meaning of that word but it would unquestionably be an insult saying you are a bad person (I'm not doing that btw, just using it as an example). If your goal is to persuade someone that what they are doing/thinking is wrong, insulting them is a poor way to change their mind.
Mar 21 at 6:12 comment added Phil Adults may disagree on whether the correct label for this is "toxicity", but regardless, it is an aspect of this family of sites that I personally find repulsive, and lowers the overall quality/utility of the site.
Mar 21 at 6:09 comment added Phil @JaredSmith This quibble about whether something is a programming question or otherwise. The people who care, care more about this than actually answering the question. It is of no interest to some random Joe who doesn't understand or particularly care about the more subtle points in the rules, and speaking as occasionally that Joe, who has arrived via a search engine, to find an unanswered question unanswered because some pedant deemed it ever so slightly off topic, or a duplicate of some different question etc, is unhelpful in the extreme. Might just as well use Reddit, GPT, quora, etc
Mar 19 at 12:23 comment added Jared Smith @SteveSummit I don't think there's ever going to be a consensus about what SO is: that's a moving target. There will always be people who for whatever reason want to turn SO into a bad clone of Reddit or (God forbid) Quora. I'm fine with the never-ending argument about this, what irks me is the assumption of ill-will: like the folks who try to keep the site true to its original mission are somehow bad actors who have seized the reigns of power to enforce their will on the oppressed. It's for folks to disagree with the rules, but I'm tired of being labelled toxic for just trying to follow them.
Mar 19 at 11:46 comment added Steve Summit You're right, the analogy is imperfect, because an expectation that (a) SO has a looser definition of "programming" than it in fact does is not as objectively justified as is the expectation that (b) Home Depot sells gardening supplies. But something like expectation (a) is widespread among newbies, and a counterexpectation that newbies will somehow properly educate themselves about SO's actual distinctions is bound to lead to frustration for both newbies and regulars.
Mar 19 at 11:46 comment added Steve Summit @RyanM The issue here is whether question X is a "programming" or a "non-programming" question. The distinction this answer attempts to elucidate (and which, allegedly, SO consensus wants to enforce) is, I assert, almost as arbitrary and counterintuitive to the layman as that imposed by the hypothetical gardening-free Home Depot manager. Non-SO-regulars have a different expectation of what a "programming question" is, and are apt to be frustrated by SO's peculiar rules and expectations.
Mar 19 at 8:19 comment added oguz ismail @KarlKnechtel Let's not kid ourselves. People using search engines to find answers are responsible for most of the traffic to SO. Of which only a fraction bother with creating an account and asking a new question. Now there's a better tool to do that and it eliminates the need for visiting SO. For a forum that runs on ad revenue, I don't think that's a good thing.
Mar 19 at 5:24 comment added Ryan M Mod @SteveSummit I'm sorry, I've lost you on this analogy. A Home Depot store is in a very real way implicitly labeled as selling gardening supplies, because every other Home Depot location sells gardening supplies, and lots of people have been to other Home Depot locations and know, generally, what to expect from one. Stack Overflow, on the other hand, is (mostly) not full of other non-programming questions; there is not that sort of precedent to base the assumption. (Note: I'm not expressing any opinion as to the merits of the argument here, in part because I'm struggling to follow the analogy.)
Mar 19 at 1:25 comment added Steve Summit @JaredSmith But consider big-box home-improvement stores like Home Depot, which typically sell both appliances and gardening supplies. Now, suppose there's one, perverse Home Depot franchiser who decides he's not going to sell gardening supplies. He puts a nice little sign next to the door clearly stating "This store has no gardening supplies". Yet people constantly walk in asking where the gardening supplies are, and the staff have to constantly explain they're not here. Why can't people read the sign? Why can't people understand the simple fact that this store doesn't sell them?
Mar 19 at 0:41 comment added Karl Knechtel For what it's worth: on Codidact we made "code review" a separate section (using Codidact functionality) of the main Software site, and the kinds of questions that now appear on PLDI would be on topic there. But we still saw fit to make separate sites for Power Users (i.e. superuser) and Linux Systems (i.e. unix.SE).
Mar 19 at 0:39 comment added Karl Knechtel @SteveSummit The point is that if you typed that off the cuff and it didn't work, you would be expected to debug it by checking what happens at each point in the pipeline; and if you encountered a problem that didn't boil down to misunderstanding an individual command, you'd have an actual programming question. For example, if the problem were caused by one piece not understanding the text encoding used by another.
Mar 19 at 0:36 comment added Steve Summit So if I type ls .. . | sort | comm -first .g - | randline -n 50 | while read f; do echo "fetching $f"; httpget -O -preserve -sslquiet https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/$f; sleep 10; done interactively at the shell command line — which I did 5 minutes ago, this is not a made-up example — am I "programming", or just using the computer in an ordinary manner as designed by the operating system authors? (You don't have to answer that, but my point is, for Unix shells, the distinction between "using" and "scripting" is super, super blurry.)
Mar 18 at 16:06 comment added Kevin B Bad analogies aside... I think it's far more gray than this answer is insinuating. Yes, general CLI questions are off topic, but it's certainly possible to have a CLI question that is programmatic in nature rather than "How do i delete a file" that would be a useful addition to the knowledgebase for programmers. Just because the code isn't being saved in a script file doesn't mean it isn't a useful problem to solve and store the answer to.
Mar 18 at 14:39 comment added Jared Smith ...playing World of Warcraft, or talking about playing WoW and bonding over a shared hobby, but it also isn't toxic for the rest of the group to ask those folks to take their WoW discussion elsewhere to stay on topic about using Linux, i.e. the intended purpose of the meetup. They're even welcome to stay and talk about using Linux, just not take it over to turn it into a WoW meetup. And this is totally fair and not toxic even if the WoW players are a majority of the group.
Mar 18 at 14:38 comment added Jared Smith @TheMaster ok I think your critique of my analogy is a little nitpicky but lets clean it up anyway to nail this down: lets say that you have a local Linux users group that you are a part of. Everyone is a contributor to the group, there aren't, in your words, "the privileged". Some people in the group start discussing World of Warcraft because they are trying to get it to run on Linux. But over time the discussion morphs from "how to run WoW on Linux" to more general discussion about playing WoW. This takes up more and more of the meeting time. Now, there's nothing wrong with...
Mar 18 at 14:26 comment added TheMaster @MatthieuM. I find it highly unlikely that the crowd at super user is better than the crowd at SO for cp related questions. If expertise matters, I'd rather ask at SO rather than SU.
Mar 18 at 14:21 comment added TheMaster @JaredSmith The analogy is wrong on so many levels. Who made you sellers/owners? Why are askers considered buyers? A new user/asker is a contributor to the site just like you. All are sellers. Furthermore the actual difference is pointless, whereas your analogy exalts the difference between them to the difference between landscaping and appliances store. It's toxic, because a small organized minority decided that they will shutdown by force, anyone who tries to sell a replacement part for a particular brand of machine, while replacement parts for all other brand of machines are allowed.
Mar 18 at 13:57 comment added Karl Knechtel @oguzismail Stack Overflow traffic going down is by and large a good thing for the site. It means, among other things, that people who misuse the site are going away. If their problems are solved by a ChatGPT model trained on SO data, and this means they don't flood the site with vague non-question debugging requests where the code has multiple issues that are separately addressed by common duplicates, great! We never wanted those questions in the first place.
Mar 18 at 13:55 comment added Karl Knechtel @MarkAmery So, if print("hello world") worked at a cmd prompt, and it became ordinary for non-programmer Windows power users to do that, would "why doesn't typing print(hello world) at the DOS prompt work?" become a Python question, in your estimation?
Mar 18 at 13:29 comment added Jared Smith @Phil your definition of "toxicity" could use some work. Belittling people is toxic. Racism/sexism/anti-LGBTQA+ is toxic. Saying "I'm sorry we can't help you with your landscaping because this is a home appliance store" is not toxic. If somebody tried that IRL at a bricks-and-mortar store we'd all laugh at them. But because this is the internet, or because it's free, or because both things involved using computers, or for whatever reason it's never the fault of the asker who refused all the feedback the UI tried to give them about what's on topic here, no no, it's because SO is "toxic"
Mar 18 at 12:38 comment added Matthieu M. @MarkAmery: I didn't understand this answer as mandating a disclaimer. For any question, context tends to matter -- especially because there are regularly better ways to achieve the task altogether, or special considerations (such as TOCTOU) to pay attention to. For a script, it's natural to present the script (and its goal) as part of the question to provide said context.
Mar 18 at 11:44 comment added Mark Amery @MatthieuM. It's precisely because I want a well-curated Q&A site that I disagree with stances like the one in this answer. If the details of how a shell command works are gonna tend to be relevant to scripting, IMO that's entirely enough to make questions about them on-topic. Requiring the question to explicitly indicate it's being asked in a programming context at best means requiring "this is for a script, honest!" which is pointless noise (like "this isn't homework" disclaimers) and at worst means adding a code dump and making the question less broadly applicable. Both results are bad!
Mar 18 at 8:30 comment added Matthieu M. @DavidMulder: True enough, yet there are different communities, and different subsets of expertise. If the question is about cp precisely, the crowd at Super User is probably better versed in its subtleties. If the question is about shell scripting, there's an expertise split between Super User & SO. If the question is about NodeJS scripting, the crowd at SO is probably more expert. A user is better served by asking the questions where the experts are, and we (all) are better served by concentrating the knowledge in fewer places (with appropriate redirections).
Mar 18 at 8:27 comment added Matthieu M. @oguzismail: It's a matter of philosophy I suppose. I ark from the olden days of SO, where the mission was clear: SO was to be a curated Q&A site. The goal of SO -- before corporate takeover -- was that most people would never need to ask, because the questions would already be answered. With the corporate takeover... there's a bit of a discrepancy between the mission -- still the same AFAIK -- and the actions ("driving engagement"). Still, so far, SO remains a Q&A website, not an IRC chat.
Mar 18 at 4:49 comment added oguz ismail @TheMaster totally agree, the system we have here makes it really hard to get help. Otherwise SO wouldn't lose as much traffic to ChatGPT and the like.
Mar 18 at 4:33 comment added TheMaster @KarlKnechtel Phil is saying the distinction is pointless and therefore the end result is neither organized nor searchable. It's unreasonable to expect a opinion of a powerful small minority to be followed by people or be punished by that minority.
Mar 18 at 0:47 comment added Karl Knechtel @Phil I don't see why or how. If you think it's "toxic" to insist that people put questions in the right place - then how do you expect to end up with an organized, searchable result?
Mar 17 at 22:50 comment added Phil This kind of pointless distinction contributes to the overall toxicity of SO in general.
Mar 17 at 19:25 comment added David Mulder @MatthieuM. Then again, if you ask about how to use Python's shutil.copyfile or Node's fs.copyFile both would be on topic again, making it somewhat arbitrary that just because a user could directly invoke cp from the terminal directly it it would be different. I mean, there is definitely a historic difference on how it was originally intended to be used, but that's not really relevant when judging the present day.
Mar 17 at 16:48 comment added Matthieu M. @TheMaster: If you're asking about how to use the cp utility -- like which flag to use to not copy symlinks -- it's not a programming question. If you're asking why cp fails sometimes when you pass a variable as an argument, or how to check the return value of cp, then those are programming questions. The difference? In the latter case, replacing cp by rm (or other) wouldn't meaningfully change the question.
Mar 17 at 14:36 comment added TheMaster I'm pretty sure this distinction(IMO, without a difference) is discussed before and there was this consensus. But if someone could point out some relevant links, that'd be helpful in increasing the depth of the conversation.
Mar 17 at 14:31 comment added TheMaster If, on the other hand, you are simply using a command line to input commands one at a time, then you do not have a programming question and the question is off topic. That feels like splitting hairs. Wouldn't syntax related questions of any other language be on-topic? I don't know why this specific exception is only made for shell language? Also, how exactly would this difference be enforced? If I wanted to ask about say cp, what's stopping me from just saying that this is used inside a .sh file or just put a dummy loop to prove "automation"?
Mar 16 at 16:42 history edited Karl Knechtel CC BY-SA 4.0
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Mar 16 at 16:13 history answered Karl Knechtel CC BY-SA 4.0