Timeline for What makes a homepage useful for logged-in users
Current License: CC BY-SA 4.0
7 events
when toggle format | what | by | license | comment | |
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Jul 18 at 19:44 | comment | added | TylerH | Just click on the tag page for ruby or do a search for two tags if you only want to see questions tagged with those. Don't break the site for others just because you want to use 5% of it. | |
Jul 2 at 7:34 | comment | added | Gimby | It is extreme, it was intended as such. Even if you wouldn't completely agree with my personal feedback, I think there is some overlap in our collective thinking that tags currently aren't all they could be which is causing limitations. | |
Jun 30 at 22:26 | comment | added | JaMiT | "I need the tag ignore function to be gone." -- This seems extreme, and I doubt it would improve your experience (emptying your ignore list would accomplish the same thing, no?). Instead of focusing on the ignore list, you might want to focus on the watch list. What you seem to want is a feed that shows only questions with a tag that you are watching (even if they happen to be also tagged "Ruby" or "Python"). Or maybe the option to specify a subset of (watched?) tags for your feed? That might be a useful feature. | |
Jun 30 at 7:40 | comment | added | tripleee | I'm divided on ignored tags. It usually sucks that the questions are displayed anyway, only greyed out; but occasionally I actually find that to be useful, too. But probably the default should be to really ignore the stuff you promised to ignore. | |
Jun 30 at 7:38 | history | edited | tripleee | CC BY-SA 4.0 |
Typos and punctuation
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Jun 29 at 14:36 | comment | added | Karl Knechtel | " if I don't put Ruby or Python on my watched tags list, I should get no questions related to them in my feed." The problem here is that the system has no built-in recognition of what tags describe languages (or major libraries or other technologies). If you only want questions that are related to your watched tags, then either you'll have to accept seeing the questions that people tag as both Python and a language you do care about (and most of these questions shouldn't be tagged that way), or else you'll almost never see something that has more than one tag. | |
Jun 28 at 16:29 | history | answered | Gimby | CC BY-SA 4.0 |