Timeline for Is the voting culture on SO different than other SE sites?
Current License: CC BY-SA 4.0
11 events
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Jul 26 at 17:33 | comment | added | Ed Swangren | @Zoltán you may like to believe* that, but only because you're not thinking. The people you're thinking of aren't registered. They don't care about rep or voting culture. They aren't here to stroke their fragile ego. Voting is a concern of validation seeking hobbyists. They don't share these motivations. What you believe seems unlikely. | |
Jul 26 at 13:40 | comment | added | TylerH | @skomisa Physics and Chemistry are different fields, so that's not really an apt comparison. Biochem would, but that's no different than someone using R for statistics or data science instead of traditional programming--there's overlap on multiple sites. ANd if you talk about someone applying themselves and learning, that's just syllogistically throwing the premise out the window. If someone takes the time to learn a new subject, related or not, of course they will then know about that subject. How long it takes them to learn something is irrelevant. | |
Jul 26 at 13:11 | comment | added | Nemo | When you answer niche questions, especially old ones, almost nobody will bother to upvote. People only seem to upvote in extraordinary cases, if they agree with everything about the question and the answer. On the other hand you can easily gain a downvote (or even a vote to close) because someone disliked one detail of the answer or didn't like the question. | |
Jul 26 at 8:01 | comment | added | skomisa | @TylerH Re "the breadth of computer programming is far greater than the breadth of a single scientific field (say, Chemistry for example)", I think the exact opposite is true. If someone is a competent developer, but knows nothing about (say) Rust, they could apply themselves and become a SME in a fairly short period of time. I don't think that argument would hold for (say) chemistry or physics or biochemistry. | |
Jul 26 at 7:33 | comment | added | Martin Zeitler | @Zoltán Just see my answers and their votes, I so often get down-votes on technically correct answers, assumedly from people who failed to apply the provided solution - and immense number of upvotes, whenever I can find some new error message, for which I can provide a line of code, which causes the error message to disappear. I usually upvote, whenever an answer actually taught me something. | |
Jul 26 at 5:11 | comment | added | Journeyman Geek | I think this is just as true with smaller sites as well - I probably get more reputation per post on Meta.SE with posts of broad interest to that community, than I do on super user. Admittedly I'm not really at the point where I'm too bothered by either, and I'm aware a lot of the issues I have these days are painfully niche. | |
Jul 25 at 18:21 | comment | added | TylerH | In addition, the breadth of computer programming is far greater than the breadth of a single scientific field (say, Chemistry for example). There's a lot you might not know about in Chemistry, but generally you can probably tell when an answer is solid in theory or sound in logic. In programming, different languages can work completely differently, so there's no guarantee that people who see your content will be at all familiar with that language or its peculiarities. Even the number you start counting from could be different! | |
Jul 25 at 15:55 | comment | added | Zoltán | @MartinZeitler on "These upvotes indicate popularity, not exactly quality." - that sounds a bit like it's a bad thing. I like to think of it more as "these upvotes indicate the number of folks you helped". So it still stands that more primitive problems will get more upvotes, but it feels more justified, because people are just more likely to hit those than more nuanced problems, so more upvotes means you will have unblocked more people / saved more people-hours that would have been spent inefficiently. | |
Jul 25 at 15:46 | comment | added | Martin Zeitler | I also have the impression, that the most common errors messages, which people may expire, gain by far the most upvotes. These are often the most primitive problems, while sophisticated Q/A often go merely unnoticed. The less specialized, the more upvotes. These upvotes indicate popularity, not exactly quality. | |
Jul 25 at 5:09 | vote | accept | Melanie Shebel | ||
Jul 25 at 5:06 | history | answered | Ryan MMod | CC BY-SA 4.0 |