This is very much a discussion, and I don't expect that there will be a "right" answer to this. My objective is just to start a conversation that perhaps may improve Stack Overflow, given that I'm very grateful to this website.
For the longest time, I have been just a "lurker" to Stack Overflow, googling for information, but not contributing. Eventually I thought that was wrong, and I decided that I should contribute to the website. As such, I recently tried my best to start giving answers. As you can see by my reputation, I actually managed to help some people, which made me feel good. :-)
However, I noticed two things that made me concerned about Stack Overflow:
- First, there seem to be some people who see this as just a game. As such, they jump on questions, and give answers in seconds, even if they are imprecise, and edit those later. It means that if you try to craft an answer, to make sure of what you're saying, and adding links and code snippets, etc., you're usually beaten by somebody else and your answer is ignored.
- On the other side of the spectrum, you can notice that some people are not following the "be nice" policy as much. So, even if you say that you're not sure about something (for example, it's not even an answer, it's just a commentary) or if you make an honest mistake, some people will engage in name-calling and call you an idiot, a vandal, nonsensical, etc. You can flag those people, of course, but eventually it becomes tiresome, and you don't feel like answering any more.
Between those two issues, you get stuck: if you take your time to craft your answer, somebody else will beat you. But if you go too fast and possibly make a small mistake, then you risk hearing some not nice words. Those two issues combined, in my opinion, constitute an incentive for people to not contribute to Stack Overflow.
Any thoughts on this? Am I wildly off the mark? Is there a way that those issues can be minimized besides what Stack Overflow already does? Is this something that we just have to live with?
Update: first of all, let me say that I appreciate very much all the comments that were made. I'll certainly take the advice you guys gave (particularly, @Oleg, I like what you said, who cares what names some random stranger writes? :-) ).
However, I need to clarify one thing about my question: this is not about me. This question is about other people that may reach the same conclusions that I reached, but differently than me may have decide to give up on Stack Overflow. Feel free to say that I'm the only person who ever reached these conclusions. :-) But if you think it's possible that more people reached the same conclusions that I did, what could Stack Overflow do to mitigate that problem?
Update II: I just saw a Stack Overflow post that talks about part of the problem that I brought in my original post. The bad aspect of this is that, if it reached that point, then the issue of being a hostile community is truly a problem. However, the good aspect of this is that the problem has been recognized and there are people working to solve it.