Today we are launching "Collections", a new feature in Collectives, designed to help collective Members easily discover and collaboratively build upon high-quality content about a specific subject area. Take a look at the new collections in the R Language, CI/CD, PHP, and NLP collectives.
What’s the feature, and how will it work?
Collections enables users to group existing questions, answers, and articles together based on a particular theme or for a particular purpose. In many ways, it is similar to the feature of the same name that exists on Stack Overflow for Teams, but there are differences, as well as some additional functionality.
For this first experimental iteration, collective Admins will create each collection, and work with Recognized Members to oversee their management. This includes defining scopes and making improvements to titles, descriptions, and the ordering of the items. You can learn more about the different user roles in a collective here.
Members of the collective will be able to add items to a collection, which will require leaving a note adding more context for the addition, which will be visible to everyone who views the collection. Any logged-in Stack Overflow user can also comment on and upvote the collection as a whole. Voting will not affect reputation, and there is no downvote button.
How can Collections be used?
There are a variety of potential ways to use Collections to benefit a subcommunity on Stack Overflow. Here are two initial use cases:
- Resource showcase – creating lists of content that will be resources for the community. Most collectives will be starting off with two collections of this type: an “FAQ” list, and a “Fundamentals” list intended for people just getting started in the collective’s area of practice.
- Content maintenance – creating lists of content that needs assessment or action by subject matter experts, such as a list of questions that have outdated answers. The collection could basically function as a to-do list, with recognized Members removing items as more up-to-date answers are added.
The Collections feature allows collective members to work together as a team to build and maintain these lists, and in the case of the content maintenance use case, to work through the actionable items on the lists. Go ahead and add some content to the new collections in the R Language, CI/CD, PHP, and NLP collectives, if any of these are your area of practice!
What do you think of this feature? Are there other ways it could be useful on the platform?
If you have any specific ideas for a collection that would benefit a Collective that you’re a member of, let us know here!