I have just noticed there is a short time span of 15 minutes after asking a question when you cannot accept an answer.
I'm really curious why it does so, because I can't think of a reason for having it...
I have just noticed there is a short time span of 15 minutes after asking a question when you cannot accept an answer.
I'm really curious why it does so, because I can't think of a reason for having it...
According to this Meta Stack Exchange post the motivation, as stated by Jeff Atwood, is the following:
It is our strong belief that if you accept an answer in less than 15 minutes after asking the question, you have not given the community an adequate chance to fully answer your question before rushing to accept.
because if you give time, the audience can write a complete answer. I guess that one of the reasons behind this constraint is to keep the quality of the answers high
The way I look at it is, what's the rush? Is there an argument in support of a speedy verdict? I'm not aware of any. There is the obvious downside that a rush to judgment may discourage other, potentially better answers, but there's another consideration that hasn't been mentioned: it is disrespectful, in my opinion, to those still preparing answers.
I expect most of us have had the experience of reading a question a few minutes after it was posted, started work on a killer solution, only to see the green checkmark flash on out of the corner of our eye. It's one thing when this happens, say, an hour after the question was posted--you take your chances--but when it happens a mere 15 minutes after the question was posted, now that's annoying. In effect, the asker is saying, "I've got what I wanted, which is all I care about, so I'm 'outa here". (OK, sometimes it's a SO newbie who hasn't taken the time to find out how the forum works.)
I'd like to see the minimum wait for choosing an answer raised, not lowered.
The idea that the OP gets to accept one answer is already half flawed because the OP is often the least qualified person to determine the best solution to their problem.
The ten minute period allows the experts some time to present the various options and solutions, so that at least the OP can make some kind of informed decision before concluding that answer X is the one he/she/it wishes to use and mark as superlative.
because the OP is often the least qualified person to determine the best solution to their problem
sooo true!