I see that a Stack Overflow site in Portuguese was launched, and that there are plans for other languages as well. My mother language is not English (nor Portuguese), but even if a site in my mother language will be launched (which seems to be planned), I think I would rarely use that site and rather stick to the English site. Even if I happened to post a question on a non-English site, I will most likely end up cross posting the same question on the English site since it is much more likely to receive attention.
My concern is that there would be a huge amount of duplicates among the sites, but each site will have an inferior set of questions and answers compared to that of the English site. There will be a significant amount of reinventing (reasking/reanswering) the wheel (a question), which is not what a programmer is supposed to do. Even just within the single English Stack Overflow site, there are plenty of duplicate questions, among which answers are split over. With localized sites, this would be even worse.
If these sites are launched, how should we deal with them? What is the correct attitude?
- Ignore them and stick to the English site?
- Stick to the mother's tongue site?
- Primarily ask on the mother's tongue site, but often leave a duplicate on the English site just in case it does not get answered?
- Always leave the same questions on as many sites as you can handle the language?
- Randomly ask on any site that you feel like for that day?
I have some more questions:
- Will cross-posting among different sites be appreciated?
- Will there be a systematic mechanism to link duplicate questions across the sites?
- Will a duplicate on another site be a reason for closing a question?
My personal thoughts is that, although I hate English imperialism/centrism, things would be more effective if people over the world communicate on a single site using a single natural language, and we have to admit that the lingua Franca as of today is English. I do not believe that any other site will grow into a usable site as the English one.