Many questions on SO are not about theory and not about best practice but requests for quick fixes. Splitting SO seems unlikely to stop the deluge of questions overall since for most people any answer, other than a plain wrong one, is better than none – and in any case does not have to be applied.
For these, "people want to ask questions on the site where all the experts are" does not convince me, though a valid consideration. The system in place is very effective in ensuring answers are generally good quality but many times the green tick is not against what I would deem the best answer. In the niche I frequent speed seems to count more than quality does, given answers of a similar standard.
MetaSO already has very many mentions of (a) a decline in the quality of questions (b) lack of friendliness to newcomers and (c) experts being driven away (or the threat thereof) – with the incidence of each appearing to be on the increase.
(a) Seems inevitable due to increased popularity (the enthusiasts who grew the site are becoming outnumbered by the occasional visitors with quite different priorities) and, to a degree that I think is not fully offset by developments, because the (interesting/challenging) fundamentals have mostly been covered (in many cases, hundreds of times).
(b) The number of questions that at some point mention “be gentle, I’m a noob” or similar, and comments in chat and meta posts would indicate, to me, that many newcomers do feel concerned about snide comments etc.
(c) Some high profile experts have been driven away and, as far as I can tell, many others either reduced their participation or are becoming inclined to.
Splitting SO along the lines of programming language has not been suggested, I think for good reason, but along the lines of Advanced v. Intermediate/Beginner is well worth consideration, IMO. There would be new problems but it has the potential to mitigate many of the current ones, with the trade-off not obvious to me. Smaller sites seem to be more effective in identifying duplicates (with themselves).
I take Software Recommendations as a kind of precedent. Less than 6 months in public beta at present and of the five key performance indicators already three are OK and one Excellent. The answered percentage is 60% (90% is deemed healthy) but given the topic may not be as strong a disincentive to visitors as on other sites. Also, SO in Portuguese (4 Excellent, 1 OK after barely more than 6 months). Neither is full-blown yet but they are ‘looking good’ despite the concerns expressed at the proposal stage - some of which (eg dilution of expertise) also apply to an SO split.
SO’s size inevitably degrades the community spirit that existed in its first few years. Hiving parts off, on whatever basis, has the potential to return towards a ‘family atmosphere’. Separate out ‘Intermediate’ and, hopefully, the experts would remain titillated by challenging issues without being bothered with many “yet another trivial variation on a topic already flogged to death”. And have time to address more thoroughly the much smaller volume of questions flowing in to SO. SO might revert towards the ‘good old days’ and answers move towards the elusive goal of “canonical”. But some departure of experts is just the ‘natural flow’. Novelty wears off, for example.
Beginners should not feel as intimidated on their own site as they sometimes do on a site that, at times, may appear to tolerate them with reluctance. Perhaps ease up a little on the current near mandatory requirement to post code if to stand much chance of a response other than some variation on “What have you tried?” I recognise that objective assessment of the quality of answers on any ‘Intermediate’ site is very likely to be less than on an (Advanced) SO. But it seems the requirement is often not the best answer but mostly something that will “tide me over immediately” and, to a lesser extent, “better something I am vaguely familiar with than the theoretical but obscure best solution”.
There should be little to fear from a shortage of expertise on an ‘Intermediate’ site. There are people who just want to help and others will ‘pay it forward’. Beginners helping beginners can be more effective at times than experts who are so precise their jargon is incomprehensible to the general public. SO already co-exists effectively with SU and Web Applications etc , despite considerable overlap of coverage for some tags.
In other fields a split might be termed ‘market segmentation’. SE needs to generate revenue, which greater focus can increase.
“That does not apply to ELL/ELU” for the same reasons as it, probably, does not apply to SO.
fseek
in php compared to loading the whole file usingfread
and then getting php to do it's methods