Is it possible to make a custom query that would show the number of my votes per user/author (of all posts that I voted for)?
3 Answers
You can view your own personal activity on the profile page, but to compile the stats you would have to go through the list manually or perhaps use the API. For example, this should show your upvotes (only YOU can see this link, others would have to substitute their own user IDs)
http://stackoverflow.com/users/current?tab=votes&sort=upvote
The Stack Exchange Data Explorer does show up/down votes (among others) but only lets you join those votes back to users if the vote type is a favourite
. So I can see you have favourited 124 questions with this query:
-
1I just checked the API Documentation but there doesn't seem to be such an option– msrd0Dec 1, 2014 at 16:02
-
-
-
Unless you know in advance every question that a user has viewed, you cannot get this information from the API. Dec 2, 2014 at 5:45
-
Any chance to modify this query to show the answers I voted for, instead of the questions?– user753531Dec 2, 2014 at 14:18
-
-
@msrd0 impossible on API now: stackapps.com/questions/4725/… Jan 1, 2016 at 12:11
I've written a short JS you can run on http://stackoverflow.com/users/current?tab=votes&sort=upvote
that fetches all your questions and summarizes all the people you voted for and how much.
I didn't run it since not having this information available seems to be intentional but if I get a blessing from SO staff I will gladly release it.
Here is how you can write such a script yourself:
- Create an empty users object.
- Make XHRs to all the pages of
http://stackoverflow.com/users/current?tab=votes&sort=upvote
- For each such page, use a query selector to find all links and whether or not you downvoted or upvoted them.
- Make XHRs for each question on the given page, select the author with a selector - if the user id is in the users object increase/decrease it (based on whether or not it was an up/down vote) and if it's not there, set it to zero and then decrease/increase it.
- Once all responses complete (I used promises and $.when.apply since it was already available on SO to detect that) - print the users object.
I am deliberately not releasing the script without blessing since it can make hundreds of requests to SO (which I don't think they mind that much in this scale of a few users) and I did not get a blessing from SO.
No, it's not possible.
Votes are secret* so that you can vote on posts without fear or favour. Having this information public would definitely be a bad thing.
While I understand that you want to be able to see how many times you have voted on posts by user X, this still falls under the "votes are secret" thing
* This isn't strictly true, diamond moderators can see voting trends and developers with database access can see actual votes if they look hard enough, but they're secret to the vast majority of users
-
41The way I read the question, the poster was asking about getting statistics on his/her own votes. The votes are not secret to the user who cast the votes. I can see my own votes in my user profile. Nov 30, 2014 at 0:07
-
5Right, @RetoKoradi I was hoping I could get that statistics for MY votes. There is no ulterior motive behind my question. Just curiosity about distribution of my votes. Perhaps after that I could study more other answers of some of my peers, if it turned out I liked their answers.– VividDNov 30, 2014 at 10:02
-
1You forgot one thing: votes aren't secret anymore if you disclose them.– gparyaniDec 1, 2014 at 16:54
-
1This isn't strictly true, moderators can see voting trends: Is it that the diamond moderators? Or anyone with moderator tools i.e. > 10k? They know if I have downvoted/upvoted their post?? Whoops! I need to be careful then ;) Am removing my DVs from all your posts right now ;) Dec 2, 2014 at 6:13
-
@abhitalks: only diamond moderators and Stack Exchange developers can see aggregated voting trends. Dec 2, 2014 at 13:47
-
1@abhitalks - only those of us with diamonds and then only trends. We still can't see individual votes.– ChrisF ModDec 2, 2014 at 13:53
/votes
tab, gathering the PostID of the up- and down- votes you cast. Then use another script to look up the authors via API. Sounds like a lot of work with potential of hitting IP-based throttles.