What is the algorithm that determines what questions appear on the "interesting" tab of Stack Overflow?
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I really want to know! Why downvote me!– Snow whiteCommented Jan 4, 2015 at 6:42
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2Hover your mouse over the downvote arrow, the reason for downvotes is displayed in the tooltip.– Infinite RecursionCommented Jan 4, 2015 at 6:47
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I saw it ,but I don't agree with it so I modified my question!– Snow whiteCommented Jan 4, 2015 at 8:27
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Are you explicitly looking at the recommended tab for this?– MakotoCommented Jan 4, 2015 at 8:43
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@Snowwhite are you asking about the box called "Questions that may already have your answer" that appears when you actually typing a question? Or the box in the side bar with "Related Questions"? OR do you mean the front page of the site with a list of "interesting" questions?– psubsee2003Commented Jan 4, 2015 at 9:23
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@Snowwhite Now that we know what you are asking, I have rewritten your question to make it clear.– psubsee2003Commented Jan 4, 2015 at 11:19
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@Snow, now that the question is clear, you may be interested in reading this answer on the Overmeta. Keep in mind things are changing, though.– Frédéric HamidiCommented Jan 4, 2015 at 11:24
1 Answer
The simplest answer to your question is found in Why do some recently asked questions not show up in the question list? in which Shadow Wizard's accepted answer quotes from Jeff Atwood's blog post Stack Overflow Homepage Changes
Here’s how it works. Starting with a list of the last 3,000 active questions:
drop questions containing any of your ignored tags
drop closed questions if you lack the reputation required to vote for reopening
drop questions scoring -4 or lower
Next, apply the following score formula to the remaining questions:
your interesting tags +1,500 per interesting tag, up to +2,000 total
your top 40 scoring tags maximum of +1,000 per tag (scaled), up to +2,000 total
question score +200 × score, up to +1,000 total
total answer score -200 × score, up to -1,000 total
number of answers -200 × answers, up to -1,000 total
number of views -15 × views, up to -1,000 total
question last activity date -1 × (seconds / 15)
Count it all up and take the top 90 by score.
However, as Frederic Hamidi mentions, there are plans in place to replace that with a different algorithm to help highlight good quality content. You can see some of the existing discussion in:
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For anyone who is interested about the "new recommend homepage": phase 4 is here --> meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/276840/… Commented Mar 3, 2020 at 6:29