I have been a member of Stack Overflow for the past four years. I have made it through a lot of bullying from higher reputation users during this period.
For the sake of discussion, consider this answer. The first comment on the answer reads:
This is nonsense. The compiler will optimise the first case into a single StringBuilder. – Boris the Spider
I am wondering if the same wording would have been used if I had a rating higher than that of the user who posted this comment? I chose to ignore the rude comment and replied as follows:
@BoristheSpider and Luiggi: My answer is based on my personal experience. I have come across this issue twice on JDK 1.7 in the past one year so if you have a solid source that can say that the compiler will always optimize the first case, please point me to it
So far so good. No harm done. The next comment is where I believe the higher reputation of the user allowed them to believe that they could be sarcastic:
How's the JLS? To increase the performance of repeated string concatenation, a Java compiler may use the StringBuffer class or a similar technique to reduce the number of intermediate String objects that are created by evaluation of an expression. – Boris the Spider
The part "How's the JLS" is clearly a sarcastic comment intended to make fun of my request of asking for a solid source.
I replied to the above comment as follows:
@BoristheSpider Please see this. What does may mean. Then read the JLS again. The point I am making is that the JLS says may and not always. I specifically emphasized on the word always in my comment but you did not get the point. – Chetan Kinger
After this comment, I did not get any reply from the user.
Now if something like this was a one-off, I would have ignored this. Although, this has happened way too many times to me. I have flagged so many rude and offensive comments that I am tired of it. Yesterday, I flagged a comment from a moderator as rude or offensive; it was marked as a helpful flag. This goes a long way to say that there is something really wrong at the core of this site.
Higher reputation users get away by saying something cheesy to make lower reputation users look like fools. Such behavior has become an integral part of Stack Overflow.
Why do some higher reputation users feel the need to bully other users? The funny part is that this bullying spreads like a disease and users like me who have been through it end up bullying other new users without even noticing. Is this the culture the Stack Overflow community wishes to have on their site?
One does not analyze a statement and decide whether they should get offended by it or not. Getting offended by something is a natural impulse. Even though I was offended by This is nonsense
, I did give the user the benefit of the doubt and responded sincerely to this comment. The above post is one incident that you have the luxury to scrutinize word by word. I request users not to focus their answers on the specific incident. Instead, if you can focus your answers on the broader issue in general, it would be really helpful to many users who face similar behavior regularly on this site. I did not keep a track of previous incidences of this nature. If anyone else feels that they have come across similar incidents, feel free to edit my question and point out the incident. I did not come here to ask whether I am wrong to be offended in this particular case. I came here to point out a bigger problem at the core of the community and ask the community to take efforts to cultivate a positive culture on the site. Stricter moderation rules that allow this would really be helpful. (High rep users play a very important role in shaping the community).
In an effort to get my point across, I will be posting links to incidents support my observations:
A user comments: Do you think I am daft?
First comment form me:
Did you mean to post this as a comment? – Chetan Kinger
Comment from the user:
Nope - I posted it as an answer. Do you think I'm daft? – duffymo
Comment from me:
I don't think you are daft. I feel that external links make a good recipe for comments. Links can expire so answers should be self explanatory. – Chetan Kinger
User deletes their post. (I believe moderators and users with higher reputation can see deleted posts). Once again, a user with a high reputation thought that they somehow had the right to speak to me this way because they have a higher reputation than me. This incident is exactly the opposite of the main incident posted as part of my question. In this particular incident, I was the one questioning the validity of the answer and was again at the receiving end of an unwarranted reply.