The average post quality and user expertise was outstanding. Has it suffered a scaling problem?
Yes. A friend of mine categorizes this as a basic "law of averages" problem. He and I used to work in a software company that, when we started, was fairly small. All employees were above average, most were well above average. But as the company grew, it became impossible to retain this level of quality. The law of averages caught up with the company, and the population in the company began to more closely reflect that of the rest of the world.
The same thing is happening (has happened) to Stack Overflow. I see it most clearly in searches for questions so trivial, they probably shouldn't even be here. I do the searching so that I can close as "duplicate" new questions that are similarly so trivial that they shouldn't have been asked. I perform the search using the Stack Overflow search feature, sort by "Newest", and skip to the end to walk backwards looking for the oldest relevant duplicate.
Invariably, the oldest posts are not the duplicates I'm looking for. They were posted to Stack Overflow in its early years, by people who didn't need a site like Stack Overflow to find answers to such trivial questions. To find the relevant duplicate, I usually need to get at least into 2010 or so.
On the other hand, it is not clear to me that such Q&A's were ever intended to not be part of Stack Overflow. Just that they didn't appear in the early days, due to the makeup of the community.
Anyone else suffering from this?
I guess that depends on your definition of "suffering". There are literally billions of people on this planet who truly suffer on a daily basis. We're definitely talking First World Problem here. That said…
Yes, I've found it painful in a way to have to deal with questions that someone should have known better than to post.
But I'm not really sure it's possible to do much better. In many ways Stack Overflow is the perfect balance of community involvement and strictness. It needs to be a fully open resource, available to all. Short of some very expensive, very hard-to-write machine learning that can reliably filter out bad questions and answers, Stack Overflow just doesn't work unless we allow the worst, and rely on the community to stem the tide of crap.
And rely on the community we do. Which is a very important part of coping. Remember that there are dozens, hundreds, maybe even thousands of other people who feel the same way you do and who are contributing what time they are able to help keep things cleaned up.
If you feel overwhelmed, depressed, discouraged, whatever, just remember…it's okay to take a step back. Stack Overflow can get along without you, me, or any other single individual just fine. For the sake of your own mental health, don't spend time on Stack Overflow out of a sense of duty or obligation. Do what you can do happily, and leave the rest to others. This will make the contributions you do make more valuable, and will help avoid burnout.
For what it's worth, I have myself had to back off quite a lot from when I first started answering questions a year ago. I initially treated Stack Overflow almost as a full-time job, because I was using it to learn new APIs that I wanted to dive deeply in quickly. But after about six months of that, I needed to get back to doing real work, and at the same time I was feeling the onset of burnout.
So now, I restrict my involvement:
- I follow only one tag.
- With practically no exception, I do not look at any question that already has one answer.
- I almost never look at "fresh" questions, other than to check if they need improvement; I set aside reasonable blocks of time each day, and work my way back through the "newest" questions in the tag, opening the ones of interest in new tabs so I can deal with them sequentially. Most of the questions I wind up looking at are at least hours old, if not almost a day.
- I do look at questions that I feel have a high likelihood of needing improvement; usually I will comment and down/close vote as necessary. On occasion, I find a question that I myself am able to improve.
- I no longer spend time on questions that are likely to require a lot of research on my part; the exception being topics which I am still trying to learn and for which I feel such research will benefit me at least as much as it will the questioner.
Doing a little bit of research to refresh my memory or provide specific details I wouldn't otherwise know off the top of my head is fine. I just won't spent a lot of time searching the web for something I'm not even sure I know is there or for which I'm not even sure I know what I'm looking for.
At this point, I find very few questions to spend time answering. Most of the time spent on Stack Overflow is in more of a curating capacity. But the questions I do find to answer tend to be ones of relatively high interest to me. This helps offset what would otherwise just be a grind, commenting and voting on post after post that are of supremely low quality.
And to be sure, such questions do exist. They do tend to get lost amongst the heaps of low quality, but they are there and if anything, their rarity makes finding them that much more pleasurable. :)
std::strign
OP should usestd::string
and BAM 5 upvotes in the bag. (Yes, a slight hyperbole) It's really hard to find interesting questions to answer.