I have some questions about how pagination works, particularly when viewing the "firehose" at https://stackoverflow.com/questions. Right now, the paginated links look something like:
https://stackoverflow.com/questions?page=2&sort=newest
This means that when I click the "next" button, the next page is calculated based on the current state of Stack Overflow, rather than the state of the site when I first started paging through question. This means that "next" may in fact show me questions I have already seen, and if I'm a slow reader I may not actually make any forward progress.
This is a frustrating experience and makes it difficult to discover questions "outside of my comfort zone".
Would it make sense to modify the pagination mechanism such that it includes a reference to the base question from which the pages were initially calculated? E.g., if I start browsing and the first question is this one, pagination links might look something like:
https://stackoverflow.com/questions?page=2&base=47946141&sort=newest
In this model the server would calculate a list of questions older than the base, and use that to generate the pagination. I could always see newer questions simply by returning to https://stackoverflow.com/questions.
I realize that this is effectively proposing a "cursor" for paginated links. Is that crazy talk?
/questions
was sorted by anything other than chronological order. So maybe that wouldn't really help all that much.