37

A reminder of a common close reason (bold from me):

Questions asking us to recommend or find a book, tool, software library, tutorial or other off-site resource are off-topic for Stack Overflow as they tend to attract opinionated answers and spam.

Extracting the bold words, I read:

Questions asking us to find a tool are off-topic for Stack Overflow.

Yet:

Through some comments, I tried to convince some people to update the tag wiki itself instead, as seen by my many approved edits, but this practice of keeping the tag wiki always up-to-date ended up being considered a bad practice by the community, and I refrained from updating the tag.

So I'm at a loss: there are too many random places where we can see the latest download locations for Xcode, and close reviews seem to often fail. Could we have some cleanup? And some guidance regarding if it fits best on a Question or on a Tag Wiki or nowhere at all?

* (blame me, I'm also in this revision log)

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  • 18
    If this belongs anywhere on Stack Overflow, I think you were right in keeping it up to date on the tag wiki. Jul 2, 2018 at 13:03
  • 4
    SO is trying to keep up with a moving target... that's not fair for a site that aims to be an authoritative source of information. Having to scramble at the beck and call of a third party is not fun at all. I think that the best place of keeping this information is in Apple's own knowledge base. If they want devs to register to download their stuff, they should also deal with the devs that doesn't want to.
    – Braiam
    Jul 2, 2018 at 15:24
  • (As indicated by the naked link, 4839526 has now been deleted. About 6 hours after this was posted.) Apr 8, 2022 at 11:53

4 Answers 4

24

Several thoughts, in no particular order

  1. The reason we have Offsite Resources closure in the first place is that links get stale really quickly. Download links are the bread of links: they go bad faster than normal links and require constant updates.
  2. Worse, you promote the "Me too" answers. These are people who go "I also know the answer!" and so they post their answer at the bottom of page 2 every time there's a release.
  3. Is Stack Overflow really the place to keep the links updated? Yes, we do try to help people with programming tools, but the problem I have with where to get the software downloaded from is partially explained by #1, but also because we're potentially creating stale results in search engines

    enter image description here

I'd normally say we need to remove all the questions (for instance this one is worthless), but apparently Apple likes to make you register to get to the download file (but doesn't do anything to restrict it to just logged-in devs), and thus, we get the rolling list of downloads for the unwashed masses people who don't want to register.

In all other cases, the version info and download links belong in the tag wiki (a lot of them already do) but, in this case, we already have

  1. A collaborative locked question (with regular updates on a community wiki)
  2. High Google rankings for the term

So everything else should be closed as a duplicate of How to download Xcode DMG or XIP file?, or as requesting an off-site resource. We need to clean your list up to leave it with just that one question remaining.

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  • 14
    That locked stuff smells. To be done correctly: remove question from author (it should be Community question, not just some random noob who gets reputation for nothing), remove all deleted questions (it's looks afwul if you can see it) and make this feature official (so that anyone can demand it, otherwise it's pretty unfair exception).
    – Sinatr
    Jul 2, 2018 at 14:02
  • @Sinatr It smells, but sometimes we leave things for historical reasons. Locks prevent new answers and let the community know this is an exception, not a rule.
    – Machavity Mod
    Jul 2, 2018 at 14:10
  • 5
    "people who don't want to register" - not sure if this argument is valid, because clicking either of links shows authorization page. And if post is continuously updated - I am not sure "hystorical" reasons is a valid excuse anymore. Your screenshot and first link (unless google adds) is the right way to download the stuff. Btw, there is additional, perhaps quite useful information about which version is the last to support certain OS). That would make sense to keep, but not by letting crappy question/answer stay, but making a new good question and answer.
    – Sinatr
    Jul 2, 2018 at 14:23
  • @Sinatr Just to be clear, I'm not advocating leaving them all up (heck, I just helped get the big worthless one deleted). But the locked one can stay. Asking it anew today would draw a closure. And all the other ones the OP linked are closed now too. And speaking from experience, having a defined dupe target would get future questions like this closed faster.
    – Machavity Mod
    Jul 2, 2018 at 17:44
24

Such questions should be deleted.

SO is not an authoritative source to answer questions like "Where do I download X". Google is one or perhaps someone's blog if official pages are too bad. But not SO.

Regarding tag wikis:

Tag wikis help introduce newcomers to the tag. They contain an overview of the topic defined by the tag, along with guidelines on its usage.

Overview is different from specific download instructions or any kind of instruction. At most the link to popular tutorial explaining those.

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    google can't be the authorial source, mind you. it'll only link to one.
    – eis
    Jul 3, 2018 at 15:59
  • @eis Strictly speaking, Google could be the authorial source of, say, Android. (pedantry aside, though, you have a good point, in that it'd be more accurate to say you can Google for the correct source)
    – Nic
    Jul 3, 2018 at 18:09
21

Use both a tag wiki and a question that you can close others as duplicates of. Ideally, answer the question with a link to the wiki...

Wait, what? Heh... I'll explain.

Which tag wiki do you think gets the most views on Stack Overflow? Probably JavaScript, right? Most popular tag on the site? Or maybe Java or C#, the next two?

...nope. It's this one: JSTL. And it's been JSTL for years. Because the good JSTL folks link to that page from many, many answers. There are 372 links to the wiki on Stack Overflow, from answers to questions with hundreds of thousands of views... How many links are there to the xcode wiki? Zero. Nada. None.

Tag wikis are a handy place to stash information that needs to be updated frequently and needs to be referenced frequently. But they are not very discoverable. Folks search for questions, not "[topic] wiki"; you need those questions to exist, or you'll just keep getting more questions.

So pick one, close the others as duplicates, and make sure to reference that wiki from answers to questions where it's relevant as often as you possibly can.

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    Why link from a canonical answer to the wiki and update the wiki, instead of just updating the canonical answer?
    – user247702
    Jul 3, 2018 at 15:05
  • 1
    You can do both, @Stijn. The value of the wiki only appears when you're linking to it from multiple places: a "how to install" section of the wiki may be relevant to multiple questions about procurement, installation, etc. Alternately, a sufficiently thorough answer, if kept up to date, can serve this role so long as it too is crosslinked heavily.
    – Shog9
    Jul 3, 2018 at 15:11
  • 5
    In other words, Google thinks that the post is authoritative source due crosslinking. The only reason why tag wikis aren't authoritative is because no one links to them. If you want them to be discoverable, you need to link to them.
    – Braiam
    Jul 3, 2018 at 20:56
0

Tag wikis are broken. They're completely invisible to the majority of users, because they don't show up in search results, can't be used as a duplicate or close reason, and I'm not even sure if they're reachable on the mobile site.

This means two things:

  1. People won't find the link in the tag wiki, even if it's beautifully formatted and faithfully kept up to date.
  2. People won't notice that the tag wiki is out of date, so it is more likely to go out of date than something that people are regularly finding.

If there is a Community Wiki reference answer which is regularly updated by interested users, that seems like the best place, and other questions can be closed as duplicates, as Machavity says. If there wasn't anybody willing / able to keep it up to date, it should probably be closed or even deleted.

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    I'd be interested to know if the downvotes are a) because people disagree with my assessment of tag wikis; b) because they disagree with some other part of it, or c) because they don't think this answers the question sufficiently.
    – IMSoP
    Jul 2, 2018 at 14:47
  • 3
    Questions for which a question like these would work as a dupe target should be closed as off topic, not as dupes, IMO. Keeping around this questions is detrimental no matter if they are carefully maintained or not, as they end up serving as example of a valid question (highly upvoted at that) in the site, whereas they are not.
    – yivi
    Jul 2, 2018 at 15:06
  • 1
    @yivi Thanks, that reasoning makes sense to me. There's a bit of a "damned if you do, damned if you don't" here - clearly, people will keep asking these questions even if we delete the current ones; but leaving them around may encourage people to ask other similar questions.
    – IMSoP
    Jul 2, 2018 at 15:08

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