-1141

We just announced a new feature test for the "thank you" reaction on The Overflow blog.

We discovered that “thanks” appears in 1 of 6 comments left under answers. Although it's less common on questions, the percentage of “thanks” comments has continued to slowly increase over the last few years.

chart showing the percent of comment on Stack Overflow with a "thank" in them, over time

Using this data and user research, we're introducing this clutter-free way for users to just say "thanks" to others for taking the time to answer questions.

Share your thanks

On the left of an answer post, you'll find a hands icon underneath the usual voting controls. By simply selecting the icon, you can share your thanks to the post-author. As reactions are added by users, a count of the reactions will appear below the icon.

This feature is available to all registered users, regardless of reputation (unlike voting, which is only available for users with 15 reputation or more).

Test variations

We’re testing two versions of the “thank you” icon:

We hope that this test will have a positive impact on our community and reduce:

  • Friction for users whose comments are deleted,
  • The burden on moderators, and
  • The time active users spend flagging/deleting comments.

Other details

  • Users will only be able to award 30 reactions during a single UTC day, like with voting, and you'll get a notification if you are approaching the target.
  • Users will only be able to award reactions to 5 posts by any given post owner during a single UTC day. You'll get a notification if you have reached the limit.
  • Reacting to an answer doesn't impact reputation so if you can vote and the answer solves the problem in the question, don't forget to vote as well.
  • Reactions don't notify the person who wrote the answer.

You can find more information about this in the Help Center.

What's next

We’ll be monitoring usage and other data over the next month and will use those results to inform how we may move forward with this experiment. If you run into any issues or bugs, please share them here.


Update: Please see Data validation & background for the Thank You Reaction feature test for more details on the plans for evaluating the results of this test, and for responding to the feedback given here

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  • 128
    The frst step to transform this community to a Social network? This seems to me the "Like" of facebook. Jun 17, 2020 at 19:31
  • 165
    Would it not have been a better idea to suggest this idea to the community first, get feedback and possible better solutions, and then test it? Jun 17, 2020 at 19:42
  • 83
    Oh no. Whatever next. Allow users to mark posts with emoticons? I really don't need to see clapping hands everywhere. Jun 17, 2020 at 19:44
  • 127
    I've just seen the feature and after reading the explanation page ... what exactly is the purpose? Isn't voting covering everything mentioned there?
    – akuzminykh
    Jun 17, 2020 at 19:46
  • 31
    Surely this is what an upvote is for!? Why not just reduce that "1 in 6 coments says thanks" and do a "if comment.contains("thanks") && user == OP then upvote" and it might cull those 1/6 stats down a bit.. Are we soon to get a wired telephone, cobweb or maybe netscape navigator logo to mark answers as obsolete?
    – Caius Jard
    Jun 17, 2020 at 19:50
  • 74
    (I can't help but think that changing the upvote tooltip to "This was useful, thanks" would have saved a lot of dev..)
    – Caius Jard
    Jun 17, 2020 at 19:53
  • 65
    I thought Stack Overflow was done with forcing unpopular changes on its users
    – pppery
    Jun 17, 2020 at 20:01
  • 108
    Could we have a "No-thanks" button for this post so that I can downvote it twice please?
    – Turnip
    Jun 17, 2020 at 20:03
  • 24
    Why can't I thank myself? I tried to give myself a good thanking but I couldn't. Thanks! Jun 17, 2020 at 20:09
  • 69
    Please note that most people use the "two hands touching palm-to-palm" emoji exclusively to indicate "praying" rather than 'high five', putting aside any addtional issues of trying to connote "upvote by providing +10 reputation and +1 score" with the act of giving someone a 'high five'.
    – TylerH
    Jun 17, 2020 at 20:18
  • 57
    @LisaPark Please also study votes cast on questions affected by this as I suspect we'll see fewer votes cast on this as people thing a "high five" is adequate. That will have the unfortunate side effect of people spending their clicks and effort on actions that have no effect. I don't care if a post has 500 positive reactions, because that doesn't help me or the system classify it. If a post has 500 upvotes, it directly affects the status of the post within the Q&A page, and it directly affects the status and privileges the author has.
    – TylerH
    Jun 17, 2020 at 20:25
  • 47
    Personally, I am not able to find the wisdom in introducing a second "meaningless-to-the-system" act which I can only see as diverting attention away from the method we already have for saying thanks, giving high fives, providing kudos, awarding chili peppers, etc: the upvote. I think such efforts would be better served by trying to point people more clearly to the up/down vote options.
    – TylerH
    Jun 17, 2020 at 20:27
  • 50
    Was there some outcry for this "feature"? Why are SO devs wasting there time with this when there's a long list of other problems and features that have been hanging around for ages? Stackoverflow's founder already told us how to say thanks (2). Stop wasting your time and fix other things.
    – j08691
    Jun 17, 2020 at 20:27
  • 49
    On Stack Exchange sites the way to say thank you is to upvote helpful answers and accept the most helpful by clicking the tick mark on the left. You're free to switch later when a better answer comes along.
    – Vickel
    Jun 17, 2020 at 20:41
  • 38
    How are reactions supposed to be different than voting for the question? As a contributor and user -- why would I want a clapping hands icon instead of an upvote? Very confusing and bewildering what practical purpose these things are supposed to serve? Looks more like a gee-whiz widget looking for some place to be used rather than a solution crafted to solve an identified problem. How many years have we nuked "+1" comments? We'll go with it and see with where it goes... Jun 17, 2020 at 21:36

102 Answers 102

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Are reactions private? That is, if I see that there have been reactions to some of my answers, is it possible for me to find out who those people were?

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    They are not private. To find out who thanked, click on activity icon below new thanks icon.
    – Cyrus
    Jun 17, 2020 at 19:47
  • 1
    Since you can only vote up, not down, it probably doesn't make sense :-) Jun 17, 2020 at 19:50
  • @Cyrus just to add to that for a bit more completeness - you can see who thanked a post when looking at the post. However, you cannot see all the thanks of a person. You can, however, see all the posts you thanked in your profile.
    – VLAZ
    Jun 18, 2020 at 5:41
  • 1
    No, they're not private, you can see who made the reaction in the timeline. Example Jun 18, 2020 at 21:50
  • 2
    I would never use this feature if my reaction was made public. Mass serial downvoting is a problem. New users who submit extremely low quality content, but happen to have a small amount of reputation, are known to serial downvote users. I have been a victim of serial downvoting on unrelated communities that those users were active on due to commentary at another community. Jun 20, 2020 at 13:35
3

Some UX suggestions that I think are better ways to accomplish the same goal

1. Allow Shadow Voting for All Users Under 15 Rep

If the problem is that new users (under 15 rep) can't interact / vote - solve that problem explicitly by allowing them to vote. Since there is a concern about people creating new accounts and sockpuppeting their own answers up, just allow them normal interactions and show them as having voted but don't increase the vote count or user scores.

You could even log these events and allow them to make an impact as soon as the user passes the Community Voting Threshold so early engagement is still rewarded and encouraged, just not exploitable. New users would be trained on how exactly to use the system, with their reactions just weighted appropriately.

2. Use Reaction Icons for Voting

As others have mentioned there is already a way to thank posters.... VOTE UP Questions / Answers

Hopefully, all roads would lead to rome and someone who expressed thanks should also be voting up an issue, if they have the rep (even if it only happened on the backend). Any potential increased engagement of thanking over voting is likely due to the familiarity with leaving reactions. But then we're directing users away from voting.

If you want to encourage a friendlier kind of voting, you could replace the up / down vote icons with thumbs up and thumbs down

Example Voting with Thumbs Up/Down Reactions

enter image description here

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    The ugly emoji thumbs up/down button would make Stack Overflow no different to those other forums with crappy UI
    – Aryan
    Jul 3, 2020 at 20:26
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Doesn't seem to be a good idea. I was confused about the purpose when I saw this reaction icon on answer and that brought me to this post.

As many other previous posters I also think upvote can mean "Appreciate the effort and thank you".

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Here is another idea...

The only way I can see this feature to work (even though I don't like it and would rather not have it) is to make the thanks button automatically also trigger an up-vote, as people are supposed to do for questions/answers they like. This way any thanks/like action gives people their acknowledgement and reputation.

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    There are issues with approach mentioned in other posts and comments to those posts. The "Thanks" can be retracted, while votes are locked. Also, it makes it very difficult to use it as a "Thanks for your effort, not no thanks for your solution".
    – Scratte
    Jun 22, 2020 at 9:49
  • There is a reason we made it >14 rep can't upvote; so this feature would be harmful.
    – 10 Rep
    Jun 25, 2020 at 0:10
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On social media in general, it has been recommended by psychological experts to comment instead of pressing 'like', as the ease and anonymity of 'liking' something leads to negative social consequences, such as malicious envy: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4710707/

With this in mind, yes, the upvote and downvote buttons can be viewed in the same fashion, but at least someone writing 'thanks' has put some effort in. It's more sincere than clicking a 'like' button, at least.

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    Oh gods, not the Daily Mail... Even if they are right, it's will be the wrong source.
    – VLAZ
    Jun 26, 2020 at 6:08
  • Comments are supposed to be useful, if we allow "Thanks" as a comment, there will be so many "thanks" comments that you won't see the useful ones. Also, how can you get reputation from a comment?
    – Anonymous
    May 6, 2021 at 0:25
  • @Anonymous Nobody actually writes "thanks". This isn't a problem we have. May 7, 2021 at 1:07
  • @metamorphosis That's what this answer is proposing.
    – Anonymous
    May 7, 2021 at 14:14
  • @Anonymous Its only a problem if it's problematic, is what I'm saying. We don't have a problem with excessive 'Thanks' at the moment, so the proposed feature was a solution for a problem that doesn't exist. And it's rare for someone to Merely say 'thanks'. Hence a comment is more sincere, more useful, and more Human. No further comment. May 8, 2021 at 22:21
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I'm ashamed to admit I was kind of excited when I saw that you could add "reactions" to an answer. My mind was dizzy with possibilities. Oh, it's literally just ONE reaction? Thanks? How is that different than an upvote?

Then I thought about it. Even if there were a bunch of reactions, what would they be and how would they be useful? Love? Funny? Meh.

I do LOVE seeing SO experiment with features like this, but this is a miss.

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  • "what would they be and how would they be useful?" Ask and ye shall receive
    – C8H10N4O2
    Jun 18, 2020 at 15:22
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    Obviously, “love” and (especially) “funny” wouldn’t be useful in context of SO—though that does seem to be the assumption many respondents are making, likely due to how Facebook implemented reactions. But there are other sentiments that might be more appropriate for SO like “Informative” or “Outdated” or “Confusing”. (It’s admittedly easier for me to envision these as negative feedback.) I’m not convinced reactions are a good fit for SO—and especially as a complement to voting—but if I were to evaluate them seriously as a feature, that’s the direction I’d be considering. Jun 18, 2020 at 18:07
  • @JeremyCaney But if one was confused about a post, it makes more sense to post a comment clarifying what about it is confusing. Likewise, it makes sense to explain when something was outdated and what replaced it. Else it's kind of like a "Not really working - figure it out yourself"-message to both poster and everyone else. We already have that type of no-comment message with the downvote.
    – Scratte
    Jun 18, 2020 at 18:21
  • @Scratte: Oh, for sure. Though, I also think that a comment is almost always more articulate and useful than a downvote, and especially if we want to mentor future generations of contributors. Jun 18, 2020 at 18:41
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A lot of people seem to miss the point that new users are not allowed to vote on answers. This feature is not really to thank the author, but to provide a way for new members to feel like they are interacting with the site more.

It is basically a black-hole, to let new users feel like part of the community without anyone having to hear them. Which seems a bit... cynical.

Why don't you just let new users vote on answers and questions, but not include those votes. Same overall effect, less extra buttons to dilute the main vision of the platform.

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    That's already somehow the case. Even anonymous users can vote on questions, the vote is not counted, but reset as if the site cancelled it, on the UI. But you have some weird message that says "you know we don't show your vote and we cancel it but internally it's still counted!"
    – Pac0
    Jun 18, 2020 at 9:20
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    "Why don't you just let new users vote on answers and questions, but not include those votes." Wouldn't that be equally cynical? If you let people do something, you should actually use the result for something. Jun 18, 2020 at 9:33
  • @Trilarion well that's a different matter... SE/SO has decided they don't want uninformed votes I guess. If you think that's wrong, you should raise it as a separate question on meta.
    – Mr. Boy
    Jun 18, 2020 at 11:13
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    Thanks for the suggestion. I plan to raise it as a separate question. This was just a comment on your argument that making new users feel like part of the community without anyone hearing them really is cynical. I fully agree and think that this is also the case already for the current practice of registering votes that do not count. I don't really see it as a different matter. Jun 18, 2020 at 11:31
  • I'm not disagreeing with you :) I never knew new users couldn't vote... maybe they get a lot of angry noobs not liking the answers?!
    – Mr. Boy
    Jun 18, 2020 at 11:32
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    @Mr.Boy It's not about uninformed votes. People can be plenty uninformed and still have 15 reputation. It's designed to prevent people from easily making dozens of sock puppets to inflate the score of a primary account. The socks need to post something and get two upvotes rather than just being able to sign up and vote freely. Socks are already a huge problem even with the existing limitations - removing the minimal rep for voting would make it exponentiailly worse.
    – Catija
    Jun 18, 2020 at 12:47
  • Re "It is basically a black-hole": Shadow banning by default? "Michael Pryor of Fog Creek Software described stealth banning for online forums in 2006, saying how such a system was in place in the project management system FogBugz, "to solve the problem of how do you get the person to go away and leave you alone"." Jun 20, 2020 at 17:55
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I have to say, I think it's very slimy tactic that you have to register to 'thank' a post. It is absolutely against any positive point this feature might have brought to the site. Oh well, a golden opportunity was missed.

And this is yet again another possibly game-changing feature that hasn't been vetted with the team here. Such things are always immediately going to draw the ire of users here, especially the veteran users.

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    Sometimes registration is the only way to get access to something. How useful is thank from unknown user, who is potentially just a cafee machine from some botnet? Sure, it can make you coffee if you find it, that's all contribution.
    – Sinatr
    Jun 19, 2020 at 13:44
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    @Sinatr, That said, it would appear that the culture of just throwing potentially identity altering changes onto the site without any even the briefest preview, consultation, feedback from those of us who do regarly take part in the upkeep, is firmly alive and well at StackExchange. It's as if they've done nothing wrong, even in the recent past, that might cause them to reconsider that way of working with the community.
    – ouflak
    Jun 19, 2020 at 14:13
  • The top-voted answer to the top-voted question on this site already has 13 thanks!
    – ouflak
    Jun 19, 2020 at 15:15
  • I can verify that you don't get a badge if you are a registered user and max out your allotment of 'thanks'. Also, very curiously, it resets at midnight, not x hours later. Definitely still in beta. I really think they ought to consider a notification for thanks, even if it isn't immediately, perhaps after a week?
    – ouflak
    Jun 19, 2020 at 16:15
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    @ouflak: "For some us, it's nice to see if we've helped somebody" <- I feel I see that through the page view count.
    – einpoklum
    Jun 19, 2020 at 16:48
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    I don't understand how this feature helps with unregistered users as you still have to register to use it. Unless you mean that it give a new reason to register (which presumably is part of the true reason SE is pushing this - it isn't to help curators thats for sure)
    – LinkBerest
    Jun 19, 2020 at 17:07
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    @LinkBerest, Didn't see that. Sleazy. Thanks!
    – ouflak
    Jun 19, 2020 at 17:10
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    @einpoklum The page view count doesn't reflect anything other than a users skill at writing a good title, and the number of people either fooled by it or lead by it :)
    – Scratte
    Jun 19, 2020 at 17:57
  • @Scratte, It doesn't even mean just that. When I thumb through posts to improve them, that counts as a 'view'. Often my changes are for poor grammar, sometimes the posts are irrecoverable. But I've still been 'reached'! It's a meaningless number.
    – ouflak
    Jun 19, 2020 at 18:01
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    Making this feature available to anonymous users would only facilitate spamming.
    – D. Pardal
    Jun 20, 2020 at 17:32
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    @D.Pardal, Spamming of 'thanks'? With no notifications? No comments? Just a click that registers a 'thanks' uptick? Who would even notice that? Nonsense.
    – ouflak
    Jun 20, 2020 at 20:46
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    Also, they did try getting anonymous userfeedback back when Atwood was here so they could have combined those two ideas (it was also at the comment space instead of near the voting buttons)
    – LinkBerest
    Jun 23, 2020 at 3:55
  • Yay! I'm downvote number 1000! My post above explains why. I have to say that I think it's really good to have that kind of engagement from the community on a topic like ths.
    – ouflak
    Jun 26, 2020 at 11:02
-31

How about: don't delete "thank you" comments. Most of them take up one line of space, or are otherwise brief. A "like" button cannot convey what's said in words - we have an upvote button already.

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    Why do you want to keep useless comments?
    – Sinatr
    Jun 18, 2020 at 13:27
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    I see the "Meta" is clearly out of touch with its user base with these net-votes - but this isn't news to me. Jun 18, 2020 at 13:34
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    @Sinatr "Thank you" comments are not useless comments, they make the website more human and are motivating to answerers. I think we should find a way to declutter comments and hide thank you comments, but not ban or delete them.
    – Flimm
    Jun 18, 2020 at 13:36
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    @Flimm, are we talking about SO or something else (e.g. Facebook)? Here I say thanks by accepting answer/upvoting and you are supposed to do the same to me. No one here really need "thanks" comment. Nor it's a replacement for upvote/accepting. Every user who wrote a "thanks" comment should have a tour and read some meta posts. Another point is what definition of "more human" depends on culture, you'd be very suprised how un-human you or me are to some of visitors, but it's them who have to adjust.
    – Sinatr
    Jun 18, 2020 at 13:49
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    @Sinatr I agree that "thank you" messages are not a replacement for upvotes or accepting answers, and I never said otherwise. I guess people are different. When people thank me in a heartfelt comment, talking about how I saved them hours of work, or how they would like to buy me a beverage, that means a lot, and I don't assume they forgot to upvote. If you don't feel positive feelings when you get them, that's OK, people are different.
    – Flimm
    Jun 18, 2020 at 16:12
  • @Sinatr When people recieve a good answer, it's human nature to feel grateful towards them. They feel they need to do something other than clicking two buttons on their answer, so they put thank you comments.
    – 10 Rep
    Jun 20, 2020 at 5:00
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    I specifically avoid any website that allows users to “thumbs up”, “like”, or any similar action. I personally find any “thank you” commentary extremely offensive Jun 20, 2020 at 13:29
  • Stack Overflow already has an "vote" button! Jul 12, 2020 at 12:49
  • I'd love to point to the stark contrast between reactions to essentially the same post between this and here. Just confirms my idea on audience variance and Meta being out of touch with the rest of users. Jul 12, 2020 at 12:51
-34

Clarification: My intention here is not to advocate for reactions as an alternative to voting. Instead, my main point is that while there is an argument to be made for reactions, trying to combine them with voting provides a really confused user experience. They are fundamentally competing and incompatible forms of feedback.


I could imagine an argument for reactions as a more expressive alternative to voting.

Currently, upvotes and downvotes can be a somewhat ambiguous signal.

  • An upvote could mean "This is a quality post". But, on a question, it could mean "Me too"—or, on an answer, "Thank you". (Those two sentiments being independent of quality.)
  • More importantly, a downvote on an answer might mean "This is incorrect". But it could mean "This adds nothing new", or "This is a sloppy post", or "I don't like your tone".

If reactions were to be pursued, the challenge would be identifying a set of globally intuitive icons that adequately capture the range of sentiments users intend to convey via voting. And then you'd need to answer questions like whether users can have multiple reactions, whether all reactions are worth the same reputation, how to aggregate reactions into a score, &c.

The problem here, however, is that this reaction is being introduced as a complement to voting, thus introducing a lot of ambiguity in terms of sentiment.

Notably, as @rene hypothesizes, this could very well reduce the amount of upvotes since, today, upvoting is the primary mechanism of saying "Thank you".

And while users could upvote and react, I'm not optimistic about that given how many contributors seem to e.g. accept answers without upvoting them, or vice versa. Or, worse yet, say "This solved my problem" in the comments, but neither upvote nor accept the answer.

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    We don't need to distinguish reactions. Upvote is for helful/good/working code/nice idea/well spotted, etc etc .. and downvote is for not working/not clear/doesn't answer the question, etc ... The number at the end will give us an overall idea about the post AND of course you need to judge it yourself. Jun 17, 2020 at 21:28
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    People don't vote enough as it is. We should be encouraging people to use the existing quality control mechanisms instead of introducing new parallel ones with even less visible impact. Jun 17, 2020 at 21:30
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    @TemaniAfif: I'm not convinced that we need to, either. My main point was while reactions might be a more expressive alternative to voting, they don't complement voting. And, as such, trying to have both just adds a lot of confusion. Jun 17, 2020 at 21:30
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    Don't use upvotes to say Thank you. You are meant to upvote if you think the answer is useful.
    – Dharman Mod
    Jun 17, 2020 at 21:30
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    @Dharman: Do you actually think that's how people use upvotes? Personally, I try to restrict my upvotes to thoughtful and informative posts. But I suspect that plenty of users use upvoting as "Me too" and "Thank you". Jun 17, 2020 at 21:32
  • @JohnMontgomery: That was the point of my post. Having voting and reactions makes no sense; they are competing approaches. Jun 18, 2020 at 3:01
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    I like the idea of giving more differentiated, quantitative feedback, and I would like to discuss this in a separate feature-request. I guess the difficulty would be to find a workable set of categories. I could imagine that after an upvote or downvote, there could quickly pop up like three subcategories of more specific things you can vote on (like "answer contains good example", ...). I would like to restrict that on technical things, not sentiments. Jun 18, 2020 at 5:33
  • @Trilarion: That idea of using reactions to annotate a vote is interesting; I hadn’t considered that. At minimum, I think trying to understand what information is encoded in a vote is a useful exercise for determining whether a more expressive feedback system might be valuable. Jun 18, 2020 at 6:32
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    Other things could include required level of expertise (for beginners, experts...), age information (outdated practice), completeness (includes corner cases). But you would have to trade-off the usefulness of such additional quantitative feedback with the costs of gathering the statistics. Jun 18, 2020 at 6:40
  • @Trilarion, People already do that somewhat in comments when they write "+1 for ..." I think of it as Slashdot-style moderation (+1 Insightful, +1 Funny, -1 Offtopic, -1 Flamebait, etc.). A "-1 Outdated" vote would be interesting, but it would annoy a lot of long-time users: "When I wrote this, it was the only way to foo the bar, and now I'm getting DVs because version 6 has bar.foo()!?" Doesn't mean it's a bad idea. Just one with entrenched interests. Jun 19, 2020 at 21:49
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I like it.

The issue with score is that it indicates popularity, not necessarily quality. A oneliner of code will generally win over three paragraphs of text and no code. The problem is that the oneliner is wrong. Not "using too many CPU cycles" or "won't even run" wrong, but "is going to cause headaches when [actually quite common thing] happens" wrong.

What I hope this will achieve, is that "thanks" will stand for "usefulness", i.e. the visitor could read what was written and it helped them along, but the answer in and of itself does not necessarily deserve an upvote, because it isn't actually good.

But I guess that it'll take years to measure whether this actually realizes that.

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    What makes you think thanks will be used differently than upvotes in that regard? There's no obvious difference in intent, and there's no incentive or guidance to use them differently. Jun 19, 2020 at 21:06
  • How would a oneliner be wrong? If you run the oneliner, and find out that it doesn't run, or produces an undesired output, then it would be wrong.
    – 10 Rep
    Jun 20, 2020 at 4:58
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    @10Rep I don't know if you're deliberately missing the point, but I mean an answer that can be copypasted, appears to solve the immediate problem and then breaks when a not so rare edge case occurs. This happens an afwul lot, yet those answers amass hundreds of upvotes. I'd rather see such answers have hundreds of "Thanks" and a handful of upvotes of people who don't know better.
    – CodeCaster
    Jun 20, 2020 at 13:27
  • 1
    I wish I could down vote this answer more than once, no offense to the author, it is just how I'm feeling about it Jun 27, 2020 at 19:59
-38

A lot of users don't have reputation.

No reputation means... no upvote or comment possible.

So, this feature is useful if and only if it is available for the 1-14 rep window users.

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    I have previously mulled over a feature request similar to this: Expose a Me Too reaction for questions, and a Thank You reaction for answers—but only to low-rep users so they (feel like they) have a voice without resorting to (ab)use of the answer feature. But this is also where I get stuck in gaming out this feature. Do you just remove it for 15+ users? Do 15+ users still see the results? That transition seems really messy. If you keep it, they compete with votes. If you remove it, it’s like an entirely separate (and inconsequential) shadow voting system for most users. Jun 18, 2020 at 7:22
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    It takes more rep to comment "Thanks" than to upvote, what the whole heck is this response
    – Makoto
    Jun 18, 2020 at 16:20
  • @makoto You can't do either if you're lower than 15 rep, that was the only point of the answer.
    – Pac0
    Jun 18, 2020 at 17:30
  • @Makoto: Right. So what do contributors do instead? They leave answers saying “Thanks”. I don’t know if it’s a big enough issue to worry about, as those are pretty obvious and easy to clean up in the Low Quality Posts queue, but they’re definitely a persistent chore for reviewers. Jun 18, 2020 at 17:57
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    I'm pretty sure that authors can leave comments on their own post and Question authors can leave comments on the Answers regardless of reputation points.
    – Scratte
    Jun 18, 2020 at 18:31
  • @Scratte yes, you're right.
    – Pac0
    Jun 18, 2020 at 19:00
  • 2
    @Caney - Users will continue to submit answer that “Thank” other users even with a “thank you” button which is the exact reason this suggested feature is a horrible idea. The focus should be to avoid the commentary submitted as an answer instead of collect meaningless “Thank You”s Jun 20, 2020 at 13:27
  • 2
    It'll jus' confuse new contributors... Jun 24, 2020 at 10:30
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