I'm a member of several neuroscience simulator communities (neuron-simulator, nest-simulator) that require extensive programming to develop software, computational models of the brain. These communities have not seen much activity on SO, most likely because the software was created in the 1990's and none of the knowledgeable members happened to be frequent SOers, so they opted for forums (uncurated, diluted, quasi-dead) and mailing lists (not public info) and the SO communities never took off. They are both the most used tools in their fields.
I'd want to transcribe frequent and relevant questions on these topics to SO in order to attract more traffic and to help these communities self-organise on SO.
However, I received a close vote on a very basic question and it made me worried. I can see that it is very minimal, but it's a basic operation with a non-intuitive solution that is not directly covered in the documentation of the tool and would be one of the first things new users bump into and benefits from a curated clear answer here on SO.
Before I fully commit to building up a knowledgebase of questions and answer here, I wanted to ask Meta if this somehow not advisable? I am worried because some of my questions when glanced over by someone outside of these communities can quickly be deemed as unfit (which will be pretty much everyone since there are no veteran high-rep SOers moderating these communities).
I don't think propping up or gamifying my basic questions to make them look more passable in the review queue to outsiders helps the spread of information. Other basic questions on different topics are also short and silly, like this, but at one point in time the information wasn't on SO and had to be asked.
I'll be very unlikely to attract up votes in these efforts initially and very likely to attract down/close votes, and am worried, what would you advise me to do?
From the help center on on-topic questions:
- a specific programming problem, or
- a software algorithm, or
- software tools commonly used by programmers; and is
- a practical, answerable problem that is unique to software development
I think these questions will check all those boxes.
A PS on the question itself: For many neuroscientists creating a synapse is a basic operation that would be semantically equivalent to something like part1.connect(part2, connection=synapse)
but in this simulator it is a non-trivial multistep solution that involves parts of which you have no way of knowing you need them, it is also not documented as such. (There's like an old tutorial part 2, step 5 that shows how to do it)