I have stumbled upon the Best practices for writing code comments article. Regardless of the excellent and interesting content (thumbs up to the author), I find this piece of code in the article quite interesting:
(Navigate to Rule 6: Provide links to the original source of copied code)
For example, consider this comment:
/** Converts a Drawable to Bitmap. via https://stackoverflow.com/a/46018816/2219998. */
Following the link to the answer reveals:
- The author of the code is Tomáš Procházka, who is in the top 3% on Stack Overflow.
- One commenter provides an optimization, already incorporated into the repo.
- Another commenter suggests a way to avoid an edge case.
Why is it interesting?
The link format is what is generated from the shared
button under each answer/question. Breaking it numbers down:
- The first part
46018816
refers to the answer itself (link w/o my user ID https://stackoverflow.com/a/46018816) - The second part
2219998
refers to the user that generated the link (or somebody uses the link in favor of a different user). The favored one is the user mcomella https://stackoverflow.com/users/2219998
Note that the author of the article is Ellen Spertus with id 631051
(https://stackoverflow.com/users/631051).
Is it appropriate?
Assuming I understand the Announcer badge system correctly, the users don't match. I have the following questions:
- Is it appropriate to share a post in The Overflow Blog article to get the Announcer badge for the author themselves?
- Is it appropriate to share a post in The Overflow Blog article to get the Announcer badge for somebody else?
- Is it appropriate to share a post in The Overflow Blog article to get the Announcer badge at all?
Why it shouldn't be appropriate?
Why do I ask whether is it appropriate? Normally, I would normally not care but I find two reasons:
- The Stack Overflow Blog article that is advertised right at the top right corner of, I guess, every Stack Overflow page.
- As far as I understand, posting to The Overflow Blog is restricted only to the team members and nobody else.
This gives certain users a significant advantage which I believe is not fair.
Disclaimer
- The goal of this post is not to whine over a badge, but the principle.
- I don't blame namely the author of the article. It might have been not intentional.
- If the meaning of the link is actually different and it doesn't contribute to the Announcer badge, I deeply apologize. However, the question would still remain actual, though.