It is a rough heuristic, but when a post has many up-votes it suggests that it was valuable. If one toggles their cursor over the up-arrow button for a post, it says "This question shows research effort; it is useful and clear". On that basis I inferred that How to make a great R reproducible example had provided value to the SO community, and produced the post How to make a great Python reproducible example in seemingly the same equivalence class of questions. A similar, pandas
-oriented post called How to make a good reproducible pandas example was also brought to my attention.
The question I have here is built on the discrepancy on how my post was moderated in contrast to these other two. The other two were converted to community wiki posts, which are no-longer questions. Mine was closed as opinion-based.
A comment proposed that my post would have similar answers as found in How to make a great R reproducible example, which would rather suggest to me that my post should have been closed as a duplicate in that sense. I think my question definitely is opinion-based whereas the redundancy to the earlier post is reasonable, but more debatable.
What is a consistent way of handling this discrepancy? At this point, I don't feel that my post was treated consistently with the precedent that was set by the previous R
-based post.
Perhaps these among other options might be considered:
- Closed as opinion-based (converting the former community wikis back into questions)
- Convert my post into a community wiki
- Move all three posts to meta SO
Or, perhaps a future meta-post on the pitfalls and gotchas of SO might be beneficial beyond the standard orientation.
What are your thoughts on how this should be resolved?
The original post has received vote(s) for deletion. I have duplicated it here for future context in case of deletion.
Echoing a corresponding post "How to make a great R reproducible example", it is important that Python programmers are successful in communicating qualitative and quantitative aspects of their code. Naturally there is a use case for posting excellent examples here on Stack Overflow, but also on blogs, other Q&A sites, presentations, documentation, and code base repositories like GitHub.
A few of the criterion to consider, as described in "How to create a Minimal, Reproducible Example", include using examples that are (1) minimal, (2) complete, and (3) reproducible.
What Python-oriented advice, tips, techniques, or criteria make a great
python
reproducible example?Edit
For more information on the closure of this post, see "Opinion-based, community wiki, or moved to meta?"