Please note: This is not about forking/splitting Stack Overflow into "beginners" and "advanced" (as discussed e.g. here, here, and here, tag: split-stack-overflow). It's about facilitating a better focus on relevant topics in a plural/messy field.
On a prologue: I'm growing frustrated with the level of contents in my staple feed: the php tag. My primary interest is with core PHP at an intermediate/advanced level. In discovering, reviewing and implementing solutions to problems encountered when developing something reasonably complicated, from a scratch or otherwise.
Now, your average programming language would have more of a gradient and a shared base of concerns between beginners and advanced, the former (potentially) in their time turning into the latter. However, not so in the wild wide world of PHP, where the language is commonly engaged with at very different levels and fields.
What makes the PHP feed so messy? We have, among others, the following:
- Absolute beginners, who haven't read the first tutorials (and often, not even the "How to ask?"), struggling with invalid syntax and common error messages;
- People dabbling in a mish-mash of HTML and PHP, where PHP is taken for a templating language plus; basically, tweaking/scripting in contrast to programming;
- People crafting things around a particular CMS, library or framework, with often very niche issues that add little value to the common body of knowledge here;
- People sorting out actual code they have written that still has bugs, missing aspects, or poor performance, etc.; typically from developers with a couple of years under the belt.
...and I'm sure there are a couple more "common types of PHP users" we can identify that mostly work in a particular zone of the language's many applications, who would welcome better focus on their relevant fields.
The problem experienced: There is no way to filter the feed to focus on #4 type questions and answers -- which is the sort I'd enjoy frequently engaging with. I can (and do) filter out #3, where I can be bothered to keep on adding to the list of ignored tags (assuming properly tagged). Still, the bulk of it falls into #1 and #2, to a point where I'm lucky to find one or two #4 type questions in a day. User experience: Shifting through way too much noise.
I realize that the plurality of fields and user types may be an issue that troubles other language (-tags) as well, with their respective break-downs of the typical divides. Don't take this as a PHP-exclusive concern, wherever the shoe fits; I can only speak from my personal experience here. (Yet, given the popularity and the low entry threshold of the language, I suspect PHP user demographics are rather skewed toward "beginner" and "tinkering" in comparison.)
What can I/we do about it? This is the question, hoping for your suggestions.
Would it make sense to create more categorical tags? For example, php-beginners; php-html and php-scripts (grouping much of #2 into one); php-frameworks, php-libraries and php-applications (grouping all of #3 into one); php-core, php-advanced, php-oop, etc. (grouping for #4). This would definitely help me focus my engagement to where it fits.
If the above doesn't make sense, then would it be possible to facilitate separate multi-tag aggregate feeds: that is, where one could list specific tags and have them appear in a separate feed? (N.B. Looking at the synonym list for PHP sub-tags, I see that most everything [php-*] redirects to php, making them next to useless. php-oop? Nope.)
We already have quite a few great FAQs on common PHP issues. Perhaps they could be pooled into a single list for ease of reference, and said list provided as suggested reading? That, and we could definitely use whatever other further measures that may help cut down the mind-boggling volume of duplicates.
Thanks very much for the kind attention -- and any suggestions given and measures taken -- in advancing better focus and content quality for the diverse audiences frequenting Stack Overflow.