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In SO's Bountied question tab, the default values are selected or checked:

  • Filter by —> Has bounty
  • Sorted by —> Bounty ending soon
  • Tagged with —> no values (however, python tagged in this example)

Changing the default 'sorted by' to 'newest' (for example) eventually picks up non-bountied questions as well (see image). I tested this by waiting 1-2 minutes to see if some questions began to appear/refresh. And the same thing for the situation were the default values where not changed, but it appeared that no non-bountied questions showed up on the page (based on the same amount of time).

Should this be the case? I would think that simply changing 'Sorted by' in this scenario would not queue up the non-bountied questions as well.

enter image description here

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    I expect this to be status-bydesign. The "new activity" feature works by subscribing to websocket messages for a tag. The websocket subscription is rather limited and it certainly doesn't have the knowledge of what filters are applied. In this case it simply started listening for activity on the python tag, and when it receives a message it updates the banner, no matter what extra filters you applied.
    – rene
    Jan 16, 2022 at 12:51
  • Similar / related: this Jan 17, 2022 at 9:08
  • @rene Couldn't some Javascript code then suppress the working of the "new activity" feature if after filtering nothing new remains. It probably would to convey more information. Jan 18, 2022 at 15:13
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    What about changing the wording to "Up to X questions with new activity, reload to find out."? Jan 18, 2022 at 15:14
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    @Trilarion I'm sure there is an easy fix to make the behavior less surprising. We only need to find that one dev that has 6 to 8 time-units available to implement it ...
    – rene
    Jan 18, 2022 at 15:43
  • I keep noticing this for my custom filters and it's pretty annoying. I hope this is not by design, but rather just an oversight. Jan 18, 2022 at 18:22
  • @rene Always these devs that are so rare. A real bottleneck they are and that despite more than a decade of SO. Jan 18, 2022 at 21:09

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