Over the last year, we have been chipping away at the problem of Outdated Answers, highly upvoted answers that may no longer be the best solution to a problem. I wanted to let you know what we're working on and what you can expect in the coming weeks.
TL;DR — we are making small changes to the answer-sorting menu in preparation for creating a new Trending sort, while we continue to work on the version-label functionality we previewed on Meta a few months ago.
Sorting menu changes
One of the solution ideas we are working on is a new sorting option called “Trending” that will decay votes over time. In other words, an upvote cast today will count more than a vote cast two years ago. Our hope is that this new way of sorting will surface newer, better answers that have no chance of catching up to the incumbent in terms of overall score (upvotes minus downvotes).
Behind the scenes, we have been working on potential Trending algorithms, and we will create a separate post in the near future with a lot more detail when we are closer to settling on our approach.
In the meantime, we are making some incremental changes to the answer sorting menu in preparation for launching the Trending sort. We are moving the sort menu into a dropdown, introducing ascending and descending sorts for all of the options, and changing the names of sort options to have clearer descriptions. Check out our Meta Stack Exchange post for details and screenshots.
Version label idea
We reached out on Meta a few months ago to get your initial thoughts about adding labels to answers that indicate which version(s) the answer applies to (e.g., "Python 3.6 and earlier"). See our original post for details and screenshots. Thank you so much for all of your thoughtful feedback, especially as it relates to the administrative challenges of managing versions over time.
Since we posted on Meta, we have conducted additional research, including user interviews, to further refine our ideas.
Adding version labels is a pretty sizable project, and we want to make sure that we get it right. We are still in the early stages of defining what features are must-have for a Minimum Viable Product and how we might build the functionality out over time. Stay tuned — we'll post in more detail and ask for lots of input in the near future.