Update 2022-08-09: New votes now update Trending scores immediately instead of waiting for the cache to expire
As part of the Outdated Answers project, we ran an experiment to try and surface trending answers. On June 21, we are launching a new sorting option on Stack Overflow called Trending sort. Trending sort will enable you to see the most relevant answers by boosting recent votes. If there's no recent votes, it will sort by Score instead. This sorting method will be especially helpful for questions on programming languages like JavaScript that are constantly changing and receive newer and more efficient answers. However, Trending sort will be less effective with questions on languages like C that are relatively stable. There are no changes to the default sorting method of Score.
Launch details
Trending sort will be available starting on June 21. During the launch, the first time you view any question sorted by Score on Stack Overflow, you'll be prompted to try out Trending sort. If there are any answers with more recent votes, Trending tries to sort them closer to the top. Once you dismiss the popover, you won't be prompted again.
Trending is an optional sort method that complements the default Score sort. Trending works best when there are recent votes on answers that aren't the highest-scoring answer. We often see this happen when software adds or removes features. Questions with Trending answers look like setting the distance between flexbox items in CSS or finding the sum of an array of numbers in JavaScript because browsers and their features have changed over time. However, how to undo your most recent commits in Git hasn't fundamentally changed over time, and the top Trending sort answer is the same as the highest Score sort answer. You'll get to choose to use Trending as your sort option wherever it makes sense to you.
The algorithm we chose was the best performing algorithm in all aspects of our experiment. It positively impacted how users copied and voted on answers. It also ranked best in our subjective survey. You can see the full results of our test to choose the best candidate Trending algorithm in Results of the Trending sort experiment.
Implementation details
An upvote or downvote's value under this algorithm decays to half of its value each year. The Trending score of an individual post is calculated with something like the following code:
/* an example implementation */
var trendingScore = 0.0;
foreach(Vote v in post.Votes){
trendingScore += v.Weight * Math.Pow(
1.0 / 2.0,
vote.AgeInDays / 365.0
);
}
return trendingScore;
We won't calculate Trending scores on questions younger than three months as we don't expect there to be enough voting data. If a question is too new, Score will be used instead of Trending.
Before July 28th, Trending scores were cached for 24 to 48 hours, so they may have seemed a day or two stale in some cases. Now, new votes will immediately update the Trending score on the next refresh.
In our initial implementation of Trending scores, we have not exposed the specific score in the interface, our public API, or the Stack Exchange Data Explorer. The score shown on each post when using Trending score is just the standard Score. Eventually, we would like to visualize Trending scores in a more accessible way, but we haven't made commitments to anything specific yet.
We know that sometimes you'll see a newer answer with a small number of votes rank higher than established answers under Trending sort. We are not guaranteeing that Trending will always find the best answer, but it will find the answer with the most recent voting. Using similar metrics to our test, we will monitor the performance of Trending sort and make adjustments if necessary.
Feedback
We would like to hear your feedback in these locations:
If you see any bugs or errors:
- In the first few weeks after our launch, we would like to collect bug reports as answers to this post.
- After July 11, please submit a separate question with the tags feature-request and sorting
If you'd like to comment on the specific algorithm choice or our survey results, please join the discussion on Results of the Trending sort experiment.
If you would like to suggest a feature for Trending sort, please submit a separate question with the tags feature-request and sorting