# Learning and Recruiting - two aspects where Stack Overflow has helped me I think it's futile trying to list all of the ways that Stack Overflow has helped me in my professional career - it is without doubt the most important website for finding information on programming topics. It's usually the first site in any of my programming-related Google searches (it's strange that I still search through Google, even though I know that I'll find an answer here). I'll try to describe the importance from two different angles (in addition to the general helpfulness for finding answers). ## Learning a new technology When learning a new technology or tool, I find that following a tag on Stack Overflow is a great way of getting hands-on information. I've used this several times (e.g. with [git](https://stackoverflow.com/questions/tagged/git) or with [AngularJS](https://stackoverflow.com/questions/tagged/angularjs)), where every morning I for several weeks, I spent a couple of minutes on browsing through the latest questions and answers for that tag. Even if I couldn't answer any of them initially, it gave me a good impression on what functionality is out there, what some of the common problems are, and how other people (hopefully with more experience than I) solve them. Doing this for a couple of days or weeks slowly builds up familiarity with the topic, and often leads to new ways of doing things. On a regular basis, I found new patterns, scripts or clever ways of solving problems, and I was able to apply them to my daily work. In addition to that, it raised awareness on how to ask questions. What is the required information, how to present examples, how not to ask a question - these are all things I learned through browsing of the most recent questions and answers. ## Recruiting Since I do a lot of job interviews for open positions in my team, I try to find out how people go about solving problems - since that is one of the most important skills in software development. In addition to asking questions about how they solved specific problems in their current or previous job, I've added two very simple questions to my standard set: * Do you know the website GitHub.com and can you explain what it does? * Do you know the website StackOverflow.com and can you explain what it does? If people are aware of these sites, I follow up with questions on how they use these sites, i.e. whether they have an account, whether they participate actively, whether they upvote/ask/answer. Believe it or not, but there are still developers out there who are not familiar with StackOverflow. This does not disqualify someone from getting an offer, but familiarity with the site and how it works is a plus in my book.