Re: [Haskell-cafe] Advertisement: the Haskell Stack Overflow Q A site

2011-05-04 Thread Andrew Coppin

One of the benefits of a site like SO as a forum is the ability to
record and link to prior work, edit for technical errors, and easily
search and categorize past answers. It is also less prone to noise,
for those suffering from cafe overload.


I would also recommend SO.


My only experience of SO is that I asked a question once, and to this 
day it has still only been viewed a grand total of 6 times. (And I think 
that was just me looking to see if there were any replies yet.) OTOH, it 
wasn't Haskell-related.


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Re: [Haskell-cafe] Advertisement: the Haskell Stack Overflow Q A site

2011-05-04 Thread James Cook

On May 4, 2011, at 4:50 PM, Andrew Coppin wrote:


   One of the benefits of a site like SO as a forum is the ability to
   record and link to prior work, edit for technical errors, and  
easily
   search and categorize past answers. It is also less prone to  
noise,

   for those suffering from cafe overload.


I would also recommend SO.


My only experience of SO is that I asked a question once, and to  
this day it has still only been viewed a grand total of 6 times.  
(And I think that was just me looking to see if there were any  
replies yet.) OTOH, it wasn't Haskell-related.


I think Haskell questions on SO tend to the opposite extreme; no  
matter how poorly thought-out the question, the Haskell community will  
descend on it like a swarm of helpful piranhas.


Languages like Java and C# have such an overwhelmingly huge number of  
questions (the quality of which are, frankly, quite poor on average)  
that very few people are going to actually sit and look through even  
1% of them.  Haskell, on the other hand, has a small enough volume  
that people can at least skim the ones from the last past day or two  
in a fairly small amount of time.


-- James

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Re: [Haskell-cafe] Advertisement: the Haskell Stack Overflow Q A site

2011-05-04 Thread Daniel Fischer
On Wednesday 04 May 2011 23:02:35, James Cook wrote:
 I think Haskell questions on SO tend to the opposite extreme; no  
 matter how poorly thought-out the question, the Haskell community will  
 descend on it like a swarm of helpful piranhas.

That's a great picture. I like it.
Haskell, where helpful piranhas swim :D

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Re: [Haskell-cafe] Advertisement: the Haskell Stack Overflow Q A site

2011-05-04 Thread Casey McCann
On Wed, May 4, 2011 at 5:02 PM, James Cook mo...@deepbondi.net wrote:
  Haskell, on the other hand, has a small enough volume that people can at
 least skim the ones from the last past day or two in a fairly small amount
 of time.

They can and, in fact, do. Or at least I do, at any rate, even when I
don't really have time to answer any. And I suspect Don Stewart does
as well since by himself he's something like 20% of the answers by
volume. Suffice it to say, questions with the [haskell] tag don't get
overlooked.

Overall, based on my experiences and glancing at the question lists,
I'd estimate that most questions tagged [haskell] get at least 50
views and at least one useful answer within a few hours of being
posted, depending on time of day and how many of the more prolific
answerers are around. There're maybe 25 questions with no answers at
all, which is less than 1% of the questions in the tag, and of the
unanswered questions many are either very poorly thought out, very
difficult to answer, or highly specific to some tool or library that
not everyone may be familiar with.

- C.

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[Haskell-cafe] Advertisement: the Haskell Stack Overflow Q A site

2011-05-03 Thread Don Stewart
Hey all,

I thought I'd just make a quick advertisement for  the Haskell Stack
Overflow community:

 http://stackoverflow.com/questions/tagged/haskell

as a forum for questions and answers on beginner to advanced Haskell problems.

The site is very active, with roughly as many questions being asked on
SO as on haskell-cafe these days.

One of the benefits of a site like SO as a forum is the ability to
record and link to prior work, edit for technical errors, and easily
search and categorize past answers. It is also less prone to noise,
for those suffering from cafe overload.

Cheers,
   Don

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Re: [Haskell-cafe] Advertisement: the Haskell Stack Overflow Q A site

2011-05-03 Thread Jason Dagit
On Tue, May 3, 2011 at 3:00 PM, Don Stewart don...@gmail.com wrote:

 Hey all,

 I thought I'd just make a quick advertisement for  the Haskell Stack
 Overflow community:

 http://stackoverflow.com/questions/tagged/haskell

 as a forum for questions and answers on beginner to advanced Haskell
 problems.

 The site is very active, with roughly as many questions being asked on
 SO as on haskell-cafe these days.

 One of the benefits of a site like SO as a forum is the ability to
 record and link to prior work, edit for technical errors, and easily
 search and categorize past answers. It is also less prone to noise,
 for those suffering from cafe overload.


I would also recommend SO.

If you have trouble following along you can also use twitter to see when new
Haskell questions are posted:
http://twitter.com/#!/haskellstoverfl

Jason
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