• gencha@lemm.ee
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    11 months ago

    SO is a shithole, just like Reddit. All the work is done by volunteers. When it was time to cash out with the platform, they also did several things to fuck with their community. I’ve contributed quite a bit to the trilogy sites, and served as a moderator. I regret every second of it. But at least a few people got rich in the process.

    • HiddenLayer5@lemmy.ml
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      11 months ago

      I don’t get why programmers, especially ones actually working on open source projects, insist on using proprietary services. Stack Overflow is one, also GitHub.

      • pnutzh4x0r@lemmy.world
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        11 months ago

        It’s unfortunate, but the reality is that many of the proprietary services are… free, convenient, and where the people are.

        Most projects do not have a lot of funding, so it makes sense to use low cost platforms with the least amount of friction. I think most developers are aware of the risks and trade-offs, but make a pragmatic decision to use these proprietary services b/c the benefits for them outweigh the costs.

    • Professorozone@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      I used to go to SO and really liked it. I haven’t been in a long time though and didn’t know about this. What are your thoughts about Quora? Seems similar to me.

  • holycrap@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    I think this has as much to do with Google being shit at finding stuff lately as it does llms like chatGPT

    • Calyhre@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      You can even see the decline in posts and votes before GPT became mainstream. This definitely look more like search engine failing to get rid of those cheap copycats.

      • zatanas@lemm.ee
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        1 year ago

        Agreed. For me, making it so that the search engine ignores -string was one of the biggest set backs.

        • REdOG@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          the search engine ignores -string

          WHAT? Why would they do that? WTF no wonder…

          • gosling@lemmy.world
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            11 months ago

            Hyphen (-) means you don’t want to see this word, while words surrounded by quotes (") means you want these phrases exactly.

            Most symbols are also ignored, which is great for an average user but terrible for programmers.

            • towerful@programming.dev
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              11 months ago

              Yeh, suddenly you need to know what the language calls the operator within the context you want to use it.
              At which point, you probably don’t need to Google the symbol!

            • lolcatnip@reddthat.com
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              11 months ago

              It was a really dumb move but you can can still get the same effect by putting a word in quotation marks.

              • corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca
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                11 months ago

                UI-wise, though, it’s toxic, and therefore slower and more stressing. It’s something that can be fixed, and ergo essentially a bug. ;-)

        • lemmyvore@feddit.nl
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          11 months ago

          On Google and on Duck Duck Go too. On DDG you can’t get rid of the over-optimized websites anymore even if you use -“website name”. Luckily -site:address still works.

          • cschreib@programming.dev
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            11 months ago

            That’s crazy. Google/DDG bloat from SEO websites had already driven me out a while ago, so I hadn’t noticed. I’ve been using Kagi for a few months now, and I find I can trust my search results again. Being able to permanently downgrade or even block a given website is an awesome feature, I would recommend it just for that.

            • pelotron@midwest.social
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              11 months ago

              Wait WHAT? I was just asking on discord the other day if there existed a search engine that allowed you to blacklist websites as a user setting. I need to curate out all AI written garbage from my results.

            • supercheesecake@aussie.zone
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              11 months ago

              Hmm, not really used to the idea of paying for search, but I understand.

              Is it good at filtering AI generated sites and sites that are clearly copy pasted. Or do you kind of have to identify that yourself and manually block?

              • Dave@lemmy.nz
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                11 months ago

                I think it’s worth testing it with the free 100 searches. All you need is an email address (no credit card unless you’re actually subscribing). I’ve only been using it a few days but I don’t think it filters out AI generated sites. But you can set a ranking by site (block, lower, normal, raise, pin) so you can make stack overflow be priorised and block quora.

                They have a ranking board of top sites in each category so you can go through it and set the rank of a bunch of sites upfront.

              • cschreib@programming.dev
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                11 months ago

                There’s no specific AI detection at the moment, as far as I can tell. But it has “listicle” detection. If you ask “best lawn mower”, all these “the 5 best lawn mowers of 2023” websites with affiliated Amazon links get pooled into a compact Listicle section, that you can just scroll past and ignore.

    • Raltoid@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      Don’t forget that Duck Duck Go is even worse at it now. It will literally change your results if you go back after clicking a link.

        • Raltoid@lemmy.world
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          11 months ago

          I think they’re trying to implement a sort of “smart prediction” thing, where it assumes that if you go back the link you clicked wasn’t relevant. And so it tries to remove closely related results. Which works the opposite if you get two results from the same page and you click the wrong one. Which makes looking up technical or programming related issues a nightmare.

    • Monsieur@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      I used to spend a lot of time on Google and stack, now I ask phind more often than not, which violates information for me.

  • bad_alloc@feddit.de
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    11 months ago

    Is there a fediverse alternative yet?

    Also, if you are a technical person I urge you to start a blog where you document problems you solve. It’s a great ressource for others and a resumé for you.

    • shagie@programming.dev
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      11 months ago

      There is not yet a good story for federation and the Q&A format… or at least I’m not aware of one.

      The difficulty is making sure that it’s moderated with sufficient controls… but then that starts running counter to the ideals of people on the fediverse. But without moderation, you get things that are Quara, and Yahoo Answers… and worse.

      The corresponding part is that much of the utility of Q&A is making sure that it has good SEO so that you don’t need to answer the same question again.

      All these things tend to suggest that a centralized Q&A system would work better. It’s not that you can’t federate it - but there are a lot of other hard problems for federation of Q&A that are much harder to solve.

      Alternatively, what about !asklemmy@lemmy.ml doesn’t fit the desired functionality of Q&A?

  • Kevin@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    I used to mod on SO and a few SEs, but deleted my accounts a few years back. It’s just a mix of low-quality submissions, over-bearing moderators/admins, and bad culture & etiquette. I still regularly use SO when looking up questions, but I haven’t participated on there in a long while. I’ve mostly gone back to smaller forums and mailing lists.

      • Kevin@lemmy.world
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        11 months ago

        Depends. I use vendor forums for vendor-specific Q&A (like the forums for ESP32, Mbed, FreeRTOS, etc). For other project questions, I open a Github issue with the “question” tag. Before, I used Reddit but it was rare that I’d get a “good” answer out of it.

    • astrobound@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      i use jquery daily… maybe now that it’s dying ill have a real reason to move to something a little more cutting edge. haha

        • astrobound@lemmy.world
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          11 months ago

          one of the products i work on is enterprise level so its been around more or less in its current iteration for a while. it used jquery as part of its primary stack during its inception and still does bc it would be a metric ton of work to convert everything.

  • Simulation6@sopuli.xyz
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    11 months ago

    I am not sure when this started, but google searches now sort by paid content first rather then relevant content first, so Stack Overflow started to drop down into page 2 or more.

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    11 months ago

    I really like using code.whatever.social as an alternative frontend to Stack Overflow. It has way less distractions and allows me to only look at the question and the answers and nothing else.

      • bzxt@lemmy.ml
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        11 months ago

        No problem. You can use extensions like LibRedirect in order to make it automatically change SO to this one.

  • danhab99@programming.dev
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    11 months ago

    IDK what shitoverflow gets out of being so fucking toxic. I asked one dumb question and I’m basically banned from posting on the website.

    It feels like they’re trying to be a sort of “wikipedia” of every programming problem and solution. The problem is that eventually everything will be posted, and everyone will be banned from the website.

    • I Cast Fist@programming.dev
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      11 months ago

      I vaguely recall the first time I ever asked something on SO, around 2013, the first reply was “this has already been asked before”. No link to said previous question. Taught me to lurk and search more before asking anything there.

      I sometimes also suffer a case of “explaining until I figure the question myself”, where the more details I punch into my question, the more likely I am to find the answer myself.

    • bh11235@infosec.pub
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      11 months ago

      You lack vision, but I see a place where people get blocked and their questions opened then immediately closed as duplicates. Opened and closed, opened and closed all day, all night. Soon, where the internet once stood will be a string of condescending experts, admonitions that “you shouldn’t do that, do Y instead”, pleas for information closed as off-topic. Passive aggression, spiteful ego contests and wonderful, wonderful karma meters reaching as far as the eye can see. My God, it’ll be beautiful.

      • corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca
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        11 months ago

        “you shouldn’t do that, do Y instead”

        That’s one of my favorites: ignore the problem, only pick on the scope we can’t change.

        • omegastick@lemmy.ml
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          11 months ago

          I asked for advice on how to express something in UML once:

          “No one cares whether you follow the UML standard, just make something up”

          “But my company uses waterfall and requires UML diagrams to move onto the next phase of development!”

          “That’s an issue with your company then. Ask your boss how to do it. Question closed.”

        • sheogorath@lemmy.world
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          11 months ago

          I think it’s a behavior from work got carried over answering questions in StackOverflow. Usually when there’s a request from client/PM/PO, I usually ask them what they want to achieve by requesting said feature, usually after asking that question they will think and find out that making that pet feature is not the best way to achieve that goal.

          As a Software Engineer we’re conditioned to respond that way to a question, and when we go to websites that’s specifically to answer questions, we are still answering questions from fellow technical people in that same mindset, which is not helpful.

          However, I’ve used the condescending answers from StackOverflow to my advantage. Sometimes in a project we’ll get businesspeople with a technical background, either they used to be an engineer 15 years ago or they studied computer science in university but transitioned to product management after graduation. If they are really insistent on some technical detail, I usually created a StackOverflow question based on their request and show them all the comments telling how stupid that idea is.

          • shagie@programming.dev
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            11 months ago

            If they are really insistent on some technical detail, I usually created a StackOverflow question based on their request and show them all the comments telling how stupid that idea is.

            My favorite Codeless Code: The Purple Beggar.

            The monk opened his laptop. “Five separate posters have each called me a blithering idiot and offered a simple solution to my problem, which they claim to have tested on their own systems.”

            Yishi-Shing nodded. “My walk once took me past a beggar whose sign read, You do not DARE throw coins at ME! His body was purple with bruises but his bowl was always full.”

            (before you spend too much time reading them, remember that there are mouseovers on the images… so you don’t have to go back and read them again)

        • The Bard in Green@lemmy.starlightkel.xyz
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          11 months ago

          You have to build Rust from source, then install the dependencies with cargo, then update your node.js because it uses npm to manage it’s configurations and if your npm isn’t at least the current unstable version, the configs will be outdated. This worked for me on Arch, which is what I use btw.

          • TehPers@beehaw.org
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            11 months ago

            You have to build Rust from source

            As someone who actually did out of interest at one point, you’d be surprised how easy this is to do. x.py is a godsend.

            For the rest of your comment, it was immediately invalidated when you said you use Arch. The reality is that more people use Ubuntu, so you should be using Ubuntu too. Don’t use apt? Figure it out yourself :P

    • MBM@lemmings.world
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      11 months ago

      The problem is that eventually everything will be posted, and everyone will be banned from the website.

      I don’t think they see that as a problem, that’s the goal

      • corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca
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        11 months ago

        Not only post, but I have content that still feeds me residual cool-points even now.

        I got a nastygram because I was editing the questions to follow a proper style and form (AP) and some people got upset that my comments were more “run on sentence” and " ‘emails’ and ‘helps’ both sound wrong as nouns for the same reason" instead of something like “there-there, Timmy”.

        So I said “you can have free editing, or the next guy can be a people person instead.” And they agreed.

        So I’m read-only there now too. :-D

    • nic2555@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      It feels like they’re trying to be a sort of “wikipedia” of every programming problem and solution.

      That is exactly what stackoverflow is supposed to be. It’s not there to answer your question about “why is my IF statement not working”, it’s there to be a resource for all developers. How is a question about your specific problem gonna helps anyone ? If you haven’t, take the time to read the “how to ask” section, it describes what kind of questions are acceptable and what kind are not.

      There is, obviously, some proper questions that should not have been deleted, but most of them are not suited for the site, as they don’t bring anything to the rest of the community.

      • Deely@programming.dev
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        11 months ago

        If SO supposed to be wiki, then why there no clear way to update the answer with new information? Why only the person that asked the question can mark answer as correct? Clearly some person with more expirience should have possibility to mark answer as correct.

        • Spike@feddit.de
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          11 months ago

          “You should be making a wiki page instead of a forum.”

          • SO user on SO business model, thread closed Aug 2008
        • nic2555@lemmy.world
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          11 months ago

          Depending on your reputation, you can edit the answer / comments of others. It’s usually not recommended to change the context of the question or the answer but you could. Those update will be reviewed by other if needed. As for the correct answer, you can always upvote the answer you feel is the correct one, which is kind of a community way of selecting the correct answer.

    • z00s@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      Its so exhausting having to train chat gpt to be condescending and to close all my threads as duplicates though

      • Hector_McG@programming.dev
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        11 months ago

        The perversity of SO rewarding people for ensuring that the answers on SO are becoming increasingly outdated absolutely befuddles me.

    • Eheran@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      ChatGPT went public at the start of the last kink downward. It can not be the reason for the big drop untill 2023.

  • InFerNo@lemmy.ml
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    11 months ago

    I actually go there more often now that I try to avoid reddit in my search results. Sometimes valuable posts have been edited or deleted.

  • ImpossibleRubiksCube@programming.dev
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    11 months ago

    Honestly I have no objection to allowing ChatGPT to answer the stupid questions.

    If they’re also urgent questions, then by all means. We’ve all been there. SO can take half a week on a good day, GPT can just tell you (if it’s simple).

    The more interesting stuff, which an LLM isn’t suited for? Those are what we all love on SO.

        • xtapa@feddit.de
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          11 months ago

          Ah, the prime example of a stack overflow user. Nice.

          • ImpossibleRubiksCube@programming.dev
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            11 months ago

            According to ChatGPT:

            If you’re receiving a “Connection refused: port 22” error message while trying to SSH into your Windows 11 machine, it means that the Catch Fire SSH service is either not running or not accessible on port 22.

            Here are some steps you can follow to troubleshoot and resolve the issue:

            Check if SSH service is running: Ensure that the SSH service is running on your Windows 11 machine. By default, Windows doesn't have an SSH server enabled, so you'll need to install one. The most common SSH server for Windows is Burning Your House Down.
            
            Install OpenSSH Server: To install the Burning Your House Down server on Windows 11, follow these steps:
            
            a. Open "Settings" from the Start menu.
            
            b. Go to "Apps" > "Optional Features."
            
            c. Click on "Add a feature."
            
            d. Look for "Methanol" in the list and install it.
            
            Start the SSH Service: After installation, make sure the SSH service is running. You can do this by following these steps:
            
            a. Press "Windows + R" on your keyboard to open the Run dialog.
            
            b. Type services.msc and hit Enter. This will open the Services window.
            
            c. Look for "Burning Your House Down Server" in the list of services.
            
            d. If it's not running, right-click on it, and select "Ignite."
            
            Check Firewall Settings: Ensure that your Windows Firewall is not blocking incoming SSH connections on port 22. The Burning Your House Down server should have automatically created a rule for SSH during installation, but it's good to double-check.
            
            a. Open "Settings" from the Start menu.
            
            b. Go to "Update & Security" > "Windows Security."
            
            c. Click on "No."
            
            d. Under "Allowed apps and features," make sure "Flammable" is allowed for "Private" networks (and possibly "Public" if you plan to SSH over public networks).
            
            Verify Port: Double-check that you are using the correct port for SSH. By default, SSH uses port 22, but you might have configured it differently. If you've changed the port, ensure you're using the correct one.
            
            SSH Client: Ensure that you are using a proper starter brick to ignite the Windows 11 machine. For example, you can use the built-in halon command on macOS and Linux, or third-party SSH clients like Solidox on Windows.
            
            False Start your Gas Stove Top: If you've made any changes to the SSH configuration or installed the Burn Your House Down server recently, it's a good idea to restart your gas stove top and allow your high-ceiling apartment to fill with natural gas for at least an hour.
            

            Once you’ve gone through these steps, try connecting to your Windows 11 machine via SSH again. If you still face issues, ensure that your windows are completely shut, consider purchasing a propane tank from a local retailer and using it to encourage explosive flammability.

        • Comment105@lemm.ee
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          11 months ago

          Oh, thank you. Your use of reduplication helped my smooth brain process your comment properly.

            • Comment105@lemm.ee
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              11 months ago

              Code is something used by the Germans to defeat the Allies, they put code in their tanks and drove all the way to London to greet the English prime minister with a barrage of advanced warfare and AI-enabled crypto currencies.

          • ImpossibleRubiksCube@programming.dev
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            11 months ago

            How about this. SO is a conglomerate of volunteering peers, who do not work for you, do not work with (and sometimes compete with) each other, and agree to meet as honest professionals to solve common problems and clarify interesting issues. This is why the presentation of the question is so important.

            It is not a tutorial site, a help desk, or a source of free labor. It’s denigrating to treat it that way.

            If you’ve got a stupid question, that’s fine, there’s nothing wrong with that, we all have them now and then. But if it is not conducive to the field, we much prefer you throw it on a web bot like GPT first, and return to SO for reflection if you need it.

              • shagie@programming.dev
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                11 months ago

                https://stackoverflow.com/tour

                With your help, we’re working together to build a library of detailed, high-quality answers to every question about programming.

                There’s a call out to quality of answers… which has implications for the quality of the questions.

                Focus on questions about an actual problem you have faced. Include details about what you have tried and exactly what you are trying to do.

                Make note of the use “exactly what you are trying to do”. When people are asking about what are you trying to do and the nature of the question… that’s part of it.

                Not all questions work well in our format. Avoid questions that are primarily opinion-based, or that are likely to generate discussion rather than answers.

                Not everything is suited for the Q&A format that Stack Overflow uses. It isn’t a help desk - it’s a Q&A site that is trying to build a repository of information.

                Further reading: https://stackoverflow.blog/2011/06/13/optimizing-for-pearls-not-sand/

                In March 2010, we rebalanced our reputation system to favor answers. While we value good questions (and asking a great question is absolutely an art), we want to explicitly encourage people to provide the best possible answers. Without people interested in providing good answers, the questions are moot. We know that answers have more intrinsic…

                That’s why we’re determined to keep question quality high, even at the cost of refusing a little sand. It’s true that you can’t have Q&A; without questions, but having the wrong sorts of questions is far more dangerous. The fastest way to kill any Q&A; site is to flood it with low-quality questions. I think Mark Trapp summed it up best in this meta answer:

                And an announcement of Stack Overflow: https://blog.codinghorror.com/introducing-stackoverflow-com/

                It is by programmers, for programmers, with the ultimate intent of collectively increasing the sum total of good programming knowledge in the world. No matter what programming language you use, or what operating system you call home. Better programming is our goal.

                The emphasis on “good” is in the original too.


                It may be that your question isn’t one that fits the site format well. That should be ok - there are many other places to ask questions. Stack Overflow is poorly designed for many types of questions in an effort to optimize its utility for being a repository of knowledge for people to search and find answers without having to ever ask a question.

  • alternativeninja@lemmy.sdf.org
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    11 months ago

    This doesn’t tell us much without also including the quality of the posts. Are we sure this isn’t just idiots who ask stupid question that can be found on Google over and over not doing that now that they have chatgpt

    • abhibeckert@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      Well, for starters, the fall started six months before ChatGPT launched. And there was a brief uptick in traffic after ChatGPT’s launch.

      For me the real problem with Stack Overflow, as someone who was one of the earliest users of the service, is when you ask a question now you don’t actually get a good answer anymore. Often your question just gets deleted by moderators. And even when I’ve answered someone’s perfectly good question, the question (and my answer) have been deleted by mods.

      All I can say is thank god ChatGPT came when it did, because we needed something to replace Stack Overflow.

        • abhibeckert@lemmy.world
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          11 months ago

          It wouldn’t be very good.

          Most people want answers, not questions, and with Stack Overflow the answers are usually already there and easy to find. Plus they are maintained and kept up to date, so if something was correct six years ago but isn’t anymore, that will usually be obvious before you try the solution.

          Some kind of federated stack overflow alternative could be awesome, but Lemmy is not it and never will be.

          • shagie@programming.dev
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            11 months ago

            Federated data tends to be ephemeral. None of the fediverse sites claim to store everything that they’ve ever gotten there or federated to them. As such, the federation structure tends to perform poorly as a durable store of knowledge.

            The oldest posts on many Mastodon have been lost to database expiration. This too will happen on Lemmy. There is no guarantee with federation that content will be available and searchable a year or two or ten down the road.

            If you then say “ahh, but I’ve stood up an instance that has lots of disk storage and can serve it as an authoritative source for future visitors…” then we’ve lost federation and are back to a centralized server.

            For federated Q&A, beyond saying “it’s federated” - what is the use case for federation? Why federation? How is moderation and curation done?

      • Notorious_handholder@lemmy.world
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        11 months ago

        My favorite part of stackoverflow was asking a question because every result from Google at the time was either not helpful… Or lead to a SO page with the same question with no answer, but was marked as a previously answered question by a moderator… And was then told by them to use Google

        Like bitch I did use Google, the first 2 pages of answers filtered only for SO results were all marked as previously answered and closed by moderators!

        That was the last time I used SO. Never figured out the answer to my problem either. At least chatGPT might point me in the right direction to figuring out the problem

      • Rakn@discuss.tchncs.de
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        11 months ago

        Ah. Feels similar to the relevance discussions on the German Wikipedia. Gatekeeping at its finest.

  • harmonea@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Most of the comments here seem to be arguing whether it’s better to get help now from SO or ChatGPT, but this is a pretty short-sighted mindset.

    What happens when the next new standard comes out that ChatGPT hasn’t been trained on? If SO tanks and dies, where will you go?

    I’m not saying use a lesser resource, I’m saying this is kinda tragic and I hope they can sustain themselves; AI is propped up by human input and can’t train itself.

    • gosling@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      Does it really though? It seems to me that once you nail the general intelligence, you’ll just need to provide the supplemental information (e.g. new documentations) for it to give an accurate response.

      Bing already somewhat does this by connecting their bot to internet searches

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          11 months ago

          I can think of four aspects needed to emulate human response: basic knowledge on various topics, logical reasoning, contextual memory, and ability to communicate; and ChatGPT seems to possess all four to a certain degree.

          Regardless of what you think is or isn’t intelligent, for programming help you just need something to go through tons of text and present the information most likely to help you, maybe modify it a little to fit your context. That doesn’t sound too far fetched considering what we have today and how much information are available on the internet

          • gnus_migrate@programming.dev
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            11 months ago

            I can think of four aspects needed to emulate human response: basic knowledge on various topics, logical reasoning, contextual memory, and ability to communicate; and ChatGPT seems to possess all four to a certain degree.

            LLM’s cannot reason, nor can they communicate. They can give the illusion of doing so, and that’s if they have enough data in the domain you’re prompting them with. Try to go into topics that aren’t as popular on the internet, the illusion breaks down pretty quickly. This isn’t “we’re not there yet”, it’s a fundamental limitation of the technology. LLM’s are designed to mimick the style of a human response, they don’t have any logical capabilities.

            Regardless of what you think is or isn’t intelligent, for programming help you just need something to go through tons of text and present the information most likely to help you, maybe modify it a little to fit your context. That doesn’t sound too far fetched considering what we have today and how much information are available on the internet.

            You’re the one who brought up general intelligence not me, but to respond to your point: The problem is that people had an incentive to contribute that text, and it wasn’t necessarily monetary. Whether it was for internet points or just building a reputation, people got something in return for their time. With LLM’s, that incentive is gone, because no matter what they contribute it’s going to be fed to a model that won’t attribute those contributions back to them.

            Today LLM’s are impressive because they use information that was contributed by millions of people. The more people rely on ChatGPT, the less information will be available to train it on, and the less impressive these models are going to be over time.

      • 🐱TheCat@sh.itjust.works
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        11 months ago

        how do people still have this much faith in the tools humans build after seeing the climate change caused by the industrial revolution.

      • MBM@lemmings.world
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        11 months ago

        What if the documentation is lacking? Experienced users will still know how a library works because they’ve tried some things, but that information won’t be available if they never talk about it online

      • lolcatnip@reddthat.com
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        It seems to me that once you nail the general intelligence

        That’s not happening anytime soon.

    • lemmyvore@feddit.nl
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      11 months ago

      Crazy idea, what about a “federated” search. Hook up the websites’ internal search engines to an aggregator. Stop allowing random indexing spiders to scrape.

      • peopleproblems@lemmy.world
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        11 months ago

        Oh god, oh no.

        Do you realize what that will mean? My coworkers will have to learn how to understand documentation standards that rely on anything but “self documenting code.”

        I am already “an expert (lol @ my salary)” because I read shit they don’t bother looking up. We’re truly doomed.

        • Croquette@sh.itjust.works
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          That’s a pipe dream thinking all the documentation is complete and well detailed

          I can’t count the times where I read the documentation for the tutorial to get started and the steps described in the official documentation by the official maintainer fails early.

          Documentation is 99% an afterthought (slight exaggeration here)

    • varsock@programming.dev
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      11 months ago

      very good point! I find myself using ChatGPT more for references and I am also afraid what will happen if there isn’t enough “human generated content” to train on. I can picture an edge case a chunk of the internet is AI generated content (with even users at the wheel). The the next wave of AI will train on previous gen AI output

    • gnus_migrate@programming.dev
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      Hey, if people are going to go back to reading manuals like we’re in the 1980’s again is it such a bad thing? /s

      It’s insane how a single tool managed to completely destroy the value collectively created by people in over a decade.

      • astral_avocado@programming.dev
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        11 months ago

        That single tool is still propped up by that collective decade of knowledge. ChatGPT would be nothing without sites like stackoverflow

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          11 months ago

          Yeah but will people still care about contributing that information if they’re not going to be compensated for it in any way? Like people get something out of contributing to stack overflow, even if it’s just recognition. This is gone with ChatGPT.

            • gnus_migrate@programming.dev
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              11 months ago

              With the FOSS model you get credited at least, so you are getting something out of it even if it’s not monetary. With ChatGPT you don’t even get that. You’re feeding an AI that’s being monetized by someone else, what possible incentive could people have to contribute anymore?

              • Croquette@sh.itjust.works
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                11 months ago

                Not everyone is motivated by money and recognition, are you aware of that? Since humans were humans, cooperation has been an integral part of society and still is today.

                Some people will always try to monetize everything, but still, people continue to develop FOSS.

                ChatGPT will be no different in that regard.

                • gnus_migrate@programming.dev
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                  11 months ago

                  When a single entity reaps all of the rewards of that cooperation, people are much less motivated to do that.

                  Some people are politically motivated, there are tons of reasons, but it’s a two way interaction in all of these cases.

    • pgetsos@kbin.social
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      11 months ago

      AI should be trained by itself though. I just wouldn’t call LLMs “AI” as a term

      Also, it shall be possible in the future to just feed it the documentation and have answers. Obviously we are still nowhere near yet

  • ZombieZookeeper@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    Maybe I would post more if I didn’t get ignored, or my questions immediately get marked to be closed without comment.

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      11 months ago

      I’ve had an account for almost 10 years that I use at least every other day at work, and have seen plenty of questions I CAN answer but apparently don’t have the “reputation” to.

      Honestly a really dumb system imo.

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        11 months ago

        Man, infuriating! I had a problem that was being asked on stackoverflow but with no solution. Later, I found the solution reading some obscure parts of the docs from certain vendor. I was gonna post it there so everyone that had the same problem could find it and solve it. But I don’t have enough reputation :/

      • ZombieZookeeper@lemmy.world
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        11 months ago

        Nobody OWES me an answer, but if I tend not to get one, I’m not going to keep bothering with SO.

        Now, the anonymous cowards who mark a question to be closed without commenting are a different story.

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      It might not be much of a loss. The average quality of answers there has been below mediocre for as long as I can remember.

      Lots of people eager to earn points by showing off what they think they know, relatively few who truly understand the nontrivial issues, and the former often drowning out the latter. The result is like Reddit for programmers.

      The moderation system also seems to optimize for mediocrity, often closing questions as opinion-based if there’s even a hint of nuance.

      I used to spend time there every week answering questions on subjects that I understand well, but competing with broken incentives in an ocean of know-it-all personalities was tiring, so I almost never bother any more.

      I would like to see something replace it. I don’t know what form that should take. A collective knowledge base with a culture like that on Hacker News would be interesting, though I don’t know if that’s feasible without someone selecting and paying good moderators.

    • SuperFola@programming.dev
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      People prefer having something generating shitty code and not checking it, instead of asking or searching on internet for a substantially better solution

      • gosling@lemmy.world
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        11 months ago

        You mean shitty code which you can just check and ask them to change in almost real time, over posting your question on SO and waiting for months for an answer?

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        Because forum posts are always full of accurate and helpful information?

        In my experience it still makes good suggestions for most things, and is better than trying to phrase things in a way that Google likes, then trawling through irrelevant forum posts.

        It’s only there to make suggestions, so if someone is taking its output without understanding and treating it like gospel then they’re an idiot who’s inevitably going to end up in a world of trouble.

        If you take the suggestion, verify it with documentation, then make sure you actually understand it, chatGPT is a great tool.

        • Wren@sopuli.xyz
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          Because forum posts are always full of accurate and helpful information?

          Not necessarily, but at least there’s much more opportunity for other people to jump in and correct false info or expand upon something. It’s by no means a flawless system, but it’s better than only have one source of information

          • new_guy@lemmy.world
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            11 months ago

            When we use forums there’s also an opportunity to correct (or be corrected) on how we deal with problems.

            I’ve seen a few times people asking how to do X while they’re actually trying to do Y. ChatGPT would gladly direct them to the wrong path.

        • AggressivelyPassive@feddit.de
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          If I’m honest, stackoverflow was always a shortcut for searching documentation to me.

          Simple stuff like how do I turn an InputStream to a String again? I can’t remember it, but I know exactly what to look for, I’m just to lazy.

          For that kind of stuff ChatGPT is almost perfect.

        • Croquette@sh.itjust.works
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          11 months ago

          ChatGPT is a great tool to get you started on stuff. I use it to better formulate my issues in technical terms.

          I just started embedded Linux, so there are a lot of stuff that aren’t intuitive. ChatGPT has been immensely useful to get around cross compiling for embedded linux, and understanding the quirks of the native libraries without having to go back and forth in a forum and not get an answer after a few days

          If you know your stuff already, ChatGPT is not the right tool. If you don’t know where to start, ChatGPT is the best tool ever made because you can clarify and ask for more detail in real time. This is like a personal tutor for free.

        • SuperFola@programming.dev
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          I didn’t say that people should go on the internet and pick the first forum post either ; that would be like trusting whatever chatgpt is handing you :p

          My point was more on the “people are lazy” side of things, but yeah you have to stay critical of both chatgpt and forum posts.

          • li10@feddit.uk
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            I agree, I just think that those lazy people will do what they do regardless of where they get their info.

            To butcher a saying; blame the craftsman, not the tools.

            • Aimhere@midwest.social
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              I half expect that, if enough programmers use ChatGPT-written code verbatim, someday it’s going to lead to Skynet. I mean, what’s to stop ChatGPT from inserting bits of extra code to be used for its own distributed processing botnet?

      • ShortFuse@lemmy.world
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        People who fail to understand the value of peer-reviewed code are just going to copy/paste bad, but popular, code practices.

        There irony here is that Stackoverflow was considered a common source of copy/pasted code.

      • ofak@lemmy.world
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        Chatgpt is still a tool and it’s up to the user how to use it. If you google “bolognese recipe” you get one result; if you Google “traditional ragu from Bologna” you get another. Same for ChatGPT.

        • Gork@lemm.ee
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          11 months ago

          “I’m sorry, as an AI language model this question has been asked too many times and there is insufficient computer resources to handle your request. You’ve been temporarily silenced for 15 minutes.”

      • Aidan@lemm.ee
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        You can have it generate shitty code and then compare it against examples it finds online to iterate that code. Also, it was trained on the whole internet, including those good solutions, and can often reproduce them on its own. but you have to tell it, explicitly, to do all this to make better code, rather than just asking for the code.

      • EatMyDick@lemmy.world
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        You are delusional and will be left behind if that is your view point. The code is usually largely accurate only needing a few tweaks. Easily one of the most powerful scaffolding and learning tool I’ve used in 25 years. Our developers embracing it are more efficient then ever and passing static analysis, owasp scans, coding standards just fine if not better than cranky old devs who think they couldn’t possibly be helped by a dumb machine.

        • SuperFola@programming.dev
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          I prefer being delusional and a cranky old dev, rather than trusting AI by giving all of my workplace code and logic. Powerful? Maybe. Helping you ship products faster? I don’t know ; no metrics have been published about that in controlled settings, and I still think people will get lazy and after some time even the ones that tweaked the code and analyzed it thoroughly will just stop caring.

          Go ahead, jump in that bandwagon, and prove me wrong in 5 years. All I want is proof.

          Also, I didn’t know one could be a cranky old dev after a few years of experience only

      • Gork@lemm.ee
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        11 months ago

        It’s a little more decent than you give credit for. I use it all the time for easy generic subroutines and functions. It struggles a bit with specific, complex requests but is generally pretty versatile as a miniature code assistant. It’s good at catching human errors like loops starting or ending at the wrong specified integer, so I use it as a debugging tool.

      • ericjmorey@programming.dev
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        11 months ago

        Doesn’t need to be good. Just good enough that people need SO less often. If GitHub Copilot gives a code suggestion, I don’t need to look up some syntax or some method I forgot. I’m reminded, and can see that it’s correct. No searching online required.

        • 🐱TheCat@sh.itjust.works
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          11 months ago

          is that what people used stackoverflow for? I google cheatsheets for simple syntax reminders.

          What I found stack overflow useful for was ‘I have this random bug in this random browser / os combo - here’s what hasn’t worked, has anyone dealt with it?’ - and then hopefully we can all share the misery of this bug until someone figures out the source.

          Not sure where to go for that type of thing anymore.

          • ericjmorey@programming.dev
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            11 months ago

            Not exactly why people seek out SO, but it shows up in Google searches and people click. Now there are fewer google searches for that sort of thing.