Lemmy is obviously inspired by Reddit. My map of the fediverse obviously not complete, so I ask myself if there is some free as in free software comparable to a q/a platform like stackoverflow?

  • Aarkon@feddit.de
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    3 years ago

    I like Lemmy a lot! But I think the changes to the UI would be quite substantial (like dumping the ever deeper nesting of answers), and even some data model changes might be required. Like already said, you can’t accept answers here, and there is no score system - be that for the better or worse, but I think that discriminating between questions with and without accepted answers bears some user value, and the score is part of what really gets users going.

    • DPUGT2
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      3 years ago

      Are the votes not a score system? There’s a number next to each comment. It’s not even clear to me that Stack Overflow’s “accepted” is meaningful… how often does it differ from the highest score? Maybe 1 in 100? Depending on who asked, they might not even be the best person to determine the best/accepted/whatever answer (though more and more SE just nukes those questions outright).

      The problems with SE have everything to do with their culture and Wikipedia-channeling-exclusionist policies. They want ever-more-narrowly focused questions until it becomes impossible to ask interesting questions they do not consider off-topic. God help you if your question is tangentially related to a second SE (even if it doesn’t belong there), they’ll punt it there, and then those guys will close it because it’s off-topic.

      You can’t fix culture. And I’m not sure how you grow a new one that would end up any differently.

      • Aarkon@feddit.de
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        3 years ago

        You’re right that SE’s culture is awful (I just today experienced an example proving your point).

        With the score I mean the user’s score. I’m still undecided if it is a good thing at all, because in a way it rates people, but on the other hand you could say the quality of your posts determines your rating. After all, it’s gamification. Once you implement a metric for something, people will start optimizing the metric instead of what’s being measured, which is another point in favour of ditching a user score.

        Having an accepted answer or not gives you a quick hint though if further engagement is requested. I’d think of it as a useful marker for people coming to the platform where their time is best spent.

    • ghost_laptop
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      3 years ago

      I think a lot of that can be done with almost no modification to the back end, since it’s pretty flexible and it’s not that different, the GUI would need to be done from scratch but it’s the easiest thing to code, and Lemmy devs have said a couple of time they would like the back end to be used in different ways.