> Will the same etiquette work when we start to get lots of questions from Java programmers? :)
If you mean "will we have to maintain the same etiquette?" then, sadly, yes.
(And I said we were done trolling! ;) )
Firstly, I would definitely like to second the group hug! I'd say best
learning community on the net, that I know of.
It also drives away people who don't know if their question is naive
On 5/24/11, Ketil Malde <ketil@malde.org> wrote:
> The point is that at face value, being rude and arrogant may drive away
> naive questions, but is much more likely to result in endless threads of
> discussions of etiquette, usually laced with ample amounts of
> hostility. This actually decreases signal to noise.
>
> Also it not only drives away the naive questions, it drives away the
> people asking them. People who might at some point become informed,
> contributing members of the community.
or not. When you don't want to be yelled at, you have a strong
tendency to err on the side of not asking. This slows down learning
significantly, and decreases the number of people who can answer
others' questions in the future.
Does anybody know how much this has happened?
> Some people quit haskell-cafe for other (better policed?)
> forums, so perhaps we are too liberal? I hope not.
I'm very interested in how we can maintain this amazing resource as
Haskell's user base grows. Will the same etiquette work when we start
to get lots of questions from Java programmers? :)
Tom
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