this post was submitted on 04 Jul 2023
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Programming
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Wouldn't !programming_languages@programming.dev already be a more appropriate community for content about programming concepts applied to languages? If that doesn't cover all the Computer Science concepts you'd like to read about, then it might be worth suggesting the creation of more specific CS communities, such as: (software)
!architecture
,!algorithms
,!data_structures
, etc. and then just subscribe to those to customize and curate your feed ?I don't think your clickbait here is fair, as the original post you linked to doesn't really have a similarly sensationalized title, nor anything about neckbeards. Chauncey Rose, King of Neckbeards, would be sadly disappointed... :( You may be envisioning the term programming a bit narrower than most, as programmers often deal with dependency management, documentation lifecycles, passing down tribal knowledge, juggling infrastructures, things that go way beyond just language concepts. It should also be noted that there is no karma on Lemmy, as vote counts are attributed to post and comments, not individuals. AFAIK, there's no public API to query another user's total score of fake internet points.
That is a fair criticism, as generic or low quality questions should be discouraged from being blasted across the (main)
!programming
community. I don't mind when someone puts forth a well researched issue with an extensive write up and is merely probing or polling the community at large for insight or opinions, but if it's just a "How do I do X?" questions prompting "You should do Y!" answers, then those posts should be relegated to dedicated Q&A communities or appropriate stack exchange sites.Regardless, I still feel like each instance really needs a
!main
equivalent, a default space for general submissions where posts can be cross posted to or from more specialized communities, providing exposure to a wider audience, while also letting link aggregators do what they do best by allowing users to rank what they think is relevant for the particular community, or general to the instance at large in this case.Instead of naming this kind of community explicitly as
!main
, I like how!programming
has been used for this instance instead, giving it a familiar title that reflects the instance that is it's namesake, while still encouraging this catch-all like community to remain in scope. For example,!meta
would be unsuitable for this given it is already reserved for self reflection of the instance, much like Meta Stack Exchange.One thing that could help improve this is better first-class support for cross-posting, integrations such as selectively merging discussion threads from communities on the same instance, to avoid fragmenting discussions, e.g. like how Hacker News can merge topics that reach mega-thread status. Posters could choose or be force to enable such cross posting for certain communities. E.g. if you want to post to the general
!programming
community, you first have to put forth a little effort to categorize your post by cross-posting from the most relevant community first. Although, this could be more akin to #tags, that may scale better with multiple matching categories.Another feature that could help would be more advance moderation tools, such as post migration. Instead of closing or deleting offtopic posts, moderators could migrate posts with existing discussion threads to more appropriate communities on the same instance, e.g. just like how Discourse can re-categorize and manage user posts. I'm not sure how the logistics like the handoff between communities could work or how votes should be retained, but it's just a thought.
Thanks, didn't know about that one
It looked cool, so i made a joke and maybe more people clicked it. Also, when the author says you prolly shouldn't do this, it makes sense that the experts don't want you to know about it.
None of those concepts are language specific.
That's really nice, didn't know that
I agree completely.
What do you think about adding a guideline over here along the lines of:
reasoning> It should also be noted that there is no karma on Lemmy, as vote counts are attributed to post and comments, not individuals. AFAIK, there’s no public API to query another user’s total score of fake internet points.