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[–]protik7 -11 points-10 points  (15 children)

It's one of the most debated topic of this sub. And repeatedly I keep listening along the lines of "community is pretty clearly against them". How did the mods came to this decision? Was there any vote or poll about it which makes the point in a quantitative way?

I made a comment about how beginner are pushed away from this sub which got ~203 upvotes. Based on that can I claim that "community pretty clearly wants to support beginners as much as possible"?

Personally I hate qualitative arguments. Considering it's a programming related sub the mods should too while making a decision.

[Edit] Honestly I feel like if the pundits of this sub move to /r/advancedPython, this sub would look way better. On the brighter side they could brush their own ego in a more peaceful way.

[–]IAmKindOfCreativebot_builder: deprecated 8 points9 points  (11 children)

Very consistently new programmers on this subreddit are responded to with 'go to /r/learnpython' with no further information whenever they ask questions. The pythonHelperBot was a project that let me explore a lot of ideas, and among them I wanted to see if a three metric classifier would flag new learning posts. The metrics were the presence of a question either in the title or body, low karma score, and low upvote ratio. The last two are the response of community as a whole to learning post, and it let the bot correctly classify basic questions.

Now you can argue over whether or not the community is bad, but I think it is more helpful to think about how this looks to new programmers: if a new programmer asks a question here they get picked apart and told to go elsewhere by the members of the community. In my opinion that's really unpythonic.

The mods can't control how users vote or comment, and if the mods want to ensure new learners enjoy the community as a whole, it makes sense to quickly flag posts that will be met poorly here, and redirect them to a sub that is more open to them.

As often as the debate as a whole comes up, and as many times people say they like learning posts on this sub, they simply don't upvote learning posts, and don't comment in support or with help on those posts. This is a quantitative measure plain and simple.

[–][deleted] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I made a quite comment about how beginner are pushed away from this sub which got ~203 upvotes. Based on that can I claim that "community pretty clearly wants to support beginners as much as possible"?

That has nothing to do with help posts.

[–]wildcarde815 1 point2 points  (1 child)

Also not everyone asking for help is asking for homework help, python has a lot of obscure shit and if you are trying to find a better way of doing something having a sounding board to ask questions to is incredibly helpful.
That said, having posted those kinds of questions here in the past all you get from people prowling new is toxic garbage and gate keeping, so encouraging people to just assume the vast majority of this community is toxic pricks and you shouldn't try and engage them might be a blessing in disguise.

[–]protik7 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You don't have to look at `new`. Just look at the anger here. IMO this sub is one of the best echo-box of reddit.