This community is:
A general purpose programming community for English speakers
Language specific posts like:
and ide specific posts like:
are not general purpose. Posts like that ruined /r/programming for me, and this community seems to be going down the same road. I’m here to read about programming concepts that can be applied to any/most languages, not patch notes for 10 different Js frameworks posted by karma farming bots. If I wanted to read posts like that, I’d have subbed to /c/javascript…
Do you agree with me that they should be removed from /c/programming, and limited only to their respective communities? Or have I missed the point of this community?
I didn’t think of that.
Same here
I think there should be a balance. It might not be ok to lmgtfy people in communities like /c/learn-programming, but it should be fine in others. Just to enforce basic etiquette like googling for a few minutes, or reading the community rules before posting.
Great points. /c/computer-science does sound really nice.
What about adding a guideline over here along the lines of:
if your post is specific to only one programming language or tool, it should be something that's interesting, otherwise check out our [community list] or [local community search engine], and if the community exists, post over there to get better feedback` (add a list of programming related communities in the sidebar) (maybe also write it as faux code, and turn it into ascii art, it would help catch attention)
That would limit automated style patch notes to affected communities. So “node version x patch notes” is not fine, but it would be fine to post “node finally supports tail recursion optimization” and just link the patch notes.
People could redirect posts that should be in specific communities, so for example:
“How do i x in python?” -> /c/python, “Should i x in Js” -> /c/javascript, “What first language/editor?” -> goto /c/learn-programming, “how do i keep warm in the winter?” -> /c/intellij
That would help grow those communities, and over here those posts would be filtered out by both active and hot.
It would be fine to post like: “emacs does something really cool”, “c# binary makes atoms look fat!”, “does rust make lemmy go FASTA?!?!!”
And it would preserve the general mood with posts like: “fav programming music?”, “programming and humility”, “is chatgpt cheating?” as they’re not specific to any language
right back at you, and thanks, this was fun