When reading Put your mouth where your money is? it occurred to me that one way to clarify the rationale behind the downvote would be to have a one line text input on the same row as the vote buttons. The text input here would be sent as a message to the node's author, and not be visible to other users. You could also send positive messages of course. It might be nice to make this message anonymous to keep the spirit of voting intact.
Due to what could be a large number of messages being sent it might be good to categorize the messages generated and provide an option to ignore them.
There is a "Send private /msg to OP" link associated with each node and available when reading a thread (rather than browsing a section).
However, I suspect most downvoters would ignore such an opportunity even were it more in their face. A vote, up or down, is a quick but fairly blunt way to express approval or disapproval of something. It may have nothing to do with a node's content even. Although a quick perusal or nodes and their votes indicates that random voting is not prevalent.
If you (the reader rather than OP specifically) receive consistent down votes check that you have read the site documentation about posting technique and that you are not being inflamatory in some fashion.
Why not stock responses too? Probably 90% of the downvotes in SoPW could be handled with one of these:
(It's Monday. I'm cranky.)
Actually, I like this. A quick and easy way to send someone something straight from Dominus' Good Advice and Maxims for Programmers. ;-)
(You'll like it even more when you're cranky.)
One of my favorites is:
#11943 Ah yes, and you are the first person to have noticed this bug since 1987. Sure.
It reminds me of a programmer I worked with in the 1980s, who had just recently converted to C from FORTRAN, and had gotten into the (bad) habit of declaring array dimensions to have one extra value each:
int max_length[NSHAPES + 1], max_height[NSHAPES + 1];
/* ... */
for (i = 1; i <= NSHAPES; i++) {
/* ... */
}
(Which is a lot like the (equally bad) strategy in Perl of reassigning the variable $[ ...)
As a result of index renumbering, this programmer would encounter, at least once a week, some hard-to-find bug, and would always ask me "Do you think this might be a compiler bug?" If only I'd had MJD's list back then! ;)
Oh, I'm glad you found that!
So, I made myself a "ticker" which displays one of those gems at random in my XP Nodelet (by way of my Free Nodelet). Witness here. It's the 4th line. The 3rd line is a similarly random selection from Oblique Strategies.
I'm curious. I noticed you got a few down-votes on the OP. Did many people send you a message? With Grandfather calling attention to the "Send private /msg" feature, and the topic of the OP also pointing in the same direction, one would think a few people would get the idea, even if it's not anonymous, if they had anything at all to say.
My intent in creating this node was to provide a forum to discuss this idea, as it was too much of a tangent in the original context. I see it as a way to quickly communicate the flaws in a post to the author, which would hopefully lead to better future posts.
The lack of messages could be due to a few things:
If an inline comment box was available I would be more inclined to add a note, and if it was anonymous some people might be more comfortable with using it.
I followed up a query of mine - with the solution, thinking that a question with an answer is more useful than just a question.
But someone voted it down.
Why? I don't know. I'd love to know.
The question was considered useful (Reputation: 8). But apparently the answer is not.
As someone who very rarely votes someone down my knee jerk response is: Demand a reason. Perhaps a pulldown form (RTFM, homework, WRONG, Flamebait, Other), with "other" requiring commentary. I don't care to know who, just why.
Thog.
This discussion has already been done to death, see: [id://489431]
Also, there are very good reasons why not to do this, see: [id://511530]
I down-voted your node. Can you hazzard a guess as to why?
I read through the nodes you listed as well as several others that were mentioned within. The bulk of the comments were either complaining about losing XP and wanting to know why it happened, or flaming the people who complained about the XP loss. My natural inclination is to skip these conversations as they are not civil or useful. I'd prefer to keep that to slashdot and fark.
However there were some good nodes that contributed to the topic buried in there:
I don't have an opinion on whether it should be anonymous or not. For myself, I wouldn't care if people knew it was me being negative about their bone-headed ideas, but I suppose some people might want to hide who it is that's being stupid when they downvote such a clever person as me.
I like this from a voters standpoint. When voting it would be nice to have the option of attatching a message occasionaly. Sometimes novices need a little push in the right direction and you don't want to do it publicly. I try to send messages but often forget. If it was as easy as choosing my vote, typing my message and then continueing to read the thread I would be more inclined to provide some feedback for cases where a reply is too much and a pm is just too much work ;) (yea i'm lazy whats your point?)
This could be a setting that defaults to off so no one who doesn't want it has to deal with it.
I don't think it should be anonymous though. I don't realy see a reason to make it so and if it is implemented I would want the option to not be anonymous.
Those are my 2 cents, over all I think it is a nice idea that can add value to the PerlMonks experience without a lot of work. Arguments that this is a non-issue often provide links to many large threads that show this isn't a true non-issue. Obviously it isn't critical or massivly important, but it would be a nice feature to have.
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