tea.mathoverflow.net - Discussion Feed (Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?) 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/ Lussumo Vanilla & Feed Publisher Charles Staats comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18590) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18590#Comment_18590 2012-03-01T09:59:38-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Charles Staats http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/297/ Suppose that the question is "How do you embed the complete graph on a countably infinite set of vertices in 3-space?" One very easy answer (to a mathematician) is to take any discrete ... Suppose that the question is "How do you embed the complete graph on a countably infinite set of vertices in 3-space?" One very easy answer (to a mathematician) is to take any discrete subset of 3-space for your vertices, and then use transversality to ensure that no two edges intersect. To someone at a more basic level, this answer would be extremely confusing; such a person would probably need an explicit construction, which a mathematician might find tedious to read through.

(NOTE: I'm not claiming that this question is necessarily mathoverflow-appropriate in any case.)

More generally, scheme-theoretic language can make a lot of commutative algebra more transparent and geometric to someone who understands it. Category theoretic language can do similar things. And so on.

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deane.yang comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18589) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18589#Comment_18589 2012-03-01T09:44:10-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 deane.yang http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/9/ Charles, I'm not sure I understand this: "Someone who has the mathematical maturity to understand a more advanced (and probably briefer) answer may well find it easier to understand than the ... Charles Staats comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18588) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18588#Comment_18588 2012-03-01T09:32:48-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Charles Staats http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/297/ Kaveh: While I applaud your desire to encourage students to ask questions, I think that telling them they should not find it humiliating to ask questions with simple and easy answers is about as ... Kaveh: While I applaud your desire to encourage students to ask questions, I think that telling them they should not find it humiliating to ask questions with simple and easy answers is about as useful as exhorting the hungry and naked to be fed and clothed. Many people will feel humiliated when they find that they have asked a question with an easy answer. Pretending that there is no issue here, or telling them that they have no rational reason to feel humiliated, is likely to compound the shame by suggesting that there is something wrong with them for feeling humiliated. When I am in a lecture and not understanding something, I am far more likely than most of my peers to ask questions--perhaps too many questions. The way I achieved this was not by trying to pretend I did not find it humiliating when my questions revealed my own ignorance or lack of understanding, but by training myself to continue in spite of the potential for humiliation.

Concerning MO more directly, I think that, for the most part, the "inappropriately forwarded" questions we are talking about are at least at the level of the Springer GTM ("Graduate Texts in Mathematics") series. (I don't mean to say that anything at this level should be kept, but that few if any questions below this level should be kept.) However, I also would like to point out that a question asked on MO is likely to be answered differently from the same question asked on MSE, because of the assumed mathematical maturity of the asker. Someone who has the mathematical maturity to understand a more advanced (and probably briefer) answer may well find it easier to understand than the more elementary answer they are likely to receive on MSE.

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Yemon Choi comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18563) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18563#Comment_18563 2012-02-28T15:27:28-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Yemon Choi http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/81/ Another one which I think should be moved, even though asked in good faith. Another one which I think should be moved, even though asked in good faith.

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Kaveh comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18560) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18560#Comment_18560 2012-02-27T11:42:33-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Kaveh http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/325/ @Storkle, I think there is no reason to feel humiliated. It seems quite normal to me that sometimes we don't know the answer to a question which has a simple and easy answer, particularly when the ... @Storkle, I think there is no reason to feel humiliated. It seems quite normal to me that sometimes we don't know the answer to a question which has a simple and easy answer, particularly when the question is not from our area of expertise. If someone is asking a question which is at the level of undergraduate textbook exercise (without any explicit or implicit indication that the answer they are looking for is not the standard answer) then the right thing to do in my opinion is to politely forward them to MSE.

I think it is the wrong attitude to act as if people who feel humiliated are right, and IMHO, this attitude is partially responsible for many students being reluctant to ask questions, not only on MO but also in lectures. I don't like this perspective being encouraged on MO. If you agree that there is no reason to feel humiliated, then what we need to do is not to act as if those who feel so are right, but to make it clear that being forwarded to MSE is normal and is not humiliating.

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Storkle comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18559) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18559#Comment_18559 2012-02-27T08:22:05-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Storkle http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/177/ I think the main worry is that mathoverflow.net will eventually lose out to math.stackexchange. Already it seems to me that many interesting questions at the graduate level have moved there, and as a ... I think the main worry is that mathoverflow.net will eventually lose out to math.stackexchange. Already it seems to me that many interesting questions at the graduate level have moved there, and as a result it is now more entertaining for me to visit that site than this one. MO remains a better place for asking research questions, although unfortunately in my field almost none of the experts frequent MO (one did, but seems to have quit).

Personally, I would already feel more comfortable asking a research question on math.stackexchange: though my questions on MO have always been well-received, I feel a bit nervous every time I ask one, and I wouldn't worry at all on math.se. This seems to me to be a problem for the long-term health of MO.

Kaveh: as others have pointed out, it is an empirical fact that people do get offended when their questions get the more-appropriate-for-math.SE treatment. The way your post was written it seems that you disagree. Do you still disagree, or are you ready to agree that people "can get offended"? Or perhaps what you really meant was what Tom suggested, that people "should not" get offended?

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Charles Staats comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18558) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18558#Comment_18558 2012-02-26T12:56:38-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Charles Staats http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/297/ (See Tom Leinster's comment for a much briefer version of mine.) (See Tom Leinster's comment for a much briefer version of mine.)

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Charles Staats comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18557) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18557#Comment_18557 2012-02-26T12:55:23-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Charles Staats http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/297/ Kaveh: Feelings are not rational. Just because you do not consider it humiliating to suggest to someone else that their question is more suitable for MSE, does not imply that they will not feel ... Kaveh: Feelings are not rational. Just because you do not consider it humiliating to suggest to someone else that their question is more suitable for MSE, does not imply that they will not feel humiliated to be receiving the suggestion. Even knowing that we should not take reactions to our questions personally, most people cannot help but have emotional responses (typically pride, humiliation, and/or indignation) to comments, votes, etc. And I think pretending otherwise--trying to critique questions, answers, etc. in a purely rational and insensitive fashion--is a good way to drive away all but the very "thick-skinned" from MathOverflow.

In the particular case of recommendations to StackExchange: There are certain types of questions which I agree can be redirected to MSE without any irrational implications of inadequacy. A good example would be the question, asked before the advent of MSE, about how fast to move in a rainstorm to minimize how wet you get. Although many professional mathematicians might find this question interesting, they have no particular expertise (versus, say, an engineer or a physicist) at answering it.

However, in most situations, asking a question on MathOverflow involves admitting, publicly, that we were unable to figure out the answer on our own. If we are subsequently told that the answer is easy, we experience a sense of humiliation. If we are told that the question is at the level of an undergraduate textbook, it is hard not to see this as humiliating, since there is a common if somewhat irrational feeling that a graduate student ought not to have difficulty with undergraduate-level problems in his own field.

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Tom Leinster comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18556) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18556#Comment_18556 2012-02-26T12:45:23-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Tom Leinster http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/106/ Kaveh, it may be that closing a question and suggesting it's re-asked at MSE shouldn't be humiliating, but I think it's the case that many people do find it humiliating. Kaveh, it may be that closing a question and suggesting it's re-asked at MSE shouldn't be humiliating, but I think it's the case that many people do find it humiliating.

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Kaveh comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18555) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18555#Comment_18555 2012-02-26T11:11:57-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Kaveh http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/325/ Charles Staats wrote: Even if each individual reference were defensible, the number of them makes mathoverflow feel unwelcoming--especially since a referral to math.stackexchange, even with the ... Charles Staats wrote:

Even if each individual reference were defensible, the number of them makes mathoverflow feel unwelcoming--especially since a referral to math.stackexchange, even with the best of intentions, can feel humiliating to someone who is, in fact, a member of the mathematical establishment.

I want to express disagreement with this view point. I don't see anything humiliating about suggesting a question is more suitable for MSE. These recommendations should not be taken as personal, they are about questions not persons. They are not judgments about people.

Moreover MSE is not a bad place that one should avoid, it is a nice place to ask questions which are not research level. If I have a question at level of undergraduate textbook MSE is a nice place to ask it. There are many users who participate in both of MO (as researcher) and MSE (as a teacher) and it seems that they like keeping them separate.

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Charles Staats comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18552) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18552#Comment_18552 2012-02-23T19:34:59-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Charles Staats http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/297/ Yemon, I'm inclined to agree with you on this one. I would expect math.SE to be able to handle almost any assigned exercise in point-set topology. Yemon, I'm inclined to agree with you on this one. I would expect math.SE to be able to handle almost any assigned exercise in point-set topology.

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Yemon Choi comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18551) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18551#Comment_18551 2012-02-22T17:22:48-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Yemon Choi http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/81/ Another example - I am not saying I immediately know how to do this, though I would back myself to be able to work it out given some fresh coffee and a bit of time, but after some thought I decided ... Another example - I am not saying I immediately know how to do this, though I would back myself to be able to work it out given some fresh coffee and a bit of time, but after some thought I decided it should be answerable adequately on MSE, and hence belongs better there.

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Harry Gindi comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18548) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18548#Comment_18548 2012-02-21T11:59:19-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Harry Gindi http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/55/ Also, as a loudly complaining New Yorker who comes from a family of loudly complaining New Yorkers, I've gotta say that taking our complaints less seriously is a mistake, if you know what I mean. Also, as a loudly complaining New Yorker who comes from a family of loudly complaining New Yorkers, I've gotta say that taking our complaints less seriously is a mistake, if you know what I mean.

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Todd Trimble comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18535) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18535#Comment_18535 2012-02-18T04:36:48-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Todd Trimble http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/411/ Tom, okay then, "shouting New Yorkers" vs. "loudly complaining Japanese". For some reason you seem to take the first less seriously... based on what? How about a loudly ... Tom, okay then, "shouting New Yorkers" vs. "loudly complaining Japanese". For some reason you seem to take the first less seriously... based on what? How about a loudly complaining New Yorker vs. a shouting Japanese person?

Bill, I'm so sorry I made the incorrect choice from the list offered by Tom. Apparently, based on your upvoting/downvoting habits, you are more likely to be the "compulsive editorializer" type. Glad we got that cleared up.

This is "Trimble's" last comment on Tom's subthread. It was a lot of fun, though.

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Tom Copeland comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18534) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18534#Comment_18534 2012-02-18T01:23:54-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Tom Copeland http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/709/ Will Jagy: You gave good advice to Bill. He should check my website and meager contributions to MO to assess how seriously I should be taken—just as I suggested in my first comment about ...
Bill Johnson: Who knows how I actually feel? How serious am I? You could follow Will’s advice. I will say that contrary to insinuations by Trimble I haven’t branded you as a hypercritical gatekeeper and haven’t stooped to name-calling (e.g., “homework grubber”—yikes!). I view the ROTFL as an obviously pure editorial expressing your feelings with little other info. (Hard to tell if you’re laughing at me or with me, though. We are in the same boat as the new user and commentators to his question w.r.t. mutual understanding.) It does make an anecdotal case (and therefore weak case) for my hypothesis that there is a rough correlation between behavior (downvoting vs. upvoting) and temperament (in this case a compulsion to editorialize). Your other comments seem well-balanced and reasonable, but I, as well as other new users, have very little info to rely on to make judgments. I hope you can take my observation good-naturedly, just as I'd like to interpret your ROTFL.

Todd Trimble: How did you obtain your impression/stereotype of the typical MO user? BTW, “a shouting New Yorker” doesn’t equal “New Yorkers.”

To reiterate, I’ve suggested some crude statistical measures off the cuff, rather than relying on some sparse anecdotes and in lieu of a detailed analysis of the recommender’s behavior and contributions (neither of which the new user has at his ready disposal), mainly to assess the question in the title—Are people TOO ready to suggest a move to SE? The statistical analysis would be a fun exploration/experiment, given the time and resources, that could possibly reveal some trends or fail completely as some suggest. Sorry if I’ve appeared sardonic or too facetious. Just thought a look at the question from another angle would be interesting.]]>
Will Jagy comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18522) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18522#Comment_18522 2012-02-17T16:55:55-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Will Jagy http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/208/ Bill, I will send you an email. Easier to explain myself. Bill Johnson comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18521) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18521#Comment_18521 2012-02-17T16:53:52-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Bill Johnson http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/133/ @Will Jagy: ? I knew Tom had a math blog which is not full of jokes, but he could well have a sardonic sense of humor. If I were more clever I might have written much the same without considering ... @Will Jagy: ?

I knew Tom had a math blog which is not full of jokes, but he could well have a sardonic sense of humor. If I were more clever I might have written much the same without considering that anyone would think that I was serious.

I guess I am out of touch.

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Will Jagy comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18520) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18520#Comment_18520 2012-02-17T16:31:14-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Will Jagy http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/208/ Bill, I don't think Copeland is joking, see http://mathoverflow.net/users/12178/tom-copeland andhttp://tcjpn.wordpress.com/
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Bill Johnson comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18519) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18519#Comment_18519 2012-02-17T15:48:56-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Bill Johnson http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/133/ @Tom Copeland: Are you continuing your joke or were you really not kidding? @Tom Copeland: Are you continuing your joke or were you really not kidding?

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Todd Trimble comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18518) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18518#Comment_18518 2012-02-17T15:16:14-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Todd Trimble http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/411/ Tom: "this is not the appropriate venue"--why don't these users just use upvotes or downvotes? Very simply, because it might be the wrong course of action. If a question isn't ... Tom:

"this is not the appropriate venue"--why don't these users just use upvotes or downvotes?

Very simply, because it might be the wrong course of action. If a question isn't appropriate for this site, it is much more effective and informative just to say so (and cement that with a vote to close), than it is to give a downvote, which is very weak information.

I can't get behind your methodology at all (nor do I much care for the stereotypes, e.g., New Yorkers vs. Japanese). It's way too crude. My own impression is that many people downvote far less often than they might, and not for particularly commendable reasons (maybe they don't feel like giving up a point, or maybe they are being soft when it would be better to be honest). And then those who are being honest (here we could take your example, Bill Johnson) get branded as "hypercritical gatekeeper" or the like. (I agree with Harry about "naming names".)

If a person gives no downvotes, do we take him or her "more seriously" or more credible than we do someone who downvotes heavily relative to the population?

The credibility of a person ought to be based on quality of comments and contributions to this site. I am skeptical about applying such simple statistical measures to gauge credibility.

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Harry Gindi comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18517) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18517#Comment_18517 2012-02-17T12:18:49-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Harry Gindi http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/55/ Yeah, but I think that Bill Johnson is a more credible source than I am, even though we have roughly the same "negativity rate". Yeah, but I think that Bill Johnson is a more credible source than I am, even though we have roughly the same "negativity rate".

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Charles Staats comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18516) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18516#Comment_18516 2012-02-17T12:00:30-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Charles Staats http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/297/ Tom Copeland: I agree with your statement that It does blunt the psychological impact of a criticism when someone says something to the effect of , "He's always like that. Don't take him too ... Tom Copeland: I agree with your statement that

It does blunt the psychological impact of a criticism when someone says something to the effect of , "He's always like that. Don't take him too seriously."

But it blunts the psychological impact a good deal less if there's just a link you can click on to find statistics that might suggest this, as opposed to someone actually saying it. Additionally, a large part of my concern is not simply the impact on the OP, but the impact on others who are trying to get a general impression of MO to decide whether their own questions are appropriate. I think that the such users are much less likely than the OP to go to any extra effort to investigate the credibility of the recommender, even as simple as clicking on a link.

I suppose that one could post the "credibility index" or "criticality index" next to each person's name on every comment, but given the number of people who find reputation (which operates, for the most part, under clear and simple rules) too prominent, I hardly think this suggestion is likely to be popular.

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Harry Gindi comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18515) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18515#Comment_18515 2012-02-17T10:22:47-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Harry Gindi http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/55/ Uh, I think I still have a similar downvote/upvote ratio to Bill Johnson, and it doesn't seem right to "name names" to try to discourage downvoting, Tom. The only thing that bothers me is ... Uh, I think I still have a similar downvote/upvote ratio to Bill Johnson, and it doesn't seem right to "name names" to try to discourage downvoting, Tom. The only thing that bothers me is malicious downvoting, but we all know that Bill doesn't do that anyway.

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Tom Copeland comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18511) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18511#Comment_18511 2012-02-16T20:08:42-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Tom Copeland http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/709/ Charles Staats: Don’t confuse editing with editorializing although there may be a grey area there, and someone who deletes his comments under peer pressure is less polemically inclined than one who ...
Inspired by Google Ngram, I suggested, off the cuff, some simplistic statistical measures, not proofs, to address the question in the title of your thread (as opposed to providing prescriptions for when to push for a move to SE or defending the sentiments behind those prescriptions). One way was to flag editorialists etc. who by temperament might be too ready to recommend a move. Bill Johnson, who has by far the highest downvote to upvote ratio among the respondents to this thread, provides by his last response anecdotal evidence of the potential correlations I've suggested.

It does blunt the psychological impact of a criticism when someone says something to the effect of , "He's always like that. Don't take him too seriously." But more importantly, the OP could use such info to help him decide whether to move his question, particularly when support by others is not forthcoming. Your suggestion of users being vigilant is of course a way to ameliorate any such problem, but doesn't address the question in the title.]]>
Charles Staats comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18466) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18466#Comment_18466 2012-02-14T07:59:36-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Charles Staats http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/297/ Tom Copeland: How do you handle deleted comments in your analysis? For instance, I sometimes give constructive comments with the sole content of "here's a minor error in your question/answer, ... Tom Copeland: How do you handle deleted comments in your analysis? For instance, I sometimes give constructive comments with the sole content of "here's a minor error in your question/answer, and here's how to correct it," and will typically delete these comments once the correction has been made. This could cause me to be rated as more "polemical" than I really am. On the other hand, extremely polemical comments will often be deleted later (sometimes at the recommendation of others), so this could cause some people to appear less "polemical" than they really are.

More seriously, I think the bigger issue is one of perception. The ability to find out that a particular commentor is hyper-critical does not necessarily blunt the psychological impact from a criticism by that commentor. A more effective (and much easier to implement) solution might be for community members to keep an eye out for over-zealous "transfer to math.SE" recommendations, and be prepared to make counter-comments.

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Bill Johnson comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18465) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18465#Comment_18465 2012-02-14T07:02:28-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Bill Johnson http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/133/ @Tom Copeland: ROTFL @Tom Copeland: ROTFL

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Harry Gindi comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18464) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18464#Comment_18464 2012-02-14T06:13:48-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Harry Gindi http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/55/ @Yemon (Offtopic): Smackdown =D @Yemon (Offtopic):

Smackdown =D

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Tom Copeland comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18457) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18457#Comment_18457 2012-02-13T21:01:28-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Tom Copeland http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/709/ For a serious investigation, why not try to quantify the problem somewhat? Look at questions for which the recommendation to move them have been made. How large is the population of users making such ...
Furthermore, how serious should the recommender be taken? I don't take a shouting New Yorker as seriously as a loudly complaining Japanese. Look for polemicists, hypercritical gatekeepers, and editorialists by gathering some statistics on the ratio of downvotes to upvotes for the recommender and random sampling of comments to estimate the ratio of constructive comments (e.g., an answer with some actual math) to editorial comments (e.g., "great question" or "this is not the appropriate venue"--why don't these users just use upvotes or downvotes?) for the user. Tag the recommender with some index based on these statistics relative to the overall population of recommenders and maybe one can assess how serious the recommendation should be taken.

Finally, provide a list of flagged questions for each recommender so that a user can determine if in general his sensibilities coincide with the recommender's or not, just as people do with movie critics. Then allow the users to rate the critics.]]>
Will Jagy comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18453) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18453#Comment_18453 2012-02-13T13:32:51-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Will Jagy http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/208/ This one is odd. OP ignored all requests for clarification, all hints. I suggested a move to MSE after giving a part answer, ... The part that is not unusual is an OP responding only to demand more help, while indicating no effort.]]> Yemon Choi comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18446) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18446#Comment_18446 2012-02-12T21:55:45-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Yemon Choi http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/81/ What about this one? What about this one?

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Will Jagy comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18443) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18443#Comment_18443 2012-02-12T16:03:52-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Will Jagy http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/208/ Yemon, I was actually thinking of this exact idea a few days ago. On your department website, you should have an alternative picture of you equipped with John Steed/Patrick Macnee hat and umbrella, ... Yemon Choi comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18438) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18438#Comment_18438 2012-02-12T13:23:21-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Yemon Choi http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/81/ Charles, good points regarding the topic. Now to go off topic: as someone who has been speaking English longer than you have, I am well aware of what "spartan" with a lower case 's' means ... Charles, good points regarding the topic.

Now to go off topic: as someone who has been speaking English longer than you have, I am well aware of what "spartan" with a lower case 's' means ;) I was making an allusion to the Spartans' reported methods of child-rearing, and indeed to what they came to epitomize as regards "manning up", to use the parlance of our times.

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Charles Staats comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18437) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18437#Comment_18437 2012-02-12T12:56:21-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Charles Staats http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/297/ My sense about Yemon's linked example is that it is probably either a question of interest to non-specialists who know the area better than I do, or a question that does not really make sense to ... My sense about Yemon's linked example is that it is probably either a question of interest to non-specialists who know the area better than I do, or a question that does not really make sense to someone who knows the area. (I'm not qualified to judge.) It has, in either case, the appearance of having been thought through carefully. Thus, I'm inclined to doubt that a referral to math.SE is helpful. And in truth, I don't think anyone would have suggested moving the question to math.SE if the OP had not specifically asked about this.

The sigma-algebra questions seem, to me, to represent a user who quite possibly should be referred to math.SE, even if his questions, taken individually, are borderline-appropriate. (I'm not making any claims as to whether or not these questions should have been closed.)

<english-language pedant>Tangential comment: I don't think "Spartan" is the best choice of words here--that word (when not used to refer to the ancient Greek Spartans) typically refers to a lack of luxury. Perhaps "stingy" (as in, stingy with your approval) is more what you have in mind.</english-language pedant>

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Yemon Choi comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18435) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18435#Comment_18435 2012-02-12T11:22:48-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Yemon Choi http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/81/ An example which could do with more discussion, I feel. My own inclination is that this question should not have been redirected to MSE. On the other hand, all those recent sigma-algebra questions ... An example which could do with more discussion, I feel. My own inclination is that this question should not have been redirected to MSE.

On the other hand, all those recent sigma-algebra questions could have gone either way: I don't really want things that smell of "do my hard homework" on MO, but then this could just be me being too Spartan.

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Zev Chonoles comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18396) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18396#Comment_18396 2012-02-11T01:39:55-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Zev Chonoles http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/123/ I haven't been involved in MO for a very, very long time (except for occasionally stopping in to vote to close only the worst of the worst questions, e.g. this one), so I think my opinions about its ... I haven't been involved in MO for a very, very long time (except for occasionally stopping in to vote to close only the worst of the worst questions, e.g. this one), so I think my opinions about its policies should carry a correspondingly small amount of weight, but as a moderator on math.SE and soon-to-be grad student I'd like to add my two cents as well.

Mainly, I would just like to express my strong agreement with Charles's original observation that

Mathoverflow used to be useful to me as a place where I could learn new math simply by browsing. Now, it is much less so.

with David Speyer's post, and with Andy Putman's post (though as Todd Trimble points out, even what constitutes "first-year graduate" or "second-year graduate" varies widely). In my opinion, several of my math.SE questions meet Andy's criteria, and simply on a personal level I'd like it if MO were a place I could even hope to use (and contribute to) in the near future; but I further think that if MO were accepting of questions meeting Andy's criteria, many people (ranging from grad students to professional mathematicians pursuing interests outside their field) would benefit greatly. (By the way, isn't one of the standard counterarguments to this that "superstars" would stop using the site if it got too "low level" for them? My guess is that this is mainly false, but I don't think people have addressed this yet in this thread.) I think it would be great if something close to Andy's proposal would replace the current FAQ's stated criterion of "research level math questions".

Regarding the original topic of when to suggest that the OP try math.SE, I think this is very simple in both the current MO paradigm and in what I described above. I am sure that someone has said this before on this thread or another, but my opinion is: if the question is being closed here only because of the level of its content, and not because of its tone or homework-grubbing nature, then by all means suggest math.SE; if instead the question needs serious improvement, suggest math.SE only if you also describe the main flaws that would need to be fixed first. We are quite used to all sorts of flawed questions on math.SE - if someone to whom you suggested improvements fails to implement them when they post on math.SE, that's their fault, not yours, and it is not nearly as much of a disruption for the usual content on the site as it is here on MO. Besides, I'm sure that they'd sooner or later have found math.SE anyway.

Lastly, some amusing additional data points demonstrating the change in MO culture: I have several questions that would now be considered borderline to downright silly from which I gained a nontrivial amount of reputation. Even in (what is now) my ideal vision for MO the latter two ought to be closed / migrated to math.SE.

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Charles Staats comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18388) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18388#Comment_18388 2012-02-10T09:19:37-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Charles Staats http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/297/ I agree with Todd Trimble here. Furthermore, although I may be mistaken, I would be very surprised if the question were to receive a decent answer on math.SE from anyone other than a MO regular. ... I agree with Todd Trimble here. Furthermore, although I may be mistaken, I would be very surprised if the question were to receive a decent answer on math.SE from anyone other than a MO regular. Thus, whether or not the question is considered suitable for MO, I do not think a referral to math.SE was appropriate.

Regarding Steve Huntsman's point: I think this is an illustration of the "cultural" bias of MO. I am inclined to think that we are more inclined to be harsh toward basic (and easy, which is not the same thing) questions in, say, algebraic geometry than in some other areas (like analysis, set theory,...). I'm inclined to think that, in general, the algebraic geometers are too intolerant, rather than the other way around. (I will admit that this comes in part out of frustration that I am nowadays more likely to understand a question tagged "set theory" than one tagged "algebraic geometry", in spite of the fact that I am myself an algebraic geometer.) Unfortunately, I don't feel qualified to comment on Steve's specific example.

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Todd Trimble comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18383) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18383#Comment_18383 2012-02-10T04:14:10-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Todd Trimble http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/411/ (Not really on-topic, but) Harry, The point is that it was basically a misunderstanding of notation, rather than an actual question about mathematics. That of course is speculation. It's a good ... (Not really on-topic, but) Harry,

The point is that it was basically a misunderstanding of notation, rather than an actual question about mathematics.

That of course is speculation. It's a good speculation, but you don't really know for sure it was notation that was the problem.

More on-topic: just because a question is about notation doesn't mean it's unsuitable for MO and belongs on math.se. Notation is important, and is frequently confusing.

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Harry Gindi comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18376) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18376#Comment_18376 2012-02-09T18:43:46-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Harry Gindi http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/55/ Regarding the other meta thread, I first answered the question, then said that it belonged on math.se. The point is that it was basically a misunderstanding of notation, rather than an actual ... Regarding the other meta thread, I first answered the question, then said that it belonged on math.se. The point is that it was basically a misunderstanding of notation, rather than an actual question about mathematics.

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Steve Huntsman comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18375) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18375#Comment_18375 2012-02-09T18:33:42-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Steve Huntsman http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/110/ Just wanted to put in my $.02. Rather than give background, I'll just quote from comments on http://mathoverflow.net/questions/33230/ :&quot;I disagree with the suggestion that this question be ...
"I disagree with the suggestion that this question be closed. It's a basic question, with a simple answer, but if you don't know the field it's not obvious where to look this up and the subject is hardly one which most mathematicians cover in grad school. As per this discussion, meta.mathoverflow.net/discussion/506/… , consider me a vote against closing. – David Speyer Jul 25 2010 at 2:13 "

...

"The grumpy old man in me can't resist: an order of magnitude more people surely learn about Markov processes than coherent sheaves or motivic homotopy theory or whatever "most" mathematicians supposedly study at any level. – Steve Huntsman Jul 25 2010 at 13:17"]]>
quid comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18374) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18374#Comment_18374 2012-02-09T14:54:01-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 quid http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/583/ By and large I agree with Charles Staats and David Speyer and others. But, no, please no encouragement of stab-in-the-dark. Some of the questions I find most annoying on MO (not the one in question) ... By and large I agree with Charles Staats and David Speyer and others. But, no, please no encouragement of stab-in-the-dark. Some of the questions I find most annoying on MO (not the one in question) are some speculations of some people having no business speculating on a subject.

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Charles Staats comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18373) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18373#Comment_18373 2012-02-09T14:44:23-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Charles Staats http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/297/ The original version of this post has been removed on account of a very good point made in the post immediately following it. I don't want to say anything that could be misinterpreted to encourage ... The original version of this post has been removed on account of a very good point made in the post immediately following it. I don't want to say anything that could be misinterpreted to encourage the sorts of questions that quid is talking about.

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Charles Staats comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18372) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18372#Comment_18372 2012-02-09T14:40:08-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Charles Staats http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/297/ Yemon's comments about the "Nakayama Me Now" question reflect my own views precisely. And perhaps I should add that I have no problems with the way that this particular question was ... Yemon's comments about the "Nakayama Me Now" question reflect my own views precisely. And perhaps I should add that I have no problems with the way that this particular question was handled, provided that no one comes in later and adds a referral to math.SE. (Personally, I think this question would be even less appropriate on math.SE than it is here, since I don't think it would get a good answer there even if it were asked well.)

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Yemon Choi comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18371) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18371#Comment_18371 2012-02-09T12:44:06-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Yemon Choi http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/81/ Charles: Harry Gindi may not represent a consensus view. For some of us longer-term users, that is delightful understatement :) Mariano, I don't think Charles (or indeed anyone in this discussion) ... Charles: Harry Gindi may not represent a consensus view.

For some of us longer-term users, that is delightful understatement :)

Mariano, I don't think Charles (or indeed anyone in this discussion) has been saying questions like the Nakayama Me Now exhibit shouldn't be closed. The question is whether redirection is (a) appropriate (b) sending out the right message to people, like Charles, who worry that asking questions from books is in some sense taboo. In this particular case, I think closure with a comment explaining why this kind of thing is bad manners here (and, let's face it, anywhere) is the right course of action, rather than just shunting the problem over to MSE.

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Todd Trimble comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18370) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18370#Comment_18370 2012-02-09T12:34:39-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Todd Trimble http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/411/ Charles: Harry Gindi may not represent a consensus view. I don't think I personally would have voted to close. At the same time, I wouldn't have upvoted it either. It seems to me that the question ... Charles: Harry Gindi may not represent a consensus view. I don't think I personally would have voted to close. At the same time, I wouldn't have upvoted it either. It seems to me that the question was mostly just a wild stab in the dark.

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Mariano comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18369) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18369#Comment_18369 2012-02-09T11:44:58-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Mariano http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/61/ Exhibit B14: http://mathoverflow.net/questions/88002/nakayama-module-closed Exhibit B14: http://mathoverflow.net/questions/88002/nakayama-module-closed

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Charles Staats comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18368) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18368#Comment_18368 2012-02-09T11:41:27-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Charles Staats http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/297/ Interestingly enough, a question just asked on meta (on the topic of "whether this question is acceptable") was met with a referral to math.SE, with comments that the question "would ... Interestingly enough, a question just asked on meta (on the topic of "whether this question is acceptable") was met with a referral to math.SE, with comments that the question "would probably be closed" if asked on MO. I'm inclined to think that, if asked well, the question ought not to be closed, because it could make good reading for mathematicians in other areas. But I also have essentially no knowledge of the topic under discussion. I'd be interested to see what others think.

Here's the meta thread:

http://tea.mathoverflow.net/discussion/1304/is-the-category-of-elements-a-coend/#Item_0

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Charles Staats comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18366) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18366#Comment_18366 2012-02-09T11:35:00-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Charles Staats http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/297/ Andreas: That was precisely the point, in a way: the impression I got from this encounter was that this question was inappropriate because math.SE existed, but would otherwise have been okay (except ... Andreas: That was precisely the point, in a way: the impression I got from this encounter was that this question was inappropriate because math.SE existed, but would otherwise have been okay (except for being an exact duplicate). The following statement is stronger than I really feel, but I'm going to propose it anyway for the sake of moving the conversation along:

Statement: Whether or not a given question is appropriate for MathOverflow should be independent of the fact that math.SE exists.

Now, why I consider the opposite groups question at least somewhat "interesting": in essence, because it makes good browsing. The notion of "opposite group," and the question of whether or not it is isomorphic to the original group, would probably not have come up in my mind; and even if it did, I would probably not have bothered to figure out the answer, because it would not have been obvious to me how little effort would actually be involved. The question and its answer are not incredibly interesting, but given how easy they both are to read, I think the ratio of "interest value" to "time investment" is quite favorable. And I, personally, derive a certain amount of satisfaction (it's almost like relief, in some sense) from tying up a "loose end" in my mathematical knowledge. It also helps that this is a general fact that relates to things I have considered before (like how to convert a right action to a left action).

Certainly, this question would be entirely appropriate on math.SE, and would probably receive a good answer there (and not necessarily by a mathoverflow regular). But it also has the virtue that a mathematician is likely to care, at least a little bit, about the answer; and that there is a nice, elegant, answer. (If nothing else, it would make a good exercise for students. And I don't think I'm the only mathematician who enjoys seeing good exercises, even at a basic level, that I have not seen before.) Most of the questions I see on math.SE, I find that I simply don't care very much what the answer is.

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Andreas Blass comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18357) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18357#Comment_18357 2012-02-09T06:58:12-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Andreas Blass http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/475/ I agree with the point raised at the beginning of this thread: We should not be too eager to send to math.stackexchange questions that are unlikely to get good answers there (except possibly from MO ... Andrew Stacey comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18350) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18350#Comment_18350 2012-02-09T01:18:30-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Andrew Stacey http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/4/ To show "how far MathOverflow has come", consider the following question from the very early days: http://mathoverflow.net/questions/90/fn-2n-is-not-surjective Most definitely not ... To show "how far MathOverflow has come", consider the following question from the very early days:

http://mathoverflow.net/questions/90/fn-2n-is-not-surjective

Most definitely not appropriate any more.

I'd also like to defend the calls to "show your working" on all questions. I'd be fine with Andy asking questions for sheer curiosity's sake - most of mine have been of that type (since most of my research-level questions go unanswered - I'm hoping that one day Bill Johnson will go through my question list and take pity on me). The key is to explain that it is for curiosity's sake.

When the user-base for MO was smaller, one could get a sense of someone's thinking by following their questions for a bit. Now, it's harder to spot and that's a shame. But we can make up for it by giving more details. This is purely for selfish reasons - I want to know a bit about the person I'm helping, or even if I can't help them then knowing why they're asking that question makes it more likely that I'll get curious in it as well and want to know the answer. So the extra information doesn't have to be of the "here's what I've already tried" type, but could be of the "this is just out of curiosity" type[1].

[1] To be absolutely clear, I'm not advocating asking every "I was just wondering" question on MO. But if a question is borderline, then having the OP explain that it just came up in conversation and it seemed like the sort of thing someone would just know and they won't be able to get any sleep until it's solved and their partner is threatening to kick them out if they don't stop bringing a pad and paper to bed at night ... well, then it might just tip the balance in favour of the question for me.

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Todd Trimble comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18349) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18349#Comment_18349 2012-02-08T23:06:37-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Todd Trimble http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/411/ Andy, as pointed out earlier, there are problems with the phrases "first-year graduate", "second-year graduate" -- these can mean very different things to different people. ... Andy, as pointed out earlier, there are problems with the phrases "first-year graduate", "second-year graduate" -- these can mean very different things to different people. Otherwise, your four conditions seem fairly reasonable.

"Show that you've worked on it" is certainly a natural reaction when faced with the "homework grubber". I agree it's not a fitting standard to apply to each and every question, but let's just say we all hope that the OP has tried to think about his/her problem before asking. And perhaps we can agree that an OP's effort to expose thinking can make a question better (it rarely makes it worse), and it's something quite conspicuously lacking in cases like grubbing for homework help.

And I think there are lots of not-quite-so-obvious cases where one feels like drawing out the OP more, because there is suspicion that he/she might be trying to avoid doing any work. It might help to have some specific examples of this.

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Andy Putman comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18348) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18348#Comment_18348 2012-02-08T21:39:27-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Andy Putman http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/113/ I agree that the question about the opposite group is boring and should be closed. I'm not advocating that we allow questions at the undergraduate level, or even questions on &quot;first year ...
1. On topics at the second year graduate level or above.
2. Not utterly trivial (ie immediate consequences of the definitions, and no reasonable person would not realize this).
3. Precisely formulated.
4. Asked in a professional manner.

I definitely bristle at the thought that you shouldn't ask questions from books! I read a lot of stuff that isn't in my area (for fun!), and I usually try to do the exercises. Certainly I feel like I know when it is in my best interest to think about something vs asking someone, and I'd feel insulted if someone didn't trust me to know this. Once someone has made it past the initial hurdles of grad school (prelims, etc), then I think we should trust them too.

Also, I really don't like all the calls for people to "show that they've worked on it" or "explain why it interests them". I think it is fine to ask a question out of simple curiosity! And what are you supposed to say -- "I thought about it, tried a few things, and nothing worked"? Let's not nit-pick to death people who add value to this site by asking real math questions.

Everyone has to make a personal decision as to what kinds of questions they will answer, and I think it is fine to not answer questions that you feel don't meet whatever criteria. My own criteria is "I can answer this without thinking, and I don't think that someone else will do it" (though sometimes I'm bored and violate the second part). But there should be a huge difference between "I don't want to answer this question" and "This question is so bad that it should be closed and the author criticized.".]]>
Todd Trimble comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18346) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18346#Comment_18346 2012-02-08T21:21:46-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Todd Trimble http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/411/ But the fact remains that the question was closed--quickly--as being too low-level, even though it is the sort of question that mathematicians find interesting. I'm very sorry to say this, but I ...

But the fact remains that the question was closed--quickly--as being too low-level, even though it is the sort of question that mathematicians find interesting.

I'm very sorry to say this, but I don't get why this is the sort of question that mathematicians find interesting. IMO the question was trivial (even for beginners in group theory), and I think the OP (who is a respected member of the MO community) simply wasn't thinking. Why was closing it as off-topic so inappropriate?

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Gerry Myerson comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18345) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18345#Comment_18345 2012-02-08T20:38:11-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Gerry Myerson http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/370/ Charles, the example you're looking for is http://mathoverflow.net/questions/63086/are-all-groups-isomorphic-to-their-opposite-group which was asked and closed on 26 April 2011, and deleted 23 ... Tom Leinster comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18344) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18344#Comment_18344 2012-02-08T18:16:30-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Tom Leinster http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/106/ +1 David. And -1 to the concept of "graduate level material": it's an almost meaningless term. +1 David. And -1 to the concept of "graduate level material": it's an almost meaningless term.

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Charles Staats comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18343) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18343#Comment_18343 2012-02-08T17:49:29-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Charles Staats http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/297/ Incidentally, I appreciate David Speyer's excellent and well-thought-out post, and I agree with it except to the extent that Ryan Budney's comments are taken out of context. (That last bit is ... Incidentally, I appreciate David Speyer's excellent and well-thought-out post, and I agree with it except to the extent that Ryan Budney's comments are taken out of context. (That last bit is intended to prevent my statement from feeling like an accusation to Ryan; I certainly am not trying to accuse David of anything.)

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Charles Staats comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18342) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18342#Comment_18342 2012-02-08T17:45:53-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Charles Staats http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/297/ There's a specific example I have remembered. I could not find it--I suspect it has been deleted--but at some point after math.SE opened, I noticed a question on mathoverflow about whether a group ... There's a specific example I have remembered. I could not find it--I suspect it has been deleted--but at some point after math.SE opened, I noticed a question on mathoverflow about whether a group is isomorphic to its "opposite group." The question was quickly closed, and the user directed to math.SE. Another comment--apparently made after the question was closed--was from some user I recognized (I can't remember who), linking to his "first question" on mathoverflow and talking about "how far mathoverflow has come." The question linked to was the exact same, asked when MO was in its infancy, and had a number of upvotes.

I think it would have been entirely appropriate to close the question as an exact duplicate, but my impression (which I cannot now verify since I can't find the question) was that the question was closed as being "off topic" or some such before it was recognized as an exact duplicate. The impression I took away from this (the closing, the redirection to math.SE, and the comment left afterwards) was that "low-level questions that might have easy answers, even ones that mathematicians might find interesting, are no longer welcome on mathoverflow," and that this was progress. I can understand why the question was closed--the answer was easy and, in retrospect, the first thing someone would try if they had put any serious effort in before asking; whereas the original question was probably asked at a time when mathoverflow had only a few users who were struggling to come up with questions to keep the project going. But the fact remains that the question was closed--quickly--as being too low-level, even though it is the sort of question that mathematicians find interesting.

But there is a key point here. When you leave a comment that a question is inappropriate (and would perhaps be more appropriate on math.SE), or choose to post an answer as a comment, or decide that a question is too easy/basic to be upvoted even though you find it at least marginally interesting (I am certainly guilty of the last), you are not just giving a message to the asker. You are also giving a message to everyone else who looks at this question to get an impression of what sorts of questions are appropriate on mathoverflow--and, in particular, whether their own question(s) at a similar level are likely to be welcomed, tolerated, or closed. I think it is important to consider this second audience; a comment that is entirely appropriate to the asker, may still give the wrong impression to an observer.

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Shevek comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18341) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18341#Comment_18341 2012-02-08T14:11:20-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Shevek http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/111/ I agree strongly with Charles, David and Tom. deane.yang comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18340) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18340#Comment_18340 2012-02-08T12:14:41-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 deane.yang http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/9/ I have to say that my objection is almost never to a question itself but whether the person asking the question demonstrates at least some reasonable effort towards answering the question. If someone ... Tom Church comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18339) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18339#Comment_18339 2012-02-08T12:06:58-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Tom Church http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/412/ I agree strongly with David Speyer's comments. When I was a second-year graduate student, I struggled for a number of months to understand an exercise on the second page of the book by ... I agree strongly with David Speyer's comments.

When I was a second-year graduate student, I struggled for a number of months to understand an exercise on the second page of the book by Ballman-Gromov-Schroeder. The exercise was the most elementary case of the problem I was working on, so my lack of progress was quite frustrating. Eventually I was at a conference and asked a senior mathematician, who informed me that in fact this was a major open problem. (Needless to say, I changed directions.)

If Math Overflow had existed at the time, I hope I could have asked for some hints and, one way or another, broken through the roadblock I had hit. But in the current atmosphere I cannot imagine a graduate student having the courage to ask about an exercise that appears on the second page of a textbook.

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Will Jagy comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18338) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18338#Comment_18338 2012-02-07T20:17:38-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Will Jagy http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/208/ About MSE, see http://tea.mathoverflow.net/discussion/1125/sending-people-to-math-stack-exchange Todd Trimble comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18337) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18337#Comment_18337 2012-02-07T19:39:44-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Todd Trimble http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/411/ Charles, I was actually being a little tongue-in-cheek there. I think maybe you have a point. Charles, I was actually being a little tongue-in-cheek there. I think maybe you have a point.

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Charles Staats comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18336) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18336#Comment_18336 2012-02-07T19:29:10-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Charles Staats http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/297/ Todd, while I agree that &quot;homework grubber&quot; questions deserve little or no effort on their behalf, I do not think that pointing them to math.SE is helpful to anyone. For one thing, ...
This actually leads to the following suggestion: questions that are simply bad (as opposed to being at an inappropriate level) should probably not be referred to math.SE--out of courtesy to the math.SE community, if for no other reason.]]>
Bill Johnson comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18335) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18335#Comment_18335 2012-02-07T18:48:30-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Bill Johnson http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/133/ @Todd: late at night I have a couple of times written appropriate responses to such posters, but, fortunately, have not put them on MO. @Todd: late at night I have a couple of times written appropriate responses to such posters, but, fortunately, have not put them on MO.

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Todd Trimble comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18334) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18334#Comment_18334 2012-02-07T17:57:35-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Todd Trimble http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/411/ As Charles surmises, it might be pretty hard to implement (much less enforce) a "policy" for experienced MO users to follow, although we might try to come to some consensus on reasonable ... As Charles surmises, it might be pretty hard to implement (much less enforce) a "policy" for experienced MO users to follow, although we might try to come to some consensus on reasonable guidelines.

They don't come much more clueless or more obnoxious than the homework grubber of Yemon's Exhibit A, and I don't think much effort should be expended on such cases. If there were a bullet point in the FAQ that "blatant requests or demands to do the OP's homework, without reciprocal effort shown by the OP, will be summarily closed" -- or something similar -- then I guess we could point to that. But honestly, that's such a no-brainer that violators are probably lost causes to begin with. (What I really want to do is tell such clueless types to go to hell, and telling them to go to math.se seems an acceptable substitute. (-: )

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Charles Staats comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18333) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18333#Comment_18333 2012-02-07T13:45:26-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Charles Staats http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/297/ I am forced to admit that the last two questions Yemon linked to should definitely have been closed. However, I do not think that for this sort of question, a recommendation to math.SE is necessarily ...
Perhaps the following policy might be the best one, at least in my mind: If a question is inappropriate for MO because of its content (an undergrad level question, for instance), then a referral to math.SE is appropriate. If a question is inappropriate for MO because of the manner in which it is asked, but might be made appropriate if the asker had, for instance, demonstrated that they had already put a fair amount of thought into the matter, then comments to this effect are appropriate; closing may be appropriate, depending on the severity; but recommendations to math.SE should be avoided. In particular, graduate-level questions should rarely be referred to math.SE.

If a policy like this were implemented, the biggest potential difficulty, at least in my mind, is that the people who really need to know about it are the experienced MO users, who I imagine rarely feel the need to check the FAQs and the like.]]>
Yemon Choi comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18331) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18331#Comment_18331 2012-02-07T10:52:26-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Yemon Choi http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/81/ David Speyer said above: "* I view graduate students as young researchers. I think they have the maturity to decide for themselves what kind of answer they are looking for. " This may be ... David Speyer said above: "* I view graduate students as young researchers. I think they have the maturity to decide for themselves what kind of answer they are looking for. "

This may be true where you are, David, and be true among most of those you knew as a grad student, but at least in the initial stages it is most certainly not always the case. In the less illustrious levels of maths where people like me work, it's not clear to me that people with PhDs whose work I have to read have attained that maturity, perhaps because no one educated them as to how to ask and solve questions.

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Yemon Choi comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18330) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18330#Comment_18330 2012-02-07T10:45:44-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Yemon Choi http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/81/ Sigh. Sigh.

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Mariano comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18329) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18329#Comment_18329 2012-02-07T10:29:02-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Mariano http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/61/ Is anyone for not closing questions like the one Yemon just linked to? (That question IMO makes for a good example for the Do Not Do This list...) Is anyone for not closing questions like the one Yemon just linked to?

(That question IMO makes for a good example for the Do Not Do This list...)

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Yemon Choi comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18328) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18328#Comment_18328 2012-02-07T10:01:25-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Yemon Choi http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/81/ Another example. Neither of these is something I immediately know how to do, because I did not have any "standard comprehensive grad school courses etc". However, questions phrased in this ... Another example. Neither of these is something I immediately know how to do, because I did not have any "standard comprehensive grad school courses etc". However, questions phrased in this way, like a demand for a Big Mac at a drive-through, really really really really really really get on my wick.

So here is an instance where I might be tempted to vote to close, or to recommend trying elsewhere. I can see why there is a case against doing so, but it isn't the kind of question I want to see on MO.

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Ryan Budney comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18326) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18326#Comment_18326 2012-02-07T08:54:34-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Ryan Budney http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/107/ I think most of your concerns are pretty standard and already-voiced, David. For example "I have the impression that, at least here at UMich, grad students feel intimidated to ask questions on ... I think most of your concerns are pretty standard and already-voiced, David. For example "I have the impression that, at least here at UMich, grad students feel intimidated to ask questions on MO". Isn't that to be expected? I mean, MO is meant to be something like tea-time. When I would walk up to John Milnor to ask him a question at tea time, I certainly felt intimidated as a grad student. Perhaps I shouldn't have but I did. It's not clear to me it's possible to create a completely non-intimidating environment when you're not only asking experts, but there's essentially no privacy (unless you're anonymous), and on top of that there's an essentially perpetual public record (which does not happen at actual tea time, thankfully).

But I think we're getting off-track by not talking about specifics and instead picking at my comments in isolation. Much of my comments had to do with asking questions in a respectful way, where you do your due-diligence and put together a question that not only shows you really care about an answer, but that you've tried things yourself. The kinds of things we'd pretty much expect of any colleague.

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Andy Putman comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18325) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18325#Comment_18325 2012-02-07T08:49:08-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Andy Putman http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/113/ I strongly agree with David's post. David Speyer comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18324) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18324#Comment_18324 2012-02-07T08:31:42-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 David Speyer http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/23/ I'd like to push back against some of Ryan's comments, because I think they are a very good explanation of how many &quot;closing&quot; users are thinking, and I disagree with ...
"If the question appears to be a grad-student homework-type problem, especially if it's not well-motivated, it might be closed... I suspect most people are worried about creating a repository of answers to homework problems..."

If it weren't for the word grad-student, I would agree with all of this. When I'm answering questions over at math.SE which strike me as undergrad homework level, I try to give hints rather than answers, and I tend to direct those questions to math.SE when they show up on Mathoverflow. But, at the grad level, if the question asks for a solution, I usually give it. This is for a couple of reasons:

* I view graduate students as young researchers. I think they have the maturity to decide for themselves what kind of answer they are looking for.

* There are cases where, as a researcher, you really do need to just get an answer and move on, rather than understand all of the background. Now grad students have more free time than professors/postdocs, and they have more future years to reap the benefits of a deeper understanding, so they more often should learn the background. But not always. My advisor (Bernd Sturmfels) tells the story of, in grad school, needing the lemma that, for any polynomial p(t) and q(t), there is a point (x,y) in R^2 not of the form (p(t), q(t)). He went to one of the local algebraic geometers, who pulled out the section of EGA on dimension theory. That strikes me as a wildly bad answer to this question. Two better answers would be "see Sard's theorem" or "consider the monomials p(t)^i q(t)^j for i+j \leq N. There are roughly N^2 such monomials, and they have degree O(N) in R[t] so, for N large, there is a linear relation between them. This gives a polynomial relation between p(t) and q(t), which will not hold identically on R^2." Neither of these is as deep, but they would have allowed Bernd to move on and apply this result.

* Graduate level questions are not only asked by graduate students. In recent years, I have taught myself the basics of quiver representations, triangulated categories, the analytic Peter-Weyl theorem, Hodge theory and Riemmannian geometry. All of these are things which would be grad-school material for a grad-student with a particular syllabus, but none of them are things that I learned in grad school. I want MO to be a place that I can come and ask about the basic things that confuse me when I am learning new fields. As I mentioned on another thread, I have gotten a very positive response to these questions, because I have a very good reputation here. But I also want MO to welcoming to people who ask those questions without establishing their bona fides first. I have the impression that, at least here at UMich, grad students feel intimidated to ask questions on MO.

"as one gains seniority, more and more people start to treat you as if you're some walking automated library"

I definitely experience this. But the great thing about MO is that it is so easy to not answer a question! When someone stops into my office or sends me a personal e-mail with a question like this, there is real pressure to give an answer. I constantly see questions on math.SE which I think "that's not worth my time to answer", so I don't! MO has many fewer such questions, but I ignore questions here too.

Here is a proposal. I sometimes view MO by going to http://mathoverflow.net/unanswered/tagged?page=2&tab=newest&pagesize=15 . That will give you questions which have gone about 12 hours without being answered . It is a pretty safe assumption that none of these are too basic. Maybe Anton could create a convenient link to do this?]]>
François G. Dorais comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18319) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18319#Comment_18319 2012-02-06T22:28:43-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 François G. Dorais http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/144/ Suggestions for edits, additions, or other modifications to the faq and how to ask pages are always welcome. Specific suggestions are preferable since it takes a fair amount of time to come up with ... Suggestions for edits, additions, or other modifications to the faq and how to ask pages are always welcome. Specific suggestions are preferable since it takes a fair amount of time to come up with the right wording, especially when starting from scratch. Send suggestions to moderators@mathoverflow.net.

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Mariano comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18318) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18318#Comment_18318 2012-02-06T21:58:53-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Mariano http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/61/ I have written uncountably many comments saying all that. Saying it as nicely as I managed. Isn't all this spelt out clearly in the FAQ? If not, we should strive to make it clearer, possibly ... I have written uncountably many comments saying all that. Saying it as nicely as I managed.

Isn't all this spelt out clearly in the FAQ? If not, we should strive to make it clearer, possibly pointing to good real examples of questions. But familiarizing oneself with a site, seeing what gets asked, what gets answered —even the average level of grammar and punctuation!— is something that I expect users to do as part of the work of asking a question. Most people would not enter a bar without checking out first what's going on inside... yet we end up coming up with the nth rephrasing of "you will get more luck if you tell us what you have tried".

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grp comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18317) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18317#Comment_18317 2012-02-06T21:49:44-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 grp http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/187/ I see MathOverflow as a trio of (1) a small community I call moderators, who founded and set the goals for the type of content to appear, (2) a larger community who provide and use much of the ...
I doubt that the community at large will ever get fully united on how to deal with questions of various levels. I have had examples of questions that I suggested be posted elsewhere which turned out to be answered by community members and have become (or so it seems) acceptable. There are other questions which I myself have asked which got gracious treatment from the community, but which might be considered not acceptable for MathOverflow because of insufficient scholarship.

One thing I have tried to do in my comments is to request a quality improvement, primarily by asking for for motivation or by asking the equivalent of "What good is the answer going to do for you?" . I have also tried to provide some help so that the original poster could solve or make progress on either the posted question or the question behind the question.

One thing I have tried to do in my answers or questions is to provide relevant and interesting material for the forum. Of course, I use my opinion of what I think is relevant and interesting, but much of what I have contributed is (or seems to be) accepted.

There may be a way to address Charles's problem about how welcoming the community should appear. I think that having some good examples to follow on how to respond (and having the community agree to use them) will help. However, I think we should continue insisting on higher quality questions, in particular asking for more clarity and less ambiguity, more motivation and background, and such that it would be clear what answers would help. Perhaps more rewriting of new questions (or asking improved versions of old questions) would address both concerns.

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Will Jagy comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18316) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18316#Comment_18316 2012-02-06T21:45:24-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Will Jagy http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/208/ How about this? http://mathoverflow.net/questions/87768/a-question-on-gauge-functions Ryan Budney comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18315) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18315#Comment_18315 2012-02-06T21:43:34-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Ryan Budney http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/107/ Regarding post number 22 "reviewing my own thoughts..." this is something like the saying "a man with one watch always knows the time precisely, a man with two watches always has ... Regarding post number 22 "reviewing my own thoughts..." this is something like the saying "a man with one watch always knows the time precisely, a man with two watches always has doubts." I'm sure there's an expression along those vague lines.

IMO the two forums have a wide overlap and there's really very good mathematical questions that will get a far better response on the StackExchange site than on MO. One of my favourites would be this one: http://math.stackexchange.com/questions/2755/why-can-you-turn-clothing-right-side-out/ also this one: http://math.stackexchange.com/questions/11669/mathematical-difference-between-white-and-black-notes-in-a-piano

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Charles Staats comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18314) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18314#Comment_18314 2012-02-06T21:34:49-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Charles Staats http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/297/ Mariano: I think that the OP should be told nicely in the comments that if s/he wants help on an exercise from a textbook, s/he should give more information--how s/he has attempted to solve it, why ... Charles Staats comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18313) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18313#Comment_18313 2012-02-06T21:15:01-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Charles Staats http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/297/ As I am reviewing my own thoughts, I think that the title I gave this thread, while hardly irrelevant, is really missing the point. A lot of the questions I come up with are about ... Mariano comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18312) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18312#Comment_18312 2012-02-06T20:52:40-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Mariano http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/61/ How are you proposing those questions be handled? How are you proposing those questions be handled?

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Charles Staats comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18311) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18311#Comment_18311 2012-02-06T20:49:11-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Charles Staats http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/297/ A quick clarification here: I am NOT suggesting that the question that is a problem from Hartshorne is, in any way, a good mathoverflow question. I am simply suggesting that this question, and ... bsteinberg comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18310) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18310#Comment_18310 2012-02-06T20:27:51-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 bsteinberg http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/675/ I think that counting by tag is not so accurate. I would only count 2 of the 5 closures listed by Joel as being questions about Set Theory. One was about basic facts about injective maps, one about ... JDH comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18309) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18309#Comment_18309 2012-02-06T20:07:26-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 JDH http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/420/ To respond to BSteinberg's claim about frequency of closures, I just did a quick count of the number of closed questions among the most recent 50 questions in a few tags:set-theory 5 closed among ...
set-theory 5 closed among 50
algebraic-geometry 2 closed among 50
category-theory 2 closed among 50
number-theory 5 closed among 50
group-theory 10 closed among 50

Perhaps someone else might want to do a more thorough data mining of the archives.]]>
Yemon Choi comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18308) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18308#Comment_18308 2012-02-06T19:18:19-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Yemon Choi http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/81/ Or: what Donu Arapura just said. Or: what Donu Arapura just said.

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Yemon Choi comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18307) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18307#Comment_18307 2012-02-06T19:17:40-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Yemon Choi http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/81/ Thanks, Bill. I still maintain that to ask a question, while mentioning the very result needed to solve it is, let's face it, unfortunate if not downright foolish. Still, one hopes that the effort ... Thanks, Bill. I still maintain that to ask a question, while mentioning the very result needed to solve it is, let's face it, unfortunate if not downright foolish. Still, one hopes that the effort put into writing a readable question made it even easier to answer effectively.

To follow up on Bill's comment on Charles's examples: I am not competent to judge how easy or difficult that second question is, nor to know if it is a standard exercise which people set students as part of the learning process. What I will say is that it displays a fault which I'm sure all of us have displayed, but which we as researchers ought to grow out of: it doesn't say what the OP is stuck on, or what he or she already knows.

Actually, on reflection, my feeling is that the question is deficient not because "it is an exercise in a book and so should automatically go to MSE", but because it is poorly worded and seems to want "money for nothing", see Ryan Budney's comments above. In a sense I think Charles has a point, in that the question is unlikely to get a good answer on MSE. On the other hand, I don't think it particularly deserves a good answer on MO in its present form.

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Donu Arapura comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18306) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18306#Comment_18306 2012-02-06T19:16:33-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Donu Arapura http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/506/ Charles, I'm sorry if you feel if this forum has become less friendly to grad students. I sincerely hope it isn't the case. But speaking entirely for myself, since I don't have a huge amount of free ...
I'm sorry if you feel if this forum has become less friendly to grad students. I sincerely hope it isn't the case. But speaking entirely for myself, since I don't have a huge amount of free time, I admit to being unlikely think about a question unless I feel that the person asking has put some serious thought into it, or if it is sufficiently interesting. The last question you mention is a good example of one where I felt that no effort was demonstrated. Had s/he said "I know this is a problem in Hartshorne. I tried the following but got stuck. ", some of us might have been inclined to say something like "write the divisor as a difference of two ample divisors..."]]>
Bill Johnson comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18305) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18305#Comment_18305 2012-02-06T18:43:13-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Bill Johnson http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/133/ As for Yemon's second example, this is exactly the kind of dumb* question that I (and, I think, most mathematicians) might ask. I have asked much worse ones, at least within threads. It is great ... As for Yemon's second example, this is exactly the kind of dumb* question that I (and, I think, most mathematicians) might ask. I have asked much worse ones, at least within threads. It is great that we have MO to help us when we have blind spots.

*Before I get deluged with outrage, let me add, as Yemon knows, that I intend no disrespect to him.

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Bill Johnson comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18304) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18304#Comment_18304 2012-02-06T18:31:21-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Bill Johnson http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/133/ Charles, there is a world of difference in the two examples you give. The first is clearly stated and references SE. It is the type of question that a non expert in a subject might ask. You got ... Charles, there is a world of difference in the two examples you give. The first is clearly stated and references SE. It is the type of question that a non expert in a subject might ask. You got good responses, I think, even if possibly not the complete answer (which, as far as I know, might not exist) you hoped for.

The second question is a good example of a bad question. The grammar is bad, part of the question is unclear, and the question is an exercise from a book. When this last is pointed out to the OP, the OP acknowledges that he or she knows that! Thanks for pointing it out--I just cast the first vote to close while wondering why mine is the first.

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Ryan Budney comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18303) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18303#Comment_18303 2012-02-06T18:30:00-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Ryan Budney http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/107/ I think the threads you bring up more or less correspond to the norm on MO. If the question appears to be a grad-student homework-type problem, especially if it's not well-motivated, it might be ... I think the threads you bring up more or less correspond to the norm on MO. If the question appears to be a grad-student homework-type problem, especially if it's not well-motivated, it might be closed. If it's a well-motivated question and well-written, it might be answered (in part) in the comments, with a hint to get a person going (and there's varying standards from subject to subject). But such questions tend not to get long answers.

I suspect most people are worried about creating a repository of answers to homework problems, or doing someone's homework, or doing the leg-work that they should be doing, telling them what they should have been reading in their course-book, or should have got out of their homework assignments. If the question does not appear to be from the heart in some sense, there's little initiative to answer it. In that regard, my impression is your first thread seems more like idle curiosity than a real desire to know, but that's just a first-impression bias. I think in part it's because you never said why you want to know the answer to your question.

I apply similar standards when people ask me questions in person. If it's a grad student laying on a couch, barking off idle questions, they'll be ignored unless the question is awesome. If they seem to really have a reason to want to know the answer, if it's clear they've thought about it, with examples and such, then I'll engage them.

There's a phenomenon one notices as one gains seniority, more and more people start to treat you as if you're some walking automated library, with free answers to everything. When answering a question one wants to feel like you're not putting in any more effort into it than the question-asker. Otherwise one may feel like they're not really getting anything out of the answer. So there's a reverse desire to want to see the question-asker sweat a little.

Somewhere in there lies roughly the kernel of the push-back to your assertion that MO is becoming elitist.

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Yemon Choi comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18302) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18302#Comment_18302 2012-02-06T18:21:08-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Yemon Choi http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/81/ Just as another data point (I make no claims that it is representative, but I do agree with Mariano and Ryan that the discussion really needs some specifics) This question struck me at the time, and ... Just as another data point (I make no claims that it is representative, but I do agree with Mariano and Ryan that the discussion really needs some specifics)

This question struck me at the time, and still does now, as something where it's not a question of the level being inappropriate, or necessarily being homework, but where more thought should have been put in. Then again, here is another example where the OP should really have just thought harder, but which didn't get redirected to MSE.

In general, I instinctively agree with Benjamin Steinberg's view that "many questions that are "sent" to MSE would probably stand if the OP had given a little background on themselves and the problem (and in particular make clear it is not HW)", but I admit this is based on my impressions and memory rather than an actual count.

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Noah Snyder comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18301) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18301#Comment_18301 2012-02-06T18:04:41-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Noah Snyder http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/59/ In part the field variation may be caused by whether that field has a standard graduate class/textbook/exercises. If something is part of the "standard graduate curriculum" there may be ... In part the field variation may be caused by whether that field has a standard graduate class/textbook/exercises. If something is part of the "standard graduate curriculum" there may be less of a welcome?

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bsteinberg comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18300) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18300#Comment_18300 2012-02-06T17:22:24-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 bsteinberg http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/675/ MO questions are supposed to be of interest to research mathematicians. This doesn't necessarily mean the same thing as research questions. Many questions that are &quot;sent&quot; to MSE ... peter.krautzberger comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18299) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18299#Comment_18299 2012-02-06T17:22:17-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 peter.krautzberger http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/427/ +1 Charles Staats for voicing your concern. +1 Charles Staats for voicing your concern.

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Charles Staats comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18298) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18298#Comment_18298 2012-02-06T17:20:09-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Charles Staats http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/297/ Here's a question that I first asked on math.SE; it was fairly well received, but not very well answered. When I finally decided to try posting it on mathoverflow, most of the ...
http://mathoverflow.net/questions/72004/in-what-generality-is-the-natural-map-operatornamehom-rl-m-otimes-s-to-oper3

Here's a question for which I specifically replied to a comment that it would be more appropriate on math.SE. I don't mean to suggest that an exercise from Hartshorne is typically a good question on mathoverflow, but I don't think math.SE should be suggested as a viable alternative. (I should probably add that, generally speaking, I have very high respect for Sándor Kovács's activity on mathoverflow.)

http://mathoverflow.net/questions/87014/questions-about-cohomology-class

There have been a number of other examples in which I have considered leaving such a comment, but since I did not, I don't know how to locate them.]]>
quid comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18297) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18297#Comment_18297 2012-02-06T17:00:10-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 quid http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/583/ One example would be Yemon's 'group theory excercise' I guess; asked on math.SE than idling around there until Will Jagy started 'advertising' it here on MO meta and then answered by an MO regular, ... One example would be Yemon's 'group theory excercise' I guess; asked on math.SE than idling around there until Will Jagy started 'advertising' it here on MO meta and then answered by an MO regular, Noah Snyder if I rememeber right.

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Charles Staats comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18296) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18296#Comment_18296 2012-02-06T16:49:56-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Charles Staats http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/297/ I'll try to get some concrete examples, but obviously I won't be able to provide concrete examples of questions that should have been asked, and were not. On a larger scale, I'm not so much talking ... markvs comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18295) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18295#Comment_18295 2012-02-06T16:09:18-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 markvs http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/364/ @Charles: For me, clearly unwelcome questions are 1) homeworks, 2) badly formulated questions, 3) questions whose answers are easily googled and 4) questions that have nothing to do with mathematics. ... Ryan Budney comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18294) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18294#Comment_18294 2012-02-06T16:08:27-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Ryan Budney http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/107/ I agree with Mariano, it's best to keep things concrete and on a case-by-case basis if we want to make any progress. I suppose you could easily make a counter-argument: perhaps the only reason why ... I agree with Mariano, it's best to keep things concrete and on a case-by-case basis if we want to make any progress.

I suppose you could easily make a counter-argument: perhaps the only reason why questions appear to be better-answered on MO is because of whose mouth the answer is coming out of? I haven't seen much evidence to support your claim, Charles.

And MO has always been elitist in a certain strict sense. MO is about research mathematics, which basically by definition is a type of elite. There's a criterion, is what I mean.

In that regard, an abstract discussion is kind of pointless.

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Mariano comments on "Are people too ready to recommend moving questions to Stackexchange?" (18293) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1300/are-people-too-ready-to-recommend-moving-questions-to-stackexchange/?Focus=18293#Comment_18293 2012-02-06T15:58:47-08:00 2018-11-04T13:47:55-08:00 Mariano http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/61/ (I fear that it is more or less useless to discuss this subject without reference to concrete questions. Abstract discussion will lead to the inevitable conclusion that some of the questions that are ... (I fear that it is more or less useless to discuss this subject without reference to concrete questions. Abstract discussion will lead to the inevitable conclusion that some of the questions that are redirected to m.se could have probably stayed here, that others had their natural home there, that we should all be civil and exercise our good will, and so on)

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