So while I understand well why CW is like it is regarding rep from the point of view of those that control this behavior (who have a quite different idea when it should be used, yet in any case very rarely), I find it much less comprehensible in view of the way it is often (ab)used. As said, I think CW is over-used. If the community thinks that soft-question is not good enough to give rep, it should IMO simply be closed not turned into some form of second-class status.
]]>To me the typical example is a question where there are a couple of standard answers essentially everybody can think of and the only interesting thing is what is the distribution of the opinions expressed by votes and there is also no particular usefullnes in giving a similar but somewhat different answer; why the first to state the obvious should then get 'something' I think there is no need. And many of my downvotes were made resorting a CW-lists question; it would be strange if such votes had a rep-influence.
@David: I am confused regarding this issue now; but I defnitely was under a miscoception here and this behavior I am surprised about seems consistent as I checked in some case, so this is by design. Though I still believe that those answers appearing after the questioner decided for CW are automatically CW (without moderator intervention). But I agree it is odd if there are some 'old' non-CW answers on a CW-question, as this seems then arbitrary.
]]>(Yes, I cross-posted the link here as a comment there as well, I just find it fascinating how well the community here views CW questions as a very useful part of the system, while the SE system [read: global network system, not individual sites] is very much trying to abhor the idea of CW questions...)
]]>Once you've used this site for a while, it's easy to forget how complicated it can look to fresh eyes. For example, go to the front page and count how many elements there are. By an "element" I mean something like a link, a tab, a reputation count, a view count, a datestamp, an entry box, a title, a menu, a name, a question, a tag ... New and newish users are highly unlikely to know what all these things mean, and similarly may have no idea what "community wiki" means. As Shevek says, the tick-box doesn't exactly jump out at you.
That isn't meant to be a criticism of the design of the site, which I think is pretty good. It's just a plea for some understanding of what it's like for new users. If a new user asks a good community wiki-type question and gets some "undeserved" points, what does it matter? Welcome to MathOverflow!
]]>I should have known of what types of question you were speaking :) I agree direct textbook-recommendations should be CW most of the time, since they are poll-like; the vote is much more 'for the book' not so much the precise content of the answer.
I wanted to write: However, answers to CW questions are always CW (also retroactively). I believe what you point out regarding this is only a display issue and it is CW; if this is different it should be a bug. (Upvote and watch the unchanged rep.)
But I tried this and...
Turns out either I am completely mistaken or this is a bug. As these answers really remained non-CW. This is extremely surpsing for me! So, I agree this is problematic.
]]>Indeed, somewhat recently I saw somebody (not you) quite aggressively asking why something was not CW, which in my opinion definitely should not be CW. Indeed, there are also questions that are CW from the start but should not be (according to my understanding). In particular, it is not true that a question being soft, on notation, on history or something like this alone makes it a CW question; it is only that question in this category tend to be such that they are CW for other reasons.
]]>For now, leave a helpful comment, along the lines of: "This question probably should be community wiki: <reason>", and/or flag for moderator attention. So far, the flagged post queue is usually quite short, and not a big bother. I doubt it gets cleared more often than every 3-6 hours, though, so bringing this to the poster attention will get faster results.
<reason> should be one of: 1) you're asking for a sorted list of resources 2) ...?
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