October 18, 2019
On Friday, 18 October 2019 at 12:41:53 UTC, Paolo Invernizzi wrote:
> On Friday, 18 October 2019 at 11:45:33 UTC, Seb wrote:
>> On Friday, 18 October 2019 at 10:55:59 UTC, Martin Tschierschke wrote:
>>> [...]
>>
>> In the state of the D survey, there were more people in favor of StackOverflow than D.learn, but to be fair the majority voted for "I don't care"
>>
>> https://rawgit.com/wilzbach/state-of-d/master/report.html
>
> Maybe it's possible to simply add an up/down vote functionality to the forum only, just keeping the compatibility with the newsgroup ...
>
> It's a win/win solution!
+1
It may help in the DIP discussions, too!

You can just see if an argument for or against a change, is accepted by the majority of thread readers or not. And you can highlight those up-voted arguments to get an better impression about the outcome of the discussion in total.
October 18, 2019
On Friday, 18 October 2019 at 13:38:11 UTC, Ron Tarrant wrote:
> On Friday, 18 October 2019 at 07:35:21 UTC, Martin Tschierschke wrote:
>> I very often end with a solution found on one of the StackExchange forums like > StackOverflow or AskUbuntu etc.
>
> I have found that StackExchange does often have answers, but I can't say I like asking questions on there, especially if the question is almost-the-same-but-not-the-same as a question asked earlier. In cases like this, I've been told that the previous answer applies to my question, even when it doesn't.
>
> In one instance, a moderator closed my question without reading the details in order to find out that, no, it's not the same question at all... and then refuse to reopen the question when I point this out.
>
> So, although I'll continue to use StackExchange as an historical resource, I would rather not depend on it for getting answers to new questions.

This is why I am for an own D Learn Forum, the process is (partly) described here:
https://meta.stackexchange.com/questions/76974/how-can-i-propose-a-new-site

The moderators of this should come from this forum community, if this can not be achieved, I am against a move, too.
October 18, 2019
On Friday, 18 October 2019 at 13:38:11 UTC, Ron Tarrant wrote:
> I have found that StackExchange does often have answers, but I can't say I like asking questions on there, especially if the question is almost-the-same-but-not-the-same as a question asked earlier. In cases like this, I've been told that the previous answer applies to my question, even when it doesn't.

Was that tagged D? Other tags tend to get obnoxious attention, but stuff tagged D  usually gets jumped on fairly quickly by people you'd recognize here and we're all pretty easy going and can push back if outside moderators get involved.

Though really since it is the same people, I don't see any real difference in asking here or SO on IRC. SO might be better for searching and I do often write a little more there for those searches and links, but I don't particularly mind duplicates anyway.

October 18, 2019
On Friday, 18 October 2019 at 13:30:37 UTC, Martin Tschierschke wrote:
> On Friday, 18 October 2019 at 12:51:35 UTC, bachmeier wrote:
>> On Friday, 18 October 2019 at 07:35:21 UTC, Martin Tschierschke wrote:
>>> If I search for what ever, not related to D, I very often end with a solution
>>> found on one of the StackExchange forums like StackOverflow or AskUbuntu etc.
>>>
>>> The main advantage is, that all answers can be classified (up/down voted, moderated etc.)
>>> This is much better than finding something in the D-Learn Forum where it is difficult to see,
>>> if several answers are given are they still valid, especially if they are some years old.
>>>
>>> I know that this was asked in the D survey and I think it should be on the table again.
>>>
>>> If we unite for this idea, it should be possible to start an own "DExchange" sub platform.
>>>
>>> Best regards mt.
>>
>> You can already ask questions on SO. What you are proposing is to close this forum, require registration to ask a question, and let JavaScript developers close questions and treat new users rudely. That doesn't seem like a good idea. The fact that most questions get asked here rather than on SO now suggests that there isn't much demand for SO.
>
> I am not for moving just to StackOverflow, but to make an own "DExchange" / "AskD" or what ever named learn platform with and inside the StackExchange [1] technology. This should keep D users together and would avoid mixing with other languages. But I am not sure if this is really achievable for us.
>
> [1] https://stackexchange.com/sites#

But then users would have to register for a new site, even if they already have a SO account. That would greatly reduce the number willing to ask questions. I don't have a problem with doing that (and you certainly can do so without asking anyone) but I strongly oppose shutting down D.learn.
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