Reactions are here! Suggestions?
Reactions are officially here!
Reactions are another way for the community to give feedback on a post; for more information, see this Meta post.
I've disabled the default "Works for me", "Outdated", and "Dangerous" reactions for now, since I don't feel like they work well for this community. That's where you all come in - we can add any reactions that this community needs, so please give your suggestions!
3 answers
I had asked some question. So, from experience on asking question I can say that
helpful is better for the community.
A answer can be good and bad in languages CD. But I don't think word in language also gets outdated. So I am saying that Helpful and Unhelpful is better for reaction. Even they are helpful for the community's Meta site.
Unhelpful requires comment.
Sometimes, people can give false information. For reason, I would like to "expand" the Unhelpful reaction.
Description of Unhelpful : False information or poorly written.?
Helpful : Good answer; helpful for me.?
I don't have any idea how helpful
reaction will be helpful. But unhelpful
reaction will be helpful cause as we know that if a person react as unhelpful than they must add comment while they can downvote without saying why the post is unhelpful.
I just chose Helpful as opposite of Unhelpful
This has been implemented
[Citation needed]
As a more academically focused site, it might be useful to mark answers as lacking sufficient citations to back the answer up authoritatively. This gives a way for users to express skepticisms without the baggage of downvotes, which would imply an answer is actually wrong in some way, rather than just needing improvement in this regard.
All languages have dialects and an answer on a specific topic can be true... or false, depending on the dialect. For this, I think we could add a reaction like:
- This matches with my dialect [add comment indicating region/country]
- This does not match my dialect [idem]
I think this would be specially interesting for questions about Spanish, which is used quite differently across many countries.
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