50

I believe most people do it using tags. Surely some use the "newest questions" link above, or the others filtering options. Others just attack them randomly when they're feeling a thrust of need to answer questions. And there are the foreigns who come across questions for whatever reason (such as google) to eventually give an answer.

I don't have a method, but I see there are way too many unanswered questions (right now, above 8k on stack and 4k on superuser). There's probably at least one question there that I could answer, but I'm finding it quite too hard to find the ones that are "right for me".

So, how do you do to find your answerable questions?

I couldn't even find a duplicate to this, as I figure there must be one.

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  • 7
    I have to admit it used to be easier in the early days of Super User. Nowadays questions range from topics where I know little of (Linux/Mac) to help with alien coding programs or worse: solutions that do not exist... Where are all have all the noob questions gone to!
    – Ivo Flipse
    Mar 31, 2010 at 20:13

8 Answers 8

4

So, you have a set of answers prepared, and hope that someone will ask the corresponding question?!

I think it's not very different from usual web browsing - just browse through the questions, and there's always a lot of interesting stuff, and when you have experience on something (or an interesting idea), and the question isn't already fully answered, just add your 2 cents if it could help the question author.

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  • 4
    It turns out this is what I have been doing indeed, as per my answer. So, I guess I should accept this, despite your uncalled aggressive rhetorical question in the first line.
    – cregox
    May 9, 2014 at 16:37
  • Please explain me why this is a best answer and how it could be in a different way. Of course one looks for questions he knows the answers for. Nobody will answer a question when he does not know the answer.
    – Paul
    Dec 18, 2015 at 19:30
  • @Paul i was never notified of your question. nor can i understand it. the general best answer is obviously the one with most votes, but i did want to call the attention to this since, in practice, it's how i've been doing all along. i personally never search for tags. and never tried searching for questions ever since a few months after i created this question.
    – cregox
    Oct 5, 2017 at 19:09
29

I usually like to use searches like this answers:0 closed:0 [tagname] where tagname is something I feel that I am skilled at.

Of course I also watch the front page and the check the RSS questions feed a couple times a day.

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    That's very cool, what other command-words are there on the search? -edit: never-mind. i think I accidentally found it: meta.stackoverflow.com/search
    – cregox
    Mar 31, 2010 at 22:03
  • You might want to add something like score:1 to weed out questions with low quality. Feb 4, 2018 at 12:05
  • I'd remove the answers:0 filter on the tags that I'm proficient at. Too many times I've seen the first 1 or 2 early answers that are complete guesswork or they're just incorrect/half-ass answers. Especially now that all 0 score answers are sorted randomly instead of based on creation date. Oct 11, 2021 at 18:52
10

Majority of the time, I can find several questions that I can answer on the front page (active). The issue tends not to be finding questions that I can answer, but finding questions that don't already have good enough answers, as questions in the popular tags tend to get answers pretty fast (and being a .NET mouth-breather, I spend most of my time in the popular tags).

If it's a slow day then I'll head over to the Featured tab; I'm not that much of a bounty hunter, but they tend to be the most interesting questions, and the people who start bounties generally really want answers so they'll tend to appreciate your input more.

Final stop is the Unanswered page, using the tag links on the right to filter to unanswered questions that are relevant to me personally. It's rare that I ever make it there, though, unless I'm going for a badge; there are just too many new questions being asked.

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The easiest ones to answer (and/or close) are the beginner tagged questions with no answers, not wiki, and not closed.

Beyond that - there are 30k questions that are not wiki, not closed, and have no answers. If you don't know good tags to use to search them (ie, you don't know a programming language, or term) then you probably can't answer any of them.

Try these searches:

(The last three based on your user profile)

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  • Of course, in the case of the C++ questions, the vast majority of them are not about C++ - it's just that the questioner gave them that tag. This is why they don't have answers. I would estimate that 99.99% of C++ questions that are actually about the language get answered quickly. Probably the same is true for most other unanswered questions.
    – nb69307
    Mar 31, 2010 at 20:02
  • @Neil - as it is with most of the language tags. They are there to narrow down the field - "ajax java" would have a different audience than "ajax php".
    – Pollyanna
    Mar 31, 2010 at 20:05
  • 2
    The one drawback of a search like answers:0 closed:0 you tend to find a large number of poorly asked and/or abandoned questions. Most questions that can be answered usually don't stay in an unanswered state very long.
    – Zoredache
    Mar 31, 2010 at 20:08
7

I just refresh the main page until I find one I like. If I don't find something interesting, I go do something else (like work, how lame) for a little while and try again.

I should note that I occasionally answer questions outside my comfort zone in languages I don't know a lot about simply to expand my own knowledge base. I find something interesting/new/weird, go research it, and then provide an answer.

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If you're using Google Chrome, you could try the Stacked Odds extension.

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  • While I'm still trying various methods, I like how this app sounds like a direct answer and still is completely unrelated to my question. :)
    – cregox
    Mar 15, 2011 at 12:17
  • 2
    This app just doesn't seem to work anywhere :(
    – gideon
    Feb 24, 2012 at 4:03
  • Does this extension still work? Hasn't been any activity on the app page for quite some time. May 8, 2014 at 21:05
  • @SamtheBrand I actually don't know, but I assume it has been ostracized indeed, as it has been too long without any updates and it looks like it simply doesn't work.
    – cregox
    May 8, 2014 at 23:43
4

Almost 4 years after this question, here's how I've been handling it: I go with the wind. Granted, this doesn't really answer my question as I'd like, but in the end it is how I've been doing it.

Main thing I do to "find the right question" is I don't look for them. I just continue with my day to day... When I have a question I mostly google for it. If I stumble on StackExchange I'm glad to find it answered, if there is no answer that satisfies me I add one, if there is no question then I ask one. I hardly ever find unanswered questions, but I think it did happen once or twice. I mostly find those "unanswered questions in need" in more obscure Q&A sites, such as Unity3D or AskDifferent - There's only less than 10K unanswered there, and less than 40K total questions, against 1.7M and 7.2M from SO.

I actually only ever actively look for questions when I see I have less answers than questions, which usually happens when I start in a new community. Then I quest for "questions I can answer", as a way to keep my Q:A ratio closer to 1:1. I don't mind having more answers than questions, what bothers me is taking more than giving. For whatever reason, it just pokes me at night.

So yeah, I haven't used any single resource from all the helpful answers here in all these years. That's not to say I haven't used any tools...

Best tool I've came across was Newt. I think it's for mac only, but it's awesome. It notifies of messages and it brings random new questions as they pop up. I haven't even used the pop up feature, but it is quite nice for finding questions at random. And I have actually stopped using Newt this year in favor of the next one...

Second best tool was StackAlert, which has almost nothing to do with finding the right questions, but it kinda helps me with that as well because it keeps reminding me of old posts thanks to new people interested in it who post up new things. Eventually I look at the similar questions or there are new links or I just try to update stuff and end up finding new questions.

In the end, I've been using a lot of patience and, in one word, serendipity to find the questions.

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Have you tried the Unanswered big link you can find in every page?

It only shows questions with no upvoted answers in the tags you have set as interesting. :)

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  • It makes the task a bit easier, but still the displayed list is a huge heap of questions I can't answer and often even can't understand what it is about.
    – Paul
    Jun 11, 2013 at 13:28
  • Don't know why I didn't answer your question back then but yeah, from the links in my question you could assume I had tried it, as I have. As it turns out, I was looking for lazier ways to find them, as you can read from my answer now. I think a better question would have been "How to make the right questions that I can answer find me?" but I'll leave the question as it is for now. ;-)
    – cregox
    May 9, 2014 at 16:39

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