
I love programming very much. It’s rare in my country of birth because I did not own a computer science degree and yet a guy who isn’t think that programming is too hard. Maybe I should use the word “scripting” instead of programming because it will makes the word “scripting” sounds like an art and less imposing as well.
For those people who think scripting (programming) are too hard, or they’ve been bogged down when writing large scripts, Stack Overflow offered a fun way for one to look at this art. On the main page, Stack Overflow introduced itself as a collaboratively edited question and answer site for programmers – regardless of platform or language. And users will find most of the questions and answers related to scripting (programming), albeit that some questions are originally tend to be fun such as “What is the worst code you’ve ever written,” “When did you know it was time to leave your job,” “What is your funniest end user story,” etc. as perceived in my first glance.
Currently, there are 17,790 questions posted on the site, at the time of my writing. Most of them are related to the use of programming languages, and all questions are properly organized with the number of votes, answers, and views. Besides, all the essential content are classified logically so that when users are searching the questions based on newest, hot, week, month, or tags, they can select the tabs and questions will be appeared accordingly. Moreover, users are encouraged to sign-up for an account because this will allows them to edit anything, this include questions that posted to the site, in addition to collect karma, in the form of receiving badges.
In overall, Stack Overflow is a scripting (programming) Q&A Web site, however, this site has performed best at its most important job by providing valuable content with the user goals of wikis, blogs, forums, and Digg/Reddit.