An Empirical Study of Obsolete Answers on Stack Overflow

March 28, 2019 Β· Declared Dead Β· πŸ› IEEE Transactions on Software Engineering

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Authors Haoxiang Zhang, Shaowei Wang, Tse-Hsun, Chen, Ying Zou, Ahmed E. Hassan arXiv ID 1903.12282 Category cs.SE: Software Engineering Citations 85 Venue IEEE Transactions on Software Engineering Last Checked 3 months ago
Abstract
Stack Overflow accumulates an enormous amount of software engineering knowledge. However, as time passes, certain knowledge in answers may become obsolete. Such obsolete answers, if not identified or documented clearly, may mislead answer seekers and cause unexpected problems (e.g., using an out-dated security protocol). In this paper, we investigate how the knowledge in answers becomes obsolete and identify the characteristics of such obsolete answers. We find that: 1) More than half of the obsolete answers (58.4%) were probably already obsolete when they were first posted. 2) When an obsolete answer is observed, only a small proportion (20.5%) of such answers are ever updated. 3) Answers to questions in certain tags (e.g., node.js, ajax, android, and objective-c) are more likely to become obsolete. Our findings suggest that Stack Overflow should develop mechanisms to encourage the whole community to maintain answers (to avoid obsolete answers) and answer seekers are encouraged to carefully go through all information (e.g., comments) in answer threads.
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