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Comments on Should it be possible to "react" to one's own posts?

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Should it be possible to "react" to one's own posts?

+5
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We now have reactions.

However, I notice that there seems to be nothing stopping a user from "reacting" to their own posts.

For some reactions, this might make sense. For example, an outdated answer might be kept around for reference or for the benefit of some subset of readers, but the user posting it could use a reaction to mark it as "outdated". They might even want to mark their own answer as "dangerous" if there's something in particular about it that someone attempting what it describes needs to be fully aware of up front.

But "worked for me"?

It's not like one would likely propose an answer without at least being fairly certain that it works for solving whatever the question is asking about; and if one does, then hopefully a wrong answer would be downvoted for not being helpful.

Should it be possible to react to one's own posts? Should certain reactions be possible to apply to one's own posts and others only to posts by other users?

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+4
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Good question. A reaction doesn't bestow benefits (reputation, progress toward abilities, or preferential placement on the page), so in one sense reacting to your own post is harmless. On the other hand, it does add an attention-grabbing marker, and it might make sense to restrict that.

I've been thinking of the "works for me" reaction as a solution to the "accepted answer" problem -- we've heard a desire for the asker to be able to mark an answer (or mark the question as resolved), and other Q&A platforms have the "green checkmark" concept. But we also felt that this shouldn't depend on the asker, who sometimes never comes back to follow up, and we felt that a "works for me" marker that anybody could use would meet the need and then some.

So, all that said, should you be able to mark your own answer as "works for me"? It seems handy in the case of self-answers, particularly where somebody asked a question and later figured it out and came back to post an answer. Other people who are scanning the page for vetted solutions will be looking for the marker and would miss a working self-answer if we blocked that.

We could probably add "prevent self-reactions" to the configuration of individual reactions, so a community could allow self-declaration for outdatedness but not workingness. I didn't give this much thought during design and testing, I admit. Or is it sufficient to show who that reaction comes from? We already show who's reacting; would some additional indicator for the author of the post be helpful?

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3 comment threads

The same reason why one should not vote on own contributions (3 comments)
TBF I don't really see a reason why you would ever want to self-react on a post. If you found a post ... (4 comments)
Signifying ownership (1 comment)
TBF I don't really see a reason why you would ever want to self-react on a post. If you found a post ...
luap42‭ wrote about 3 years ago

TBF I don't really see a reason why you would ever want to self-react on a post. If you found a post outdated or dangerous, best recourse would be to edit the post and to address the issue. So I suppose we could also completely prohibit self-reactions without much trouble.

Monica Cellio‭ wrote about 3 years ago · edited about 3 years ago

True, you can edit and at least say there's a problem even if you don't yet know what the fix is. And if a self-answer works, somebody else might add that reaction.

Canina‭ wrote about 3 years ago

luap42‭ Editing to fix outdatedness or dangerousness might require significant work, which one might not want to put in at the time. (Adding a reaction is comparatively a very rapid operation.) Also, some things might be dangerous by their very nature, and there's nothing to be done about that. Being able to communicate such a fact up front in a standardized manner has some value.

luap42‭ wrote about 3 years ago

Err... that wasn't formulated clearly. I mean that, besides fixing, you could also just add a warning/disclaimer into the post. For example "The solution proposed in this post only works with Python version 1.0.0 or earlier" or "Attention! This is very hot and you could easily burn yourself if you are not careful."