Feedback on this new DEV feature?
Ben Halpern

Ben Halpern @ben

About: A Canadian software developer who thinks he’s funny.

Location:
NY
Joined:
Dec 27, 2015

Feedback on this new DEV feature?

Publish Date: Jun 15 '19
144 41

🚨 Polls are not a functional feature on DEV/Forem. This post purely represents a proof of concept.


Here is a thread I made earlier today:

And before getting into what I've been up to this weekend:

My other answer:

I've been using this weekend to ship some ideas which haven't found their way into the weekday priority bin for me or the rest of the team. Low pressure time to hack on anything I want is my favorite part of the job.

One such feature I just pushed and would love some feedback on:

Polls!

Are polls a good idea for DEV?

Before you get too excited, this feature currently only works for admins, and even for admins, you can't actually create a poll outside of the console.

I'm a stickler for maintaining usefulness and accuracy with polls and surveys, even if these aren't necessarily for scientific use. As such, I think we'll want to collectively come up with good rules around whether articles that contain polls are allowed to be edited after they are published (probably not, right?) and things like that.

We will also want to come up with a good interface for including polls in posts. Two approaches come to mind.

First create the poll in separate UI and then drop in to a post like this:

{% poll e41 %}
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

Define the poll entirely inline:

{% poll %}
How do you pronounce dev.to?
- dev dot tee oh
- dev dot too
- dev dot toe
- dev toodilydoo
- dev too
{% endpoll %}
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

How should polls be created?

The poll functionality should be extensible for creation of surveys and other neat things. I think it could be fun and very useful for the industry if we get this right. I also think it would be cool if we created some aggregate data analysis of polling trends as folks use the feature which could be anonymized and released for analysis. It could be a fluid way to help people make better choices about the software they build. Before doing that we'd want to be very clear about how the data would be used and offer simple opt-out options for having your votes included in this kind of aggregation.

I'm not sure when this will ship for general use, but feel free to hop into our repo and improve on anything here. Since this was mostly a weekends feature I'm releasing it as a bit of a surprise, so the rest of the DEV team may be finding out about it via this post. 😄

Polls currently accept up to 15 options and allow for use of some inline markdown tags like the code element. Option count is pretty arbitrary but maybe we can hammer out all the little details while it is in closed beta. Multi-option polls also seem like a good idea. I left the schema flexible enough to build towards that idea but did not implement it in this push.

Here is a poll that could have been included in the above-mentioned thread about coding on the weekend:

How often do you code on the weekend?

P.S.

Speaking of new things... If you check out the "three dots" menu in the post "reactions" area, you can see new notification settings which allow you to subscribe to comment threads. This will be useful for keeping up to date with interesting discussions, AMAs, etc. depending on the post.

We think folks will find a lot of value in that usage pattern. We want to ship some additional tooling for providing more context within the notification page before we make a big announcement/push about this feature. But as long as you're reading this little weekend announcement I felt like I'd let you in on that as well.

If you follow along in the repo, you might have already known about all of this stuff already.

Happy coding!

Comments 41 total

  • Mazen Touati
    Mazen TouatiJun 15, 2019

    Sounds interesting, Good job Ben. However, it would be great if you implement an error prevention mechanism like giving a chance for the user to undo his choice in a defined interval. I accidentally cast my first vote by clicking out of curiosity.

    • Ben Halpern
      Ben HalpernJun 15, 2019

      This makes sense. It probably shouldn't be possible, though, to change your vote once you've seen results. Twitter allows you to click a button and then click submit which limits the surface area for misclicks. That is probably the expected behavior.

      I found getting things just right to be outside of the scope of my weekend hack. I hope others will jump in and improve on this whole feature. 😄

      • Mazen Touati
        Mazen TouatiJun 15, 2019

        Indeed, Twitter's model may be convenient.

      • Andrew Brooks 👨‍💻
        Andrew Brooks 👨‍💻Jun 15, 2019

        Another idea maybe is a quick countdown splash with an undo button for like 5 seconds that then changes to the results if undo is not clicked.🤔

      • Nicolus
        NicolusJun 16, 2019

        Twitter allows you to click a button and then click submit which limits the surface area for misclicks. That is probably the expected behavior.

        In any case, the expected behavior of a Radio Button is never to do something irreversible.

        If you want to save one click you could probably replace those with a "vote" button or something, then people would understand that clicking would cast their vote.

        But radio buttons ? The whole point of a radio button (as anyone who spent time playing with their dad's old stereo as a kid would know) is to play with them and see them pop out when you press another button. If you cast my vote when I press one you completely remove my ability to play with them and enjoy them.

        So yeah, a "submit" button would probably be better, especially since it would allow you to have multiple answer polls down the line without rethinking the UI.

        • Ben Halpern
          Ben HalpernJun 16, 2019

          Yeah, this is valuable feedback.

      • Pablo Ariel Mayobre
        Pablo Ariel MayobreJun 16, 2019

        Sometimes it doesn't really make a difference, so it could be optional, and the creator of the poll chooses if the vote can be changed or not

  • Andrew Brooks 👨‍💻
    Andrew Brooks 👨‍💻Jun 15, 2019

    Love the idea of polls. Small thing I noticed is when tapping a poll response on mobile in dark mode the response selected highlight renders the inner text invisible. Nice weekend feature!

    • Ben Halpern
      Ben HalpernJun 15, 2019

      Yeah I saw that too. Did a bad job of accounting for all states in all contexts before pushing. We’ll get that sorted out.

  • Josh Pullen
    Josh PullenJun 15, 2019

    I love this idea!

    One fear I have is that polls could result in less discussion happening in the comments. A user who wants to contribute their opinion and who previously might have written an in-depth comment could instead choose to vote and nothing more. This isn't always bad, but it might result in less nuanced conversations.

    I'm not sure what the right solution is to this problem. Even without any changes, though, polls definitely seem like a net win for the platform. 👍

    • Ben Halpern
      Ben HalpernJun 15, 2019

      Could be neat maybe to have a post-voting prompt to ask users to elaborate on their choice in the comments?

      I bet that would work well and be a fun little nudge.

    • Julian Soto
      Julian SotoJun 16, 2019

      It think that if you want the users to discuss in comment section, don't post a poll then.

    • Andy Piper
      Andy PiperJun 16, 2019

      Yes, this is exactly my thinking and feeling as well. For me, one of the huge attractions of DEV has been the active conversation generated by even the thoughts and questions posted. Polls could lead to more folks using a simple click to engage, and moving on. Interested to see how this might pan out, though!

  • Dan
    DanJun 15, 2019

    I’ve been meaning to ask about polls. I thought that be a great feature. Thanks for working on it!

  • ItsASine (Kayla)
    ItsASine (Kayla)Jun 16, 2019

    The poll results are grey on grey in dark mode, for what it's worth.

    I would have thought step one would have been embedding Google forms or some other poll service and then rolling your own, but you do you :P

    I prefer the inline way to make it clearer what will be in the finished article, though what would happen to results if I add an option later or completely edit the existing options like:

    {% poll %}
    Do you like kittens?
    - Yes
    - Also yes
    {% endpoll %}
    

    edited to

    {% poll %}
    Who is the best ruler ever?
    - Pol Pot
    - Hitler
    - Other
    {% endpoll %}
    
    • Ben Halpern
      Ben HalpernJun 16, 2019

      I'll get the dark mode color issues fixed in a next push.

      And yeah, I think once a post with a poll is saved, it should not be possible to edit it.

      From an implementation details perspective, the poll would be committed as a record in the database upon publication and not before that, and once published the whole post would not be editable (with a big message warning of this fact). This would help keep both the poll consistent but also ensure the context around the poll doesn't change. So you couldn't this scenario where:

      Kittens are great.
      
      {% poll %}
      Do you agree?
      - Yes
      - No
      {% endpoll %}
      

      Becomes:

      Drowning kittens is great.
      
      {% poll %}
      Do you agree?
      - Yes
      - No
      {% endpoll %}
      

      (Sorry for the disturbing visual)

      • ItsASine (Kayla)
        ItsASine (Kayla)Jun 16, 2019

        Poor kittens 😿

        Sounds like the feature's thought out 👍 Looks like a solid idea :)

        • Ben Halpern
          Ben HalpernJun 16, 2019

          No kittens were harmed in the making of this feature

  • Andrew Brown 🇨🇦
    Andrew Brown 🇨🇦Jun 16, 2019

    As a Content Creator

    I like how I've seen in Facebook posts where you can leverage reactions to be the voting mechanism.

    I think if I wanted a poll, I would create two comments in my post and then direct people to heart the one to cast their vote. This is how I would work within the limitations of the current system if I wanted polling functionality.

    I think I would much rather have a liquid tag to support a third party polling system that an integrated polling system in DEV.to. Which third-party polling service? Uncertain.

    As a Developer

    The DEV.to codebase is unwieldy and putting on my Solutions Architect hat I would hope this polling feature would be an isolate micro-application powered by lambdas (serverless functions) and the dat store elsewhere (DynamoDB) than part of the Rails codebase and schema.

    The serverless functions could still sit within the DEV.to repo just not as a Rails application.

    When I saw the launch of listings, I thought, this too would benefit by being its own isolate application. I have yet to check if its part of the single Rails codebase or is isolated.

    I hope to see improvements over the core-functionality over new features and wish I had more time to work on these on boring tickets.

    • Ben Halpern
      Ben HalpernJun 16, 2019

      Feedback super welcome as always Andrew.

      As it currently stands, we're definitely a team shaped to implement the majestic monolith approach, but as we evolve it's certainly a possibility that we would break things up into services where appropriate.

      This feature could have been done that way but I think we're about a year away from being able to adjust our overall architecture approaches (if I were to guess).

      As a company that has to keep taking some chances and maintaining momentum on new features as well as ironing out existing functionality, we have to take educated guesses and hope to be right on average most of the time.

      We're at a place where our state of "core functionality ironed out and bug-free" status is better than ever, and we will have to maintain balance as we land on new plateaus in our evolution.

      You definitely bring a lot of good insight when you dip into the code with opinions—and it's sometimes tough to balance "finding the right approach" with "settling on the practical approach in the moment". Your ongoing feedback and contribution is definitely welcome.

  • Mahesh K
    Mahesh KJun 16, 2019

    Loved it! I wonder if we can get option to skin the poll box. Like values for background color of poll and also result section?

  • Felippe Regazio
    Felippe RegazioJun 16, 2019

    Nice! Another approach could be: the post card at the timeline has/is the poll, and the post content has/is the text and discussion about it.

  • Thomas Bnt
    Thomas BntJun 16, 2019

    woaah greaaat!

  • Julian Soto
    Julian SotoJun 16, 2019

    I'd prefer to write polls in like a markdown format to keep it simple and consistent.

  • briwa
    briwaJun 16, 2019

    whether articles that contain polls are allowed to be edited after they are published (probably not, right?)

    Edited article is a different problem on its own, IMO. Whether or not they contain polls, allowing users to edit articles is tricky. I saw your example with kittens poll down below, but IMO that could be applied to any articles, say, well-received article with dozens of likes about users' pets then the author edited the article's title and description to, "List of animals that poop too much". I'm not saying anyone did/would do this, but it is possible.

    If I may, dev.to shouldn't disallow users to edit articles with polls as much as dev.to always allowing users to edit articles on any circumstances. That would make it consistent. What could be improved, though, is telling users that an article has been edited.

    Discourse has the entire history of the post changes recorded for the readers to compare versions, which IMO what is lacking in most of the content creating platform. Probably it's there because us devs (at least me) love this style of version comparison. (example, click the pencil icon next to the date Nov '18). And I think we all know other platforms that did this as well: Wikipedia, Google Docs, to name a few.

    Sorry for going on a tangent like this, it's always something that bugs me too much, even giants like Medium isn't doing it well IMO. I'm not sure if it's already in the roadmap or if it's going to be implemented, just my two cents. I can also foresee that some people would see this as a nice-to-have, which I'm fine with that.

    As for the polls, yes, it looks great. But it's true what others mentioned that polls could 'kill' the conversation, because typically polls can simply stand on its own. People might be discussing more on the results rather than the poll itself. But, as an add-on to what is already a great content creating platform, why not?

    • Ben Halpern
      Ben HalpernJun 16, 2019

      This is all really valuable feedback. We've had the idea of displaying past changes to a post as something we'd want to add in general. This could let us implement that feature with polls in mind as a use-case.

      Definitely will add a feature to prompt conversation post-vote. I think this can be dealt with through design choices and we'll see if we can split test to make sure we're having a good impact here.

      • Zohar Peled
        Zohar PeledOct 3, 2019

        You can do what Stackoverflow does: They have a grace period of 5 minutes where you can edit your post and it will not show in revision history (which is great for fixing typos and stuff like that), but any edit after that period is visible to anyone that clicks the "edited" link.

  • Jonathan Kuhl
    Jonathan KuhlJun 16, 2019

    Polls are fine, so long as those using and reading them understand that these are not scientific and only get a vague sense of how the community feels.

    Highly unlikely that any article will get a sufficiently random sample though. But again, it's fine so long as they're not treated as scientific.

  • Ben Sinclair
    Ben SinclairJun 16, 2019

    I think polls would be better as surveys with more questions.

    Other platforms have polls and people tend to either just use them for fun or use them to get unhelpful stats.

    "Do you use Photoshop Yes/No" isn't helpful unless you know the demographic, so having other questions like "are you a graphic designer" in the mix would be really cool. You could either do this as a single object or by linking all the polls in a single post as if they were related.
    We could pull out some really nice stats and a little graph or something. That would be such a cute feature compared to, say, Twitter surveys.

    • Ben Halpern
      Ben HalpernJun 16, 2019

      Yep, had similar thought in mind. I’m thinking that this functionality could sort of be like a progressive enhancement on top of the basic poll functionality.

  • Andrew Healey
    Andrew HealeyJun 16, 2019

    I probably wouldn't use a poll if it meant that the article couldn't be edited.

    I'm always going back to make minor revisions (e.g. commas, fixing code typos, adding things people mentioned in the comments and tagging them).

    • Elliot Derhay
      Elliot DerhayJun 16, 2019

      I wondered about that too, though I do see why Ben is concerned with editing after a poll is published.

      It looks like a couple of people have suggested allowing editing and letting users see post revisions to compensate for this concern. That would definitely promote good behavior.

      • Andrew Healey
        Andrew HealeyJun 16, 2019

        That sounds like a perfect solution. I would feel more comfortable editing my articles if readers could see the history 👍

  • Glenn Carremans
    Glenn CarremansJun 16, 2019

    I love this! ❤️
    I understand to keep it for admins only for now but hope to see it available for everyone soon.

    If I knew that DEV was already working/planning on something like this I wouldn't have made my blog post a couple weeks ago 😉

  • K-Sato
    K-SatoJun 17, 2019

    Very cool

  • Akhil Jay
    Akhil JayJul 30, 2019

    is the polling functionality live? I wish to use it for my new post dev.to/akhiljp_dev/would-you-pay-f...

  • Zohar Peled
    Zohar PeledOct 3, 2019

    What if I want to see the results and only then cast my vote? That's usually a valid option in most online polls I've seen...

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