HACKER Q&A
📣 RivieraKid

What's wrong with asking for a TL;DR?


Whenever I ask for a TL;DR when there's a long article on HN, I'm downvoted. Why?

I think there is a legitimate value in short summaries of long articles. Often you can extract 90% of the value with just 10% of the time (and more importantly 10% of the energy). I'm mainly reading articles on HN to extract value, not because I enjoy the experience of reading.

Also, a summary can indicate whether it's worth it to read the full article. When it's unclear from the title what some heavily upvoted article is about, should you spend the time to find out and risk wasting some of your limited time and mental energy?


  👤 ksaj Accepted Answer ✓
I suspect it comes across like "My time is too valuable to spend reading this article. Since your time is less valuable, please read it and explain it to me."

I could be wrong. But I can see that interpretation being plausible.

I wonder how often people use OSX's Summarize capability for exactly this purpose. It does a surprisingly good job.


👤 h2odragon
"Hi I'm too busy to read this myself someone go understand it for me and summarize it tx"

Even a polite request for a TLDR suggests you want to say you read or understood something without making the effort. I might help you fake things like that but only if i really like you, and still feel a little skeezy about it cuz its wrong.

Less polite, more arrogant demands for TLDR (which is how many come across) are worse. Feels like being bullied into helping someone cheat.

By comparison, try this: "I read half of this and am totally lost? Can someone help?" The same question, but the feeling is much different with just a little implied humility.


👤 gus_massa
Each community has it's explicit and implicit rules. One of the (implicit?) rules here is no tl;dr. The idea is that the site will get a better technical discussion if everyone reads the complete article before commenting. (Strangely, another rule is that you can't write RTFA.)

Nobody is sure which are the best rules to get a nice discussion, but this are the rules here. Other communities like tl;dr.

There are some exceptions, like very very long articles or very very technical articles. Also, sometimes the tl;dr are ignored, nobody is so angry to downvote a tl;dr until it has -100 points. So assume that if you write or ask for a tl;dr, there is a high chance that it will be downvoted.


👤 jimmyvalmer
Nothing wrong, and my tldr's are frequently upvoted.