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Cover image for How to DEV: Tips  I've found in Forem repository
Vitor Paladini
Vitor Paladini

Posted on • Updated on • Originally published at paladini.dev

How to DEV: Tips I've found in Forem repository

I don't know about you, but I find DEV Community's commitment to openness and transparency fantastic.

I love that we can simply download the code that makes this run, snoop around and find how it works.

That's what I did last weekend and today I'm sharing some things I've learned.

Keep in mind that things might change (they did while I was writing this post πŸ˜„) so let me know in the comments if something is not up to date.

Make sure your article has a cover image

Reference

It is general advice to always add a relevant cover/feature image to your posts as it makes it more attractive.

Here in DEV it has the extra benefit of making your post suitable to the first position of the feed.

Be aware that while having a cover image will not guarantee that your post is featured as the first of the feed, not having one will make it impossible.

Avoid using #discuss and #watercooler tags together

Reference

I'm guilty of this one.

#discuss and #watercooler sound quite similar but they serve different purposes.

#discuss is for "questions designed to elicit community responses" while #watercooler is meant "for slightly, or majorly offtopic subjects".

My take of these guidelines is that #discuss is good for work/career/tech/industry-related discussions while #watercooler is for laid back chats with people on the community.

With that in mind, it comes as no surprise that articles with the #watercooler tag get a small penalty in the feed algorithm. So adding #watercooler to your serious #discuss thread may actually make it harder to reach its audience.

So, if your discussion is more focused and serious go for #discuss. For just-for-fun chats that respect the code of conduct, #watercooler is that way to go.

Understand the "hotness score"

Reference

Every article has a score that helps the feed algorithm decide which articles to show on your DEV homepage.

At the time of writing, that hotness score takes a few things in consideration:

  1. How recent is the article
  2. How many reactions it has
  3. How big is the article comment score
  4. How spammy the article looks

I'm not going deep on numbers because, I'm not even kidding, the rules of the ranking changed twice until I got to this part of the text. πŸ₯΄

How recent is the article

Article freshness is calculated by getting the difference between the article time of publish and DEV epoch date (2010-01-01 00:00:01).

Freshly posted articles also get a score bonus that gradually decreases until the mark of 4 days. From then on it receives a penalty that decreases the weight of reactions on the score, so older posts get a bit less attention.

How many reactions it has

This one is pretty straight-forward, a post with lots of ❀️, πŸ¦„ and πŸ”– get a bigger hotness score.

How big is the article comment score

An article comment score is the sum of all of its comments own score.

A comment score is based on:

  1. How many ❀️ it has.
  2. How many replies it has.
  3. How spammy the comment looks

The comment also gets a bonus if it is bigger than a specific size or includes code samples.

How spammy the article looks

Article spamminess decreases the hotness score.

If you are a trusted user (couldn't find what that means) or have any badges, your spamminess is zero. However, if your account is newly created it get a little spam bump.

Wrapping it up

While certainly cool to know, you may find that the topics that I brought today are no game-changer.

I mean, if someone came here expecting tips to game the feed algorithm I'm sure that this person will leave quite disappointed. πŸ˜„

What I really hope, though, is that this article sparked an interest in looking through Forem. I have zero experience with Ruby/Rails and it is being an interesting learning platform.

As a final thought, imagine how wonderful it would be if we could do that with every app that we use every day?


Hey, let's connect πŸ‘‹

Follow me on Twitter and let me know you liked this article!

And if you really liked it, make sure to share it with your friends, that'll help me a lot πŸ˜„

Top comments (2)

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branmar97 profile image
Brandon Marrero πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡Έ

Thank you for sharing this. As a new user to DEV, I am lucky to have this information early. So far I think the system here allows for lots of engagement, networking, and controlling what is shown in your feed. It seems like there are lots of features in place to make high-quality posts get seen more as well. I think that is a great for active users or serious bloggers trying to build viewership and following. I will definitely keep these tips in mind

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vtrpldn profile image
Vitor Paladini

Hey, Bradon. Glad I could help! I agree with all your points and one thing that I'm certain of is that the core team is working to improve it every day.

Let me know if I can help with anything else, I've learned quite a bit of DEV-fu this last couple of months πŸ˜„