Spyke
nostupidquestions·No Stupid QuestionsbyCras

What does the Hot sorting actually mean?

Right now I have my feed sorted by Hot. The sixth post in my feed is 19 days old, has zero comments, and one upvote. I'm struggling to work out what algorithm is deciding this is a Hot post

View original on feddit.uk

The answers always in the GitHub lol, but I haven’t been here long and I was sure something was off with the sorting but assumed it was due to server issues or low on the fix list.

22
reddthat.com

Sorting by anything seems pretty buggy now - growing pains, I guess. I tend to sort by "New comments" and from time to time I'll get threads with zero comments on top of my feed...

I'm sure it's going to get better with time - right now we're all basically taking part in an extended load test for Lemmy and federation mechanisms :)

38

I just use "Top in 6 hours" as a functional substitute for "Hot".

10
doctortofureply
reddthat.com

True - which seems to be a bug to me, since that's what studying by New is supposed to show. I do find all the bugs kinda endearing though - reminds me of the internet of old and the time when reddit wax starting :)

4
lemmy.world

Funny that the first post I saw when sorting by Hot is a post asking what hot sorting is

24

From what I understand, hot is supposed to be like Reddit where they show up posts that are gaining traction in the day.

But yeah it's pretty buggy right now, been seeing a lot of old posts too

23
  • Lemmy uses the same Rank algorithm above, in two sorts: Active, and Hot.
    • Active uses the post votes, and latest comment time (limited to two days).
    • Hot uses the post votes, and the post published time.
6

I love sorting by new, its chock full of interesting (and shit) content that you'll never know what to expect lmao

1
scutigerreply
lemmy.world

If you set your default sorting method in your settings, it applies it to all pages by default. So your subscribed will also be sorted that way when you might prefer that be sorted by new or active. Then you need to manually choose to sort it differently each time you change between subscribed/local/all.

2

Supposed to be based on time since posted with some kind of logarithmic decay and rating.

But yeah it seems buggy.

17

For a big instance, Hot sorting seems to work pretty well. Otherwise Top Day is probably a better choice.

8

I actually enjoy that the algorithm is not that good. I hate it that every site nowadays just throws everything they think you want at you. It's so refreshing to just see what people are posting without that complex stuff going on in the back.

6

As far as I can tell, when I sort by hot it overheats the CPU of the instance server.

5

That's just a bug. It gets better with newer versions of Lemmy.

4
lemmy.world

Sorting by hot and All, my front page looks like this right now - guess the bugged algorithm really likes that community for some reason.

4

I'm sure it's growing pains. When it works it seems to be the best way of sorting things, but after a while it seems to give you new, relevant stuff interlaced with really old irrelevant stuff.

3

For me, the first page is showing new stuff but the second page sometimes shows posts from weeks ago or even 2 years ago.

Edit: hot is completely broken when I browse subscribed posts.

3

I like to use Hot for up and coming kinda posts, or finding random communities. When I get bored of that, I normally do one of the Top ones (Day, 3, 6 hours etc).

3

You reached the end