We're going to be looking at the ask question page from a few different perspectives soon, the most interesting of course being that of a new (or inexperienced) user.
Instead of having one place to type all the things that need to be typed, we're considering a version of the page that asks for things individually with additional guidance for each thing:
- What's the title of your question? Your title should be a short summary of the problem you're having.
- Tell us about your problem in a few sentences. Start with phrases like How do I or I don't understand, followed by the main idea of your question.
- Tell us the steps you've taken so far, or how you arrived at this problem. If you've done any debugging, let us know what you've tried here. If you're stuck on how to get started, let us know what you searched for prior to asking, so we get a good idea of your understanding of the problem.
- Show us the code that illustrates the problem. Don't paste too much, but make sure you provide the code you suspect is the problem, and any other code we'd need to understand how it works. If all you have is a few attempts, show those to us instead, it helps us understand where you're stuck and write more relevant and helpful answers
- Anything else we should know? Are you working on a non-standard platform? Does the problem require special circumstances to reproduce? The more information you provide, the faster you'll get an answer.
Finally, we'd show them the tags we inferred from the question, a brief bit of guidance about what tagging is and why it's important, and ultimately have them post the question.
What's next? You guessed it, just combine all of the input in order and .. there's the question.
What I have above is probably too long, too many words, and too much like getting a quote for car insurance. This is a very hypothetical idea that folks responsible for product development have been kicking around, it's just relevant in the context of your question.
And, to be clear - this would only be shown to very inexperienced users for a very short time, while giving them the ability (along with a bit of caution) to switch to the normal editor.
But, that's the gist of it. Showing a final 'preview' does sound like a reasonable idea, provided that the brains and designers working on this find a way to break the essential parts of a good question out into smaller bits.
In the meanwhile, have a status-review - I don't have a timeline on when we'll be getting deep into building this, probably months at least, but something is coming and I think this idea could be a nice part of it.
<10
- at the rate SO currently deals with it, I think any new user would learn their lesson from 4-5 bad questionsScrew readin wot i jus writ, jus gimme teh codez
button.