Like maybe five minutes. Has anyone considered such a feature?

I've gotten workable answers given to questions that were also immediately closed with reasons that really didn't apply to the given question. I had no time to edit my post or provide more information. If beginner questions aren't allowed on this site simply say so or retheme the engine. Call it beginner overflow. I don't care. In my opinion, these silent, unhelpful and overeager moderators seem to be the biggest problem with a site that I thought was designed to answer programming questions.

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Do you have any examples? Also closing is not the end. If you improve the question it can be reopened. Add a comment, post here or flag for moderator attention. – ChrisF Jan 25 '12 at 13:07
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Like this question of yours? It was just code and a "is there any reason why it wouldn't do what i think it does?". How could people answer that? – Damien Pirsy Jan 25 '12 at 13:11
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Another question I would have it why were the questions closed? Closing because a question is a duplicate is rather different (from the standpoint here) than closing for other reasons. – cdeszaq Jan 25 '12 at 13:13
And especially this revision I assume is the one that got closed? – Bart Jan 25 '12 at 13:13
a -1. classy. it happens all the time. as for "it pollutes the front page. why doesn't someone make a fix so every question doesn't go on there by default? does that not make any sense? – expiredninja Jan 25 '12 at 13:13
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Also, closing questions quickly helps to keep Stack Overflow focused on what problems it's designed to solve. If one lets unwanted questions be answered at all, then similar questions are more likely to be asked in the future, creating a shame spiral. – cdeszaq Jan 25 '12 at 13:14
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Lastly, votes here on meta don't mean the same thing as votes on SO. On meta, votes indicate agreement or disagreement with the ideas expressed in a post, rather than on the quality or helpfulness of the question, as they do on SO. Please don't be offended by downvotes here on meta, it's just the community opinion. – cdeszaq Jan 25 '12 at 13:17
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In my own opinion, if something can be fixed within five minutes so it won't be closed, the author should think twice before posting and have it posted correctly the first time. – Sha Wiz Dow Ard Jan 25 '12 at 13:22
"designed to solve"? – expiredninja Jan 25 '12 at 13:23
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We also deleted that Q for you! Welcome! – JNK Jan 25 '12 at 13:28
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Understanding the SE philosophy can be a little difficult - I recommend reading this advice on writing the perfect question from our top-ranking user on SO. It contains a number of really useful tips, particularly the section on problem statements. – user142852 Jan 25 '12 at 13:33

closed as not constructive by Mark Trapp, Diago, Ninefingers, Sha Wiz Dow Ard, M. Night Demonbobby Jan 25 '12 at 13:23

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1 Answer

In my opinion, these silent, unhelpful and overeager moderators seem to be the biggest problem with a site...

First: In the two closed questions of yours which are public visible, no moderator did anything. Only 5 other users voted to close these questions.

...with a site that I thought was designed to answer programming questions.

It is designed to answer programming questions. But we've become picky if it comes to quality of these questions.

I had no time to edit my post or provide more information.

You can still do that, you can still edit closed questions, and they can be reopened.

time limit for “Vote to Close” like maybe five minutes. Has anyone considered such a feature?

I'm sure of that. I think I can even remember such s...like

  • Don't close questions within x minutes
  • Don't close questions after x minutes
  • Don't close questions after x upvotes
  • Automatically close questions after x downvotes
  • Don't close questions if the user says so

And what about that, you ask?

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+1 - Also the argument "I had no time to edit..." is total BS. You have infinite time before you hit "ASK QUESTION". Once you ask we assume it's at least decent, if not totally clear. Someone who has asked 30+ questions over 15 months should have an idea of how it works by now. – JNK Jan 25 '12 at 13:37

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