What the FAQ says ...

Okay, so let's imagine I'm completely new to the site, and I have a question closed. However, I think my question is perfectly valid, or I'm totally confused about why that even happened. Nobody cared to write a comment about why it was closed.

I start thinking about it, and I'll try to read the FAQ. Here's what I read:

Questions that are not a good fit for this site may be voted closed by experienced community members. Closed questions cannot be answered, but are eligible for improvement (and eventual re-opening) through editing, voting, and commenting.

Users with 3000 reputation can cast up to 50 close votes per day. When a question reaches 5 close votes, it is marked as closed, and will no longer accept answers. Closed questions may be opened by casting reopen votes in the same manner. However, you may only vote to close or reopen a question once.

To a new member of the site, this may seem

  • overly detailed: The reader might ask, "What do I care if members with reputation over 3k can cast 50 close votes a day?".

  • missing details: The FAQ says, "may be voted closed by experienced community members" and "when a question reaches 5 close votes". This is not always true. In some cases, the question can be closed by a moderator only. From my experience, some moderators are more likely to intervene, while others only step in if there are already some community votes. As the FAQ doesn't even mention that at all, it's confusing.

  • missing guidelines: My question has been closed. Now what? In some cases, the moderator who closed (or one of the five >3k users) might not have even left a comment. The message points to the FAQ, but the FAQ says only little about how one would go and get the question reopened.
    Should the user edit? What should they edit? "Voting"? How? "Commenting"? Should the user start pinging every user who voted to close?

Obviously, there are too many open questions here.


Example

Original question is closed by one binding moderator vote. User posts a new question and says:

the other one was closed because "this question will likely solicit opinion, debate, arguments, polling, or extended discussion." So I rephrased it.

They didn't know they had to edit their old question and what to do exactly to have it reopened. The procedure of having a question reopened is clearly insufficiently addressed in the Stack Exchange network's FAQs.


Suggestion

This part of the FAQ should include more information. Here are a few ideas I came up with initially, but go ahead and suggest changes if you like!

As @YannisRizos mentions, it would also make perfect sense to create new page similar to the "How to Ask" and "How to Answer" pages that the "closed" message would then link to, instead of just extending the FAQ for this very special case.

Either way, this is what I think it should look like:

What can I do to get my question reopened?

Carefully read the message below your question. The text should explain why it was closed and point you to the FAQ. In order to have it reopened, you will have to edit your question to meet the standards outlined there. Take into account any constructive comments you received, and read the How to Ask guide.

Once you edited the question accordingly, you may use the "flag" link to inform a moderator about your changes.

They will judge if the question is worth reopening. Similarly, users with 3000 reputation can cast a "reopen" vote, which behave the same as close votes.

You can also visit Meta to post a "reopen request".

What should I not do?

Do not post the question again. Chances are it will be closed too, and also possibly deleted. You always need to fix your closed question first.

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46% accept rate
This was adapted from a MSU post that did receive 15 upvotes, but nothing ever happened there. – slhck Jan 26 at 13:27
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Counter proposal: Instead of altering the FAQ, we could expand your suggestion to a full blown "how to get my question re-opened" guide, in similar vein to the "how to ask" and "how to answer" help pages, and link to it on each close notification (and on the FAQ, obviously). How to re-open a question doesn't really belong in the FAQ, as it's information that only becomes interesting & useful after a question is closed. Me thinks. – Yannis Rizos Jan 26 at 13:52
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@YannisRizos I really like that idea! If the close message was changed accordingly, this would totally make sense. Added it to the question. – slhck Jan 26 at 13:54
No kind of phrasing is ever going to make everybody happy that their question got closed. Make it too broad and they'll complain it isn't detailed enough. Make it detailed and they'll complain that their question doesn't match any detail to the letter. What's there has worked for 3 years. – Uphill Luge Jan 26 at 14:16
@UphillLuge I don't think it works. We've seen plenty of users who just re-post their question instead of editing, or go ahead and write comments under their question without ever addressing somebody, therefore never getting a response. This list can be continued. As a new user I wouldn't know what to do. – slhck Jan 26 at 14:22
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@UphillLuge Although I see your point, it would be extremely helpful to have a single point of reference to guide users to. The point is not so much to make everybody happy, but the apparent information gap. A guide would help us be a bit more efficient, as we won't have to waste any time re-iterating the basic re-open process to every newer user. Some will still complain, but hopefully some will take the advice and try to improve their questions on their own. – Yannis Rizos Jan 26 at 14:29
@UphillLuge As a sidenote: What's worked for SO for 3 years, won't necessarily work for every other site on the network, especially the ones where subjective questions are welcome. And vice versa. – Yannis Rizos Jan 26 at 14:31
Hah! "Obviously, there are too many open questions here." instantrimshot.com – Popular Demand Jan 27 at 0:11
@yannis I am strongly opposed to such a page, as I believe it is a recipe for endless whining and a manifesto for "I done been wronged" attitudes. – Jeff Atwood Jan 27 at 8:48
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1 Answer

I appreciate what you're proposing here, but I feel this would make the problem worse, not better.

First, the existing text does cover this:

Questions that are not a good fit for this site may be voted closed by experienced community members. Closed questions cannot be answered, but are eligible for improvement (and eventual re-opening) through editing, voting, and commenting.

What you wrote isn't bad, but it has two problems.

  1. It is a "wall o' text". If the user can't read and comprehend the above simple sentence, the odds of them reading and comprehending 3+ paragraphs more, is slim to none.

  2. It enables whining. Because it starts with "my question is valid" and goes on to say "your question might have been unfairly closed! here's how you can complain about it to anyone who will listen!" it will cause no end of friction. The reality is that most questions are closed because they were NOT, in fact, valid. So getting users into this "I done been wronged!" mindset is a very bad idea.

I am open to some refinement of the text that is there, but

  1. No walls of text.

  2. No whining or enabling whining.

Here's my proposed change:

Questions that are not a good fit for this site may be voted closed by experienced community members. Closed questions cannot be answered, but are eligible for improvement (and eventual re-opening) through editing, voting, and commenting. See How to Ask for guidance on editing your question to improve it.

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Thanks for the input. My primary concern always was that there's no definite guideline on how to even get something reopened. I can see where you're coming from – I removed the wall of text and included some pictures from the FAQ. – slhck Jan 27 at 8:18
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still not agreeing with this; it's like a "here's how to complain" recipe. – Jeff Atwood Jan 27 at 8:28
How would you phrase it then? The whole point is that there must be a way to have a question reopened once it is fixed. I'm talking about users who are perfectly able to express themselves and just need a second chance. It's not about complaining before. Most of the people that would just complain wouldn't even care to 1) read the FAQ and 2) edit their question accordingly. They'd just insult, post again, or move on. – slhck Jan 27 at 8:31
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@slhck see my proposed change, above, in bold. Remember the typical clueless 1 rep user asking a closed Q won't have the ability to flag (requires 15 rep) or post on meta (requires 5 rep). – Jeff Atwood Jan 27 at 8:46
That's concise, and pretty good. I think there's a huge difference though in the way reopening "just works" on SO, due to the large traffic and the number of users with the necessary privilege. They will probably "just see" a fixed question without needing the OP to intervene. On SU, however, very few questions are reopened once they're closed – even if they're bumped to the front page –, and in many cases, a moderator has to step in to review. In these cases, they'll just stick around closed forever. – slhck Jan 27 at 8:51
@slhck this added sentence is live on all sites now. superuser.com/faq#close – Jeff Atwood Jan 28 at 18:17
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