I'm not a frequent visitor of user voice, so this could very well have already been suggested there, and I apologize in advance if it has.

My request is simple: Many times, there will be a question where some people feel like it should be closed. At the same time, I'll feel like it's a perfectly legit question, and it should therefore NOT be closed. Right now, I have to wait till it gets enough close votes (which it always does for some reason, as soon as 1 or 2 people vote to close, e/o else decides to vote as well) and then vote to re-open. How about, as soon as there's one vote to close, there should be an option to counter the close vote, something like "vote not to close" or whatever. This would then bring the "Vote to close" number down by one. Only when the vote to close outnumbers the vote not to close by 5, that's when a question is indeed closed. Any thoughts?

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I agree - this would be something I would like as well. – tim Jul 17 '09 at 22:04
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And then we can add votes to ignore votes not to close... – Axeman Jul 28 '09 at 22:40
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+1 I just came here to make the same suggestion and found this when searching. At present there maybe 5 people who want to close a question and 100 who want to keep it open, but the latter don't get to do anything about it until it's been closed. – Dan Dyer Aug 31 '09 at 21:28
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What's the status of this? I'm very much looking forward to this feature... – Roee Adler Sep 1 '09 at 9:41
What Rax said.. – Paul Nathan Nov 11 '09 at 18:15
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I like this idea. Currently, the question has to be closed before re-open votes can be cast. It would be more democratic to allow a battle between "close" and "leave open". As soon as the first vote to close is cast, a link to "leave open" appears. – raven Dec 5 '09 at 18:04
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Oh god yes please, that 5 people can close any question gives way too much power to a small cabal, especially given that its difficult to rally people to revisit and reopen. – Schwern Dec 13 '09 at 23:37
@Shwern, even more relevant for community wikis. There can be no rep gain from a community wiki, so if a question, started as a community wiki, is closed, it better be for a damn good reason. – MPelletier Apr 12 '10 at 2:26
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Why was this feature declined? – Warren in Toronto Jun 25 '10 at 13:21
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@Warren: Did you bother scrolling down the answers list looking for answers from staff (they have diamonds next to their names)? If you had, you'd see an answer from Jeff Atwood that starts "Declining, because..." – Powerlord Sep 24 '10 at 14:42
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8 Answers

up vote 110 down vote accepted

I am definitively in favor of that process.
By the time the 5 "close" votes are here, not enough people are still looking at the question to care to vote for reopening, even if they wanted to at the time where closing votes were being (slowly) set.

Of course, it has been proposed "numerous" time on UserVoice already:

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Don't forget also the trivial ability to reverse your own close-vote (e.g. in a case a question was improved significantly).

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I'd rather be able to retract a close vote (and then use it elsewhere... for instance, to re-open the now-good question if it still gets closed) – Shog9 Jun 28 '09 at 21:49
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this seems to come down to adding another dimention to the voting system.

        interesting
            ^
            |
            |
proper<------------>improper
            |
            |
        uninteresting

we already have buttons for voting on the intersting/unintersting axis
the buttons for voting on the open/close axis should simply be labeld
'close' and 'open'.

if close > x+open 
   then mark as closed
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Excellent diagram. Good solution to the problem. – Kelly S. French Jul 30 '09 at 16:31
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I tend to like the things way up in the top right hand corner – bobobobo Apr 4 '10 at 14:18
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I'm pretty sure it's on uservoice too (only supposed to be having a quick look here so I haven't really got the time to find and post a link).

Would the same would work for reopening too?

Would it reopen the moment the number of close votes dropped to 4, or would it have to gain a nett score of 5 reopen votes to be reopened?

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Ooh +1, Very good point, I didn't think of that. No, I think once it's closed it would work the same way in the reverse, meaning only once the vote to repoen outnumbers the vote to leave closed by 5, that's when it reopens. Obviously, you can't vote again if you already voted to close/leave open. – BFree Jun 28 '09 at 13:10
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Easy, it closes at 5+ net close votes. Once closed it reopens at 0 or less net close votes and so on. – cletus Sep 3 '09 at 2:30
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In this case, we don't need "stay open", we need "open" and "close". – David Thornley Oct 20 '09 at 13:55
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Sounds like you'll get a closing war: close it, no, yes, no, yes,... with a long comment thread why and why not. Than SO is the discussion group and not Meta. I don't like this scenario.

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I think currently there are no long comment threads so why do you think they will start happening? What war are you talking about? It's about ability to vote at the moment you want to vote without waiting for a question to be closed/re-opened. -1 – Piotr Dobrogost Jul 6 '09 at 10:15
Possibly, but that's what moderators are for. They already step in and clean up long boring comment threads. – MarkJ Nov 11 '09 at 17:52
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Please leave the closing/reopening system alone. It works fine as is. There is a bias towards reopening, but most of the noise is getting purged properly.

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You could just as easily ask for a "don't reopen" option to counter the vote to reopen. – Nathan Fellman Jun 30 '09 at 18:31
@Nathan: But why? Why would I want more complexity to a simple process? – GEOCHET Jun 30 '09 at 19:10
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It doesn't work fine. You can't vote until after the question is closed or re-opened. It's simply broken. How about voting to unelect Obama, now when we can? :) -1 – Piotr Dobrogost Jul 6 '09 at 10:19
@Piotr The Senate actually has this option: Impeachment – alexanderpas Dec 9 '10 at 5:21
@alexanderpas: Yes, but he was talking about if that was the only option. If we just got a random president and had to impeach them all until we got a decent one. – Ullallulloo Apr 15 '11 at 21:49
How is there a bias toward reopening? As others have pointed out, the fact that you can't reopen until closed is a bias against reopening, as interested parties have moved on. – orbfish Nov 23 '11 at 17:13
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I had several questions get closed too quickly like within 2 hours. Questions get closed even though after getting some answers. I mean if there are users willing to reply, doesn't that give some credibility to the question!?

I am surprised how fast questions get closed. I feel like there's a few 'Close Police' squads constantly patrolling the questions in their Camaros! They're having fun cruising.

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How is this relevant to the question? – Shog9 Oct 14 '11 at 22:55
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I was a member of the Clothes Police for a time, but there was an unfortunate incident. I think this is related. – sixlettervariables Oct 15 '11 at 0:16
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Declining, because there's already a solution: track the question (favorite it, or leave it open in a tab in your browser) and if it reaches the close threshold, vote to reopen it.

Beyond that, the 10k rep tools include a report that will show you

  • recently closed questions
  • questions with close votes
  • questions with open votes

(I plan to improve this a bit in the future.)

That gives you the ability to monitor questions that are on the edge either way and vote to close or reopen. But remember, you can only vote to close once and vote to reopen once on the same question.

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This really seems to miss the point of complaints. The chances of a good but not particularly popular question getting reopened seems to be near-zero. Having to add something to a watchlist and check later is a crappy solution. – ceejayoz Dec 27 '09 at 15:40
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@ceejayoz: the chance of a good but not unpopular question getting closed in the first place is rather slim. It's usually lousy and/or unpopular questions that get closed. However, I still see some value in being able to retract close votes in cases where a user is able to "reform" a post in response to criticism; however, the work-around right now is to ask them to re-post their question, which has other advantages as well... – Shog9 Dec 27 '09 at 18:26
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It only takes 5 people who are trigger-happy to close. I've seen it happen a number of times with decent questions that are simply poorly worded. – ceejayoz Dec 27 '09 at 20:15
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For questions with a lot of voters (open/close), this will virtually force a close war since people can only vote-to-open or vote-to-close, in groups of five at a time (closers, then openers, then closers, etc)... until your run out of people. That seems to annoy people for some reason: meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/34815/… – Robert Cartaino Jan 8 '10 at 0:26
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This feels like bureaucracy. "Get the right forms.. tick the right box.. wait in line.." – bobobobo Apr 4 '10 at 14:19
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What about the users with >= 3000, but < 10000 rep? That's a significant number of users, I would imagine. This is a poor solution in any case, for the reasons already mentioned. – EMP Apr 28 '10 at 4:35
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@Jeff, this is really a time-sucking deal, having to track questions so that when they reopen I can close them. – Lance Roberts Oct 10 '10 at 2:24
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@lance the intent is to get more votes than just you. Once you've cast your vote, others should carry forward. Vote wars are not something I want to encourage by allowing this kind of monitoring. – Jeff Atwood Oct 10 '10 at 17:48
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I'm downvoting this suggestion because the suggestion (marking something as a favourite and checking later etc) is less simple/usable than simply upvoting once now. – ChrisW Jan 16 '11 at 23:17
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This hardly solves anything. As other users have noted, once a question gets to a certain number of votes to close, 2 or 3 usually, then it takes almost no time at all to get the final closing votes because many users will vote to close without giving it a second thought due to the existing votes. Likewise, a reasonable question with a few votes to close will often prevent quality, valid answers before they are submitted because even if the person with an answer doesn't vote to close, they are less likely to bother answering because of the implied inferiority of the question. – Nathan Taylor Mar 14 '11 at 19:25
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@Jeff I don't want to track questions. It increases my work load. If I come across a question (not one I am particular interested in) with some close votes which are not deserved, I want to vote not to close and move on. – Tony_Henrich Apr 29 '11 at 18:01
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Did it ever occur to you, Jeff, that it would only take five disgruntled users (trusted ones, granted) to delete this answer of yours? And none of the other users could even oppose it. Ironic, isn't it? – sbi Oct 13 '11 at 13:19
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@Tony: I certainly spend a lot of time on SO, and sometimes I'm still amazed about the sheer stupidity of the current system, which requires veterans to fight a constant uphill battle against trigger-happy close-voters who don't know what they are doing in a part of SO they have little idea about. – sbi Oct 14 '11 at 18:06
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Any chance on reconsidering this decision? It's pretty clear that the community thinks this is the wrong way to go. Also as someone who has +10K I do not check the recently closed questions frequently, why should I not be able to have take an action when I see a problem rather than have to add another mental task? It's not important enough for me to keep track on such questions but it should be in your interest to avoid false closings. – Motti Dec 28 '11 at 12:22
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I also think this should be reconsidered, as a >10k user who doesn't track questions. The point of votes is that they act concurrently -- we don't wait until a question has five upvotes before allowing downvotes! – katrielalex Feb 19 at 23:24
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