More than infrequently, opening posts on SO are not questions at all, in the very grammatical sense: They're just statements or vague musings (for instance this recent one), and it's not clear what exactly is being asked (since nothing is technically being asked).

I always feel that it shouldn't be our job to construct a question from someone's undirected ramblings, and so this is usually a NARQ candidate for me.

I was wondering if we could add a very simple check that would count the number of literal question marks in a post and refuse to accept it if there are none. This could be accompanied by a small note on what a question should look like.

What do you think? Should we add this feature?

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I don't think we should refuse such questions (without any question mark), but we could additionally warn user (popup or something) before submitting that this question are likely going to be closed as NARQ. – om-nom-nom Mar 25 '12 at 14:36
@om-nom-nom: Yeah, sure, a non-blocking warning would also be OK... whatever fits in most nicely with the infrastructure. – Kerrek SB Mar 25 '12 at 14:37
This could easily be gotten around by dropping in a block of code that uses ? as an operator. – BoltClock's a Unicorn Mar 25 '12 at 14:39
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@BoltClock: I will personally answer all (non-)questions that use the ? operator if that's your only objection :-) – Kerrek SB Mar 25 '12 at 14:40
@BoltClock count only plain text (no code and no quotations)? – om-nom-nom Mar 25 '12 at 14:40
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I count 3 question marks in your post and its title. Which of those indicates the feature you're requesting? – Arjan Mar 25 '12 at 14:45
@Arjan: I'm afraid I don't follow. The question marks in my text are part of the text. The feature I'm asking for is described by the text. Is any part of it unclear? – Kerrek SB Mar 25 '12 at 16:18
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I was trying to show that looking for a question mark does not solve the problem. 1) Your title does not summarize what you're asking for. (And the title doesn't describe a feature request to me.) 2) The last paragraph does not add anything to the post. 3) In general, we'd like one question in a single post on a Q&A site. So, though of course I understand what you're proposing: I could say that the above 3 question marks are just a way to circumvent the very quality filter you're asking for, and might even make things worse when folks add unrelated sentences with question marks. – Arjan Mar 25 '12 at 16:54
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@Arjan: But Meta isn't the same as SO. On Meta I can reasonably say "We need feature X." On SO there's no equivalent. And also, while you could of course go on finding edge cases where my suggestion doesn't help until the cows come home, my point is that for a large majority of cases the proposed warning would help the potential poster to create a more successful question. The question title describes the underlying cause; the question body suggests a way to deal with it. – Kerrek SB Mar 25 '12 at 16:56
Here's the third candidate in the space of a few hours, just in C-or-C++... – Kerrek SB Mar 25 '12 at 18:47
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I don't know if it helps anything but I do enjoy asking people to amend their question to include an actual question, complete with a question mark, to indicate specifically what they would like answered. It's a time when I wish we had delayed-close votes that evaporate if the question is edited to save me the effort of returning. – sarnold Mar 25 '12 at 23:10
You really think, that amount of question signs is a sign? I can easy write perfectly correct question without any question mark – Lazy Badger Mar 26 '12 at 7:44
@LazyBadger: Simple observation has lead me to believe that the vast majority of questions that lack a question mark are also lacking in many other departments. I know that there are always some cases where the heuristic doesn't apply, but I think it would overall be a very useful feature. – Kerrek SB Mar 26 '12 at 7:57
@KerrekSB - I, personally, don't think so and doesn't support idea "think instead of user". But local looosers disagree with me – Lazy Badger Mar 26 '12 at 8:39
...and here is another candidate. – Kerrek SB Mar 26 '12 at 20:28
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1 Answer

It can be notice, but must not be refusal. And, after all, "don't dictate me, how I write my texts!!!". Strong and strict management needed only for small kids, which isn't our case, isn't it?!

Count my voice "contra" idea in your current form.

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don't dictate me, how I write my texts! We do not dictate a good style (that includes grammar and spelling)...we imply, need and partly demand it. – M. Night Demonbobby Mar 26 '12 at 8:17
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@Bobby - refusal isn't good style. And downvoters-assholes want refusal?! Or they just understand me? Give them brains! – Lazy Badger Mar 26 '12 at 8:31
Small kids or new users who are not yet aware of the high standards kept by the current community... – Lix Mar 26 '12 at 8:43
@LazyBadger: No, it isn't. But sometimes it's all we can do. – M. Night Demonbobby Mar 26 '12 at 9:17
@Bobby - just don't do it?! If you want to be nice even for idiots, you'll be nice only for idiots – Lazy Badger Mar 26 '12 at 9:21
@LazyBadger: Okay, now you lost me...what were we talking about? – M. Night Demonbobby Mar 26 '12 at 9:23
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@LazyBadger: Actually, OPs proposal seems to be the exact opposite. If there's no question mark, refuse it. That would keep some bad content from entering the system. Though, there's not much hope that it gets any better if it finally enters the system...but it's an idea. – M. Night Demonbobby Mar 26 '12 at 9:42
@Bobby OP proposed to serve every stupid idiot, which not able write good content (-1 from me 1-st), use refuse instead of (rating-dependent?) warnings (-1 from me 2-nd) and use bad, stupid algo (-1 from me 3-rd) – Lazy Badger Mar 26 '12 at 9:47

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