Often a (new) user asks a question and seems to leave. Probably to come back later and check if there were any answers. But on Stack Overflow that doesn't alsways work so good since there are very often comments asking for clarification.

And if not provided, the question gets closed or ignored or downvoted. That is really a pity since the first minutes are the most important ones while getting the most attention.

Can we please add a hint to the question form telling the user to stay put for at least a few minutes?

Something to tell the user like ThinkingStiff suggested

Things happen quickly on Stack Overflow. Expect comments requesting clarification shortly. Editing your question to satisfy these comments can help get your question answered more accurately.

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"Things happen quickly on Stack Overflow. Expect comments requesting clarification shortly. Editing your question to satisfy these comments can help get your question answered more accurately." – ThinkingStiff Nov 26 '12 at 16:26
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@ThinkingStiff: Sadly, no one ever reads that. – Madara Uchiha Nov 26 '12 at 16:36
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I normally comment, to leave a "marker" unless the question is really crap and then come back later to see if the OP has changed anything. If not then VTC etc but there's always a chance that they have actually acknowledged it. Anything to keep them around for the first 20 minutes would be good. Bytes are cheap so spreading a few around to rescue a couple of newbies is a good thing. (I agree if it's not clear from the comment!) – ben is uǝq backwards Nov 26 '12 at 21:48

3 Answers

up vote 12 down vote accepted

It's almost become a cliche on Meta that any message we display to new users will necessarily go unread.

I think a fairly clear, simple, and obvious message displayed to new users right after they ask their question could be quite helpful.

enter image description here

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Similar to the "we don't want to put any effort into hand-holding these users because they are most likely hopeless" argument you see on here a lot (especially regarding post bans). +1 because I think this could be effective, despite going against the common arguments around here. – jadarnel27 Nov 26 '12 at 18:21
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@jadarnel27 - what you describe has long been another pet peeve of mine. – Adam Rackis Nov 26 '12 at 18:26
@jadarnel27 What exactly makes you think this can be more effective than the already existing ways (which get regularly ignored)? – Alenanno Nov 26 '12 at 18:34
@Alenanno - because the regular ways are embedded in FAQ pages that normal people don't read. Ever. I'm a 20K user and even I haven't read the faq. – Adam Rackis Nov 26 '12 at 18:42
@AdamRackis Not really: Did you read the message the first time you posted a question? This is one more thing that people won't read. I still don't see why this would be any different, honestly... I have read the FAQ. The problem is not the place, the problem is that some users simply don't bother reading it, no matter where you put it. – Alenanno Nov 26 '12 at 18:48
@Alenanno - I don't know - I don't remember even seeing the message. Is it displayed in the page where you type your message in, or is it displayed in the actual question that you see when you post your new question? I think the above could be helpful because it's visible on the actual question after you post it. Some people will ignore it, but I think plenty will read it. – Adam Rackis Nov 26 '12 at 18:58
@AdamRackis If I remember correctly, it's displayed right after you click on "Ask question" (a new page opens). When you accept this page, you'll be brought to the usual Writing-the-question page. I tried making a new account and asking a question to post a screenshot here, but it didn't work. :P – Alenanno Nov 26 '12 at 19:02
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@Alenanno - ah. That's what I mean. Anything you put between the user and his asking of a question is likely to be ignored. Users—especially developers, which we all are—will almost always ignore instructions like that. But displaying it on the question itself, after the user has asked it, could I think me marginally useful. – Adam Rackis Nov 26 '12 at 19:04
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@AdamRackis I'm not sure about that, but again, we can't all have the same opinion. :P – Alenanno Nov 26 '12 at 19:30

Sadly, most users won't read that.

When a user registers, he "must" read the FAQ, he is provided with help messages every step of the way, encouraging him to add details and code. When their questions get closed, they don't bother reading why, they just open it again, hoping to get an answer, not realizing their question is bad.

Adding yet another warning sign won't solve the problem. Only put a further obstacle between the user and his question (Even though the question was already submitted).

No. Sadly, most users only respond to the sting of downvotes and closes/deletions. And if that's not enough, they're banned.

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How must a user read the FAQ? – juergen d Nov 26 '12 at 16:44
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@juergend: You sign on it ("I have read and accepted") when you register IIRC. It was said once, but I haven't tried it. I said "must" because most users scroll through and press OK. – Madara Uchiha Nov 26 '12 at 16:45
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@MadaraUchiha: I don't think that "terms and conditions" include reading the complete FAQ. And since nobody reads that like you say a hint in the question form would be much better. – juergen d Nov 26 '12 at 16:51
@juergend Were you talking to me? Mine was just a (serious) joke. Anyways, if I remember correctly, before posting a question you are asked to read the FAQ. – Alenanno Nov 26 '12 at 16:54
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Nobody ever reads a site's faq before starting. But a big message right in front of the user, displayed after asking a question? There's a good chance the user will see / read that. – Adam Rackis Nov 26 '12 at 16:56
@AdamRackis: Find? yes. Read? Not likely. – Madara Uchiha Nov 26 '12 at 16:58
FYI -- this post details one of the "required to click through" pages that new users get. (CC @Alenanno) edit: oops, link added =) – jadarnel27 Nov 26 '12 at 17:27
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@jadarnel27 I think you forgot to link. :P – Alenanno Nov 26 '12 at 17:28
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Imagine that someone somehow discovered a way to prevent you from accessing their website until you've actually read all the terms and conditions. How many people would just walk away if that happened? – Sam I am Nov 26 '12 at 17:36
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but just think of all the fun that you could have with those T&C – Sean Cheshire Nov 26 '12 at 20:02

An additional/different possibility would be to open a messagebox if the user closes the tab of his/her question (Like the messagebox appearing if you write in the post editor and close before posting).

That messagebox could be shown if the question in younger than 1 hour for instance and say something like

You just asked a question and should stay put for comments about your post. Do you really want to close this window?

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