I recently asked a question on Stack Overflow. I needed assistance with programming for an old PDA. I logged on about an hour later to see if I had received any answers; the question had been down-voted, and closed as "Not a Real Question"

I began to wonder what I had done wrong. Had I forgotten a question mark? Was my question not specific enough? I was baffled.

I decided to investigate this issue. Krishna on Thought Clusters had some interesting things to say, and so did this person. Page after page of search results have driven me to ask: Is Stack Overflow overrun with bullies?

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Nope. We do have to deal with scores of questions that are not a good fit for the site though. Yours, unfortunately, was not a good fit. And not everyone that wants their open-ended question answered understands that. – Martijn Pieters Mar 5 at 20:10
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The question is not one that is suitable for the Stack Exchange Q&A format - see Q&A is Hard, Let’s Go Shopping!. We are in the process of reviewing the text on the close reasons - the "not a real question" is somewhat misleading and should probably be more - "not a suitable question here". – Oded Mar 5 at 20:11
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Your question takes the form "how do I develop on platform X". If an entire book could be written on your question, it's too broad. Sorry. – GManNickG Mar 5 at 20:14
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"I logged on about an hour later" That's also a worrysome thing to hear. The vast majority of activity for most questions is within the first 10-15 minutes. It's when you're likely to see lots of clarifying questions and comments on your question that frequently need to be repsoned to in order for quality answers to be posted. By waiting so long you're pretty much ensured that by the time you do respond very few people will be around to see it. – Servy Mar 5 at 20:16
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Just a little note: sometimes the way you present an issue can affect how people view it. Your title might predispose people against your concerns here. – Andrew Barber Mar 5 at 20:18
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In all fairness, that Krishna guy wrote that article over four years ago. A LOT has changed since then. As far as that other link, no need commenting on an article that uses "nazi retards". – 0A0D Mar 5 at 20:23
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At least that one has some substance. The second article is saying little more than "Stack Overflow sux coz they downvoted my clearly off-topic question!" – Pekka 웃 Mar 5 at 20:26
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Is Stack Overflow overrun with bullies? No. Was my question sub-standard? Yes. – David Heffernan Mar 5 at 20:28
My SO question was intentionally vague because at that point I was ready to see information on developing in ANY environment, and in ANY language. It seems that was what ruined the question's chances. – Sean Pedersen Mar 5 at 20:33
@SeanPedersen: that's a large part of it. Such a vague question is impossible to answer (should someone have responded with a list of instructions for developing in every single language you could want?) But it also looked like you were looking for recommendations of books or blogs. That's generally considered Not Constructive here (it just leads to extended discussion that's not backed up with facts). – David Robinson Mar 5 at 20:42
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p.s. @SeanPedersen One small tip for Meta next time: If you think "SO is full of bullies closing my perfect question" that is just fine. But think it, don't say it. Bring your question neutrally. Simply ask "Hey, my question was closed. I would like to know what's wrong with it". Then you are more constructive and more likely to receive helpful comments. If you then still think "these people are bastards", that's entirely up to you. ;) – Bart Mar 5 at 20:47
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@Bart you mean something like this "If the question is spelled in a way that doesn't hurt feelings of meta readers, one can even get some upvotes..." right? – gnat Mar 5 at 22:01
Just got bullied in a similar way regarding my answers to a question and the "moderators" closed the question after deleting my answers. Any objective reading would have agreed that my answer was on topic and helpful and not self-serving. Still they killed it. Bizarre. – Tyler Jensen Apr 22 at 21:02

closed as not constructive by Rosinante, ЯegDwight, Rory, animuson, hims056 Mar 6 at 3:21

As it currently stands, this question is not a good fit for our Q&A format. We expect answers to be supported by facts, references, or specific expertise, but this question will likely solicit debate, arguments, polling, or extended discussion. If you feel that this question can be improved and possibly reopened, see the FAQ for guidance.

3 Answers

up vote 22 down vote accepted

Let's have a look at your question and how it reads

I need to develop for Windows CE 3.0.

Okay. So it has something to do with Windows CE 3.0. Fair enough.

So far my search has lead me to dead links and spam.

So apparently you searched for something, but have found nothing. That's not very helpful information. And it certainly does not satisfy the "Do your own research and tell us about it" requirement.

Where can I find information relating to compiling for Pocket PC, and also a Pocket PC software compiler?

Ah, so that is your question. You want to us to point you to "information", whatever that might be. Besides it being a very vague request, we also don't handle such questions. We don't want to be a big signpost, or list of links. We want to answer a practical question regarding a problem you face. In short, we want to host the answer. What we don't want to do is say something of the form:

"Well, there might be some information over there, that might apply to your situation. Or it might not...but check it out"

All in all you have asked a bad question. Don't be shocked by that. Asking a good question is difficult. And your question is a very fair one. After all, that's what you're looking for. Information. Documents. Links. But it's simply not what this site does.

And ultimately, that is what you got the downvotes for. There is no bullying involved here. Your question does not satisfy the requirements for a question fit for Stack Overflow. That's all.

Want to know how to ask a good question?

Good luck.

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I think the first 2 parts are a bit over the top (if you run into only crap, how would you prove to the audience?). But the last 2 parts (part = start with quote) nails the issue. – nhahtdh Mar 5 at 20:29
@nhahtdh Over he top? How so? That is how the question reads. The question contains content, but no substance. – Bart Mar 5 at 20:30
The thing is that: no information of what is being developed is fair - since the question is about compilation. And research links to dead link and spam is also fair, since there is no way for the asker to prove it. (I am giving the asker the benefit of doubt here). Only the main question really contradicts with how SO works. – nhahtdh Mar 5 at 20:33
@nhahtdh Fair enough, addressed the first point. As for the research, a "no result" outcome does not imply that the reporting of it is zero as well. What was the OP looking for? What information is required? What did you find but dismiss? What was not helpful? Why did you dismiss it? Ultimately the whole question asked is flawed, but I see too many SO questions with the phrase "I googled but found nothing". Any research has evidence even if the outcome is zero. – Bart Mar 5 at 20:42
Well, dead link and spam is quite hard to report. But you are right about "I googled but found nothing" phrase or equivalent - while the answer can give the asker the benefit of doubt, he/she might also refuse to do so when there is no clear evidence of research. – nhahtdh Mar 5 at 20:48
It's not even so much about having to report the dead links or spam. If you can clearly state what you've been looking for and what your exact requirements are (i.e. why you dismissed what you found) then, in the case of an on-topic question, you've already succeeded in narrowing down your question, helping me answer it. – Bart Mar 5 at 21:08

"Not a real question" is perhaps unfortunately named. "How are you today?" and "Where did I leave my car keys?" are "real" questions, but they are wholly unsuitable for Stack Overflow (or anywhere in Stack Exchange, for that matter).

Stack Overflow has a lot of people participating, and that means that there are a lot of different kinds of people here, some of them may not be so nice. I think what you've run into, however, are people zealously keeping Stack Overflow focused on the kind of questions they want to have. If I may paraphrase Michael Corleone: "It's not personal. It's business."

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With regard to the first paragraph- "Off Topic" would probably be a better close reason than NARQ for this one. – David Robinson Mar 5 at 20:20
@DavidRobinson So would Not constructive. There's a lot of overlap between close reasons. – Servy Mar 5 at 20:25
@MikeB: I was referring to "How are you today?" and "Where did I leave my car keys?" – David Robinson Mar 5 at 20:29

If asking about suggestions for a library in a language to do a certain task is OK, then I don't see why asking about documentation is not OK.

Your question seems fine to me. It is not at all like the examples in Q&A is Hard, Let’s Go Shopping!

Of course, I don't mean that any question about documentation is OK, in the same way that any question about libraries is not OK.

I think there are two issues here:

1) Are questions that encourage link questions OK? If some questions about libraries are OK, then certainly at least some are. Some problems just can't be efficiently answered without links. I know that Stack Overflow aims to be have the answer here, but that's just an aim, and should not be blindy enforced in questions that are alright otherwise.

2) Is this question about a specific problem? This is probably the main point. The question is about somebody who is starting to learn about how to develop for Windows CE 3.0. Then he find a problem: it's hard to find documentation because Windows CE 3.0 is basically obsolete. He doesn't find anything useful. That, from my point of view, is a legitimate programming problem.

And now, a list of recent questions about libraries that I found, to support my point:

Html5 canvas: find a library can draw line and drag the line

JS library to perform the path Union and Intersection(set operations) in SVG

Image to polygon image

Java CSV parser with unescaped quotes

Library for pulling all the comments out of a directory

android testing, is there any automate testing tools?

Image filter libraries in Android?

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I don't think most would consider "asking about suggestions for a library in a language to do a certain task" as an OK question. Asking how to do something specific, including your ideas for how it might be implemented, and saying you're open to a library instead of doing it yourself might be OK, but saying "give me a list of libraries that do X" isn't. – Carl Veazey Mar 5 at 20:22
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"What's the best library to accomplish X". "What's the best site to learn about X". Those statements seem awfully shoppish to me. – Mike B Mar 5 at 20:22
If askig about suggestions for a library in a language to do a certain task is OK... erm, what? Not lately they're not. – LBT Mar 5 at 20:23
@CarlVeazey In a fast search, I found these questions asking about libraries, all of them upvoted: java library for unit conversions, Java IO Library and Which Java library/libraries for CouchDB?. I'm sure I could find many if I searched more. – Pablo Mar 5 at 20:28
@Pablo Can you find any from this year? I'd love to use my close votes – Mike B Mar 5 at 20:29
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@Pablo Thanks for pointing us to a handful of questions that should be closed so that the site can be cleaned up. I imagine you'll find those questions closed within a few minutes at this point, as they really should be closed. Note that just because a question is open doesn't mean it should be open. Some are so old that they were asked before current guidelines were put in place, other just didn't get noticed by someone who flagged/voted to close. Note that upvotes have no bearing on whether or not a question should be opened; being popular doesn't mean it's within the site's scope. – Servy Mar 5 at 20:33
@MikeB Sure, I edited my post and put links to several of them. – Pablo Mar 5 at 21:54
@Servy of course, getting upvotes is not a perfect indicator. However, the change in policy to limit this kind of questions came from the community itself. Therefore, finding a bunch of recent questions about libraries that are not downvoted and closed seems a pretty good indication that those questions are not always considered bad by the SO community. – Pablo Mar 5 at 21:58
@Pablo none of those are recent. The newest one is almost 2 years old, and the oldest is 3.75 years old. Remember SO is only like 5 years old. Even if one or two were know, it would simply mean that one or two were missed, because that happens a lot. People post questions in off-peak hours, and or in tags with very few views and there just isn't enough attention to trigger the start of close voting. That doesn't mean the questions are okay, it just means they'll be closed as soon as they're noticed. – Servy Mar 5 at 22:02
@Servy Read my post again, I have udpated it with links to recent questions, and there are several of them just in the last couple of them. – Pablo Mar 5 at 22:02
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@Pablo That doesn't affect the validity of my comment; it's simply giving me a new list of questions to go through and close. – Servy Mar 5 at 22:03
@Pablo - it just means that not every non-constructive question gets caught right away, people may not be aware of the policy, or they simply choose to ignore it. It doesn't make your answer any more correct. – LBT Mar 5 at 22:05
@LittleBobbyTables the policies have room for interpretation. The question the OP asked and the questions about libraries that I linked are certainly not obviously against what is written in the FAQ about asking questions. So certainly having a bunch of recent ones that are not closed and several of them are even upvoted can be seen as the SO community considering them OK. – Pablo Mar 5 at 22:12
@Pablo some of those questions specifically ask for help solving a particular problem including possibly a library recommendation which I think is different. However others are clearly candidates for closure. – Carl Veazey Mar 6 at 2:26
@CarlVeazey certainly, some questions about libraries are OK, and some are not. And I think the same about questions about documentation. I adressed this in my answer. – Pablo Mar 6 at 23:04

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