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This issue plagues Stack Overflow questions. Do you encounter this a lot?

Click on a high ranking Google result of your carefully crafted keyword-rich query

"How does foo work with bar"

Perfect! This sounds relevant to what i'm looking for. (click)

Question: I'm trying to use foo and bar but i'm getting this error about baz. Halp?

Ohh kkk, so this is a corner-case issue, not actually what is promised from the title.

Top Answer: Your baz is leaking. Just run the blip command and that should fix the error.

Congratulations for solving the corner case, the answer is now completely unrelated to the title.

Frownie face.

Edits:

The deeper question here is "Could there be a way to make it less of an issue to start with?" - as eloquently spelled out and addressed below by @gnat

Pretty much duplicate of How to save the world which explains & demonstrates the issue much better, particularly how it relates to Google search results. Kudos Josh Caswell's comment. See also the related feature requests.

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    You would edit the title to make it more representative of the question. What more do you think should be done? Jul 21, 2015 at 14:46
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    This is a gripping some people have since ancient times. The only solution is editing the title.
    – Braiam
    Jul 21, 2015 at 14:51
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    Now whether to edit the title of this meta-post. I was swindled into clicking this question by its outrageous title only to find I actually understood the question.
    – ryanyuyu
    Jul 21, 2015 at 14:54
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    Sometimes it can even still be incorrect to change the title to "How do deal with baz error", rather the answer would best fit with a title such as "What command needed to fix leaking". The problem is about this 3-step disconnect between title > question > answer. The whole sequence needs rewriting...
    – xyphenor
    Jul 21, 2015 at 15:00
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    Robert Harvey posted on this as well several years ago: How to save the world, one question title at a time?
    – jscs
    Jul 21, 2015 at 18:13
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    @JoshCaswell that question you linked hit the nail on the head, explained & demonstrated the issue much better than me. Perhaps post an answer here and suggest this question as duplicate of that one?
    – xyphenor
    Jul 22, 2015 at 13:42
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    one Cannot mark question duplicate on another part of Stack Exchange, otherwise I'd vote as duplicate instead of answering ("How to save the world..." is posted at other meta)
    – gnat
    Jul 22, 2015 at 16:36

1 Answer 1

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Well, once you landed on such a question, the apparent thing to do was to edit the title to better fit the question text. That way, you would help future readers.

Of course this leaves a question: Could there be a way to make it less of an issue to start with?

Math.SE folks recently bragged at MSE that they found a way to make it less troublesome:

To some extent, uninformative titles can be detected automatically but this requires a site-specific approach. On Mathematics, some community members were sufficiently tired of uninformative titles to

  1. Collect the signs of weak titles
  2. Write a meta post on writing good titles
  3. Propose a feature request for automatic check
  4. ... and it was implemented.

Not to say that the problem disappeared — terrible questions still have terrible titles — but the users writing decent questions got some just-in-time help.

Math folks didn't tell (maybe because they don't have it there) but at Stack Overflow, even the refusal of the user to follow a suggestion to improve the title may be useful: it can serve as yet another signal to trigger pushing the question into Triage review, where it wouldn't bother readers.

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