After cruising around SO and friends for the past couple of weeks, it became pretty obvious to me that many questions are asked by new users with 1 rep point.

I have no problem with this.

What I do have a problem with, however, is the fact that the majority of these users do not ask questions properly. I.e. many are extremely vague or hard to understand, or posted in incorrect areas. Furthermore, many of these users have extremely low acceptance rates.

Wouldn't it be better to enforce a minimum reputation score of, say, 10 before users are allowed to post questions? This way they will have had time get a feel for the site, and work out how it functions, and keeps functioning, before posting.

Just a thought.

Also, note my score... ironic at all?

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… said the 1-rep user. – Georg Schölly Nov 17 '09 at 9:25
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3 rep now... he's just tripled his productivity! – cletus Nov 17 '09 at 9:47
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It sounds to me like you think SO is for people who speak perfect, coherent (Americanized or British) English. Additionally, it seems like you view people with low reputation asking easy questions with broken English from which you could earn a lot of reputation by providing an answer that they can understand as some kind of parasite. And now here you are, with one reputation point. I allowed some time to pass before commenting, and I'm still as disturbed by this question as I was when I first read it. -1. – Tim Post Nov 30 '09 at 19:21
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I wanted to ask this exact question. After seeing so many people coming in with 1-5 rep, 5 questions with 2 reposts and no accepted answers, it's annoying to go through them in the 5 minutes I've got before a meeting or over lunch. I'm not calling into question the reasoning below, as it seems sound, but it would be nice to at least make people read a "how to post" and "why you're getting this message" page when they meet certain (lower) quality standards. Blocking them would simply prompt new account creation, but educating them might work... – Kendrick Sep 14 '10 at 17:01
+1 Whatever your opinion is, it is a good thing this question was asked. – rds Dec 8 '11 at 16:02
@TimPost : Jt.WK might be concerned with language but i am concerned with quality question or in broader view with quality of this platform . For just now as example before commenting here ... i have posted the same question on this website before even looking for such question . I believe put limit on user to before asking question and these starting points can gaining by search on few topic ... – Mohit Sharma Feb 20 '12 at 19:32

7 Answers

up vote 19 down vote accepted

No.

You know who else requires people take part in answering before being able to ask? Our friendly neighbourhood gender-swap specialists. SO exists to not be them.

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yeah good response.. i'll pay that! – JT.WK Nov 17 '09 at 9:39
For those that may not 'get' this answer, examine the difference between experts-exchange and expertsexchange. – Tim Post Jul 7 '12 at 6:27

That would seriously interfere with the intended use of the system. If someone had to find questions to answer prior to asking what they (usually urgently) need to know, who would bother to ask questions? Questions are the life blood of the system, why? People find SO while searching for answers to them. Google space hardening and you'll find one of my questions.

Rest assured, 'show me the codez' questions are quickly closed, off topic questions are quickly migrated and on topic but incoherent questions are quickly edited. I've edited over 100 of them myself and likely voted to close three times as many. English, for many people, is a second (or even fifth) language.

Good questions usually result in great answers, which is the norm, not the exception.

If SO can't roll out some kind of welcome mat to a very selective community of users .. said community will enjoy a stunted growth.

Try to be tolerant, everyone starts at their own beginning (like it or not) :)

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Yeah, they're quickly closed, but that is not automatic. People like you and I have to spend time doing that in order to prevent SO from being completely overrun. And, really, if the user needs their answer "urgently", is that our problem? The point is that for these low rep users in the vast majority of cases their question has already been posted -- this is just a mechanism to require them to actually go and find it, rather than blindly adding to the fray because they left their project until the last minute. – Lightness Races in Orbit Jan 20 at 17:24

The most positive experience new users to the site can have is when they have a problem that they're struggling with, they ask a question, and they get a thought out, helpful answer.

That experience is massively more positive than answering someone else's question - the site has helped them. Once they've had that experience, many then go on to get invested in the site. Don't expect them to invest in the site (in terms of helping other people out, and generally engaging in the community) until they've been helped by it.

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Asking bad questions is okay for a newbie. Giving bad answers is okay for a newbie. Some of my early answers were crap; it takes a while to get a feel for the site, the expected format, the level of detail expected and the appropriateness of various topics.

What is less okay is continuing to ask bad questions and to give bad answers. The reputation system helps there by providing feedback to the user, and hopefully he will learn.

Some don't, but that's a different topic, and one we've discussed extensively -- see here for some of those discussions.

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I disagree with this for two reasons:

  1. I imagine that most of our new user population is comprised of users who have a question. We don't want to halt the influx of new users by restricting them from asking questions, since that seems to be what most of them join for. Of course, there's also a group of people that join to give answers, but a decision to require a minimum amount of reputation to ask a question would drive most of our new users away, and that's valuable traffic, regardless of the kinds of questions they ask.
  2. "Abusing" the system is a learning experience. Even then, it's not exactly abusing the question system as much as it is our new users learning the system for themselves. We've all made our fair share of mistakes on this site, but that's how you learn—sure, we have the FAQ, but that only goes so far in terms of good/bad questions (which is why we have meta, to close the gap that the FAQ leaves). Off-topic questions have little to no effect, because they're usually moved to the proper site or closed/deleted. Questions that have been asked before get flagged or closed as a duplicate. This is all part of the experience that a user should have on this site, and it's what shapes them into a better user altogether.

So to sum things up, restricting the asking privilege to users with more than 20 reputation would drive most of our new user population away from the site. Making a mistake as a new user is a vital part of one's experience on this site and contributes greatly to their growth as a user here. For these reasons, a minimum reputation for asking questions would be a bad idea.

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Yes , i agree with u . But give a thought on this Assuming we have implemented this system . Now i am newbie and want to ask question . Now before putting question system will u need min pts before putting a question , which u can gain by searching this site similar problem/simple view few web pages u have . And i dnt think this will effect us – Mohit Sharma Feb 20 '12 at 19:49
@MohitSharma: I'm not sure I understand what you mean. Could you elaborate? – Purmou Feb 20 '12 at 19:51
Since he is not allowed to post any question we dnt knw his problem . So , award him point if he view 10 question or some web pages that are some what linked or have similar tags – Mohit Sharma Feb 20 '12 at 19:56

Directly from the FAQ:

Do I have to log in or create an account?

Nope. You can answer and ask questions to your heart's content as an anonymous user, much like Wikipedia. However, there are some things you won't be able to do on the site without registering. But it's easy to register if you want to. All you need is an OpenID account.

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It is awesome to be able to get at the heart of the community & site with no barrier to entry at all. Warms the cockles.

Since that also confuses some people, I reckon this topic is a perennial favorite. It's related to all of the questions about first-timer etiquette and how to handle contributors who don't quite get how the site is meant to be used.

It might be handy to have some color-scheme or filter that lets browsing readers differentiate b/t the questions that are likely to

  • be from newbies who may not have much Q-writing practice
  • not yet have been read or edited by long-time users who could massage a lumpy Q into shape

This sort of color would both let people who don't want to be bothered with such questions avoid them, and let those who want to help welcome and encourage new contributors dive in.

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