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We're about to add some better, more verbose descriptions of the question close reasons, and I wanted to put this up for discussion. Here's what I have so far

exact duplicate

This question covers exactly the same ground as earlier questions on this topic; its answers may be merged with another identical question.

not {topic} related

Questions on {site} are expected to generally relate to {topic}. This question is very far afield from {topic}.

subjective and argumentative

It's impossible to objectively answer this question, and the question was asked in a confrontational, argumentative way.

not a real question

It's difficult to tell what is being asked here. This question is ambiguous and vague, and cannot be answered in its current form.

blatantly offensive

This question contains subject matter or statements that are obviously and clearly offensive to the community.

too localized

This question would only be relevant to a very small geographic minority, and is not generally applicable to the worldwide audience of the internet.

spam

This question is an overt commercial, promotion, or advertisement for a product or service.

no longer relevant

This question was only applicable to a very narrow situation or moment in time that no longer exists, and will ever exist again for anyone.

Feedback? Thoughts?

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When are these descriptions going to appear? (and where?) – Vinko Vrsalovic Jul 14 at 7:05
see blog.stackoverflow.com/2009/07/… – Jeff Atwood Jul 14 at 11:01
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Don't use the word afield, it makes the sentence a little more unreadable if you aren't use to the word. Just 'very far from the topic etc, should work. – Chacha102 Jul 31 at 15:00

15 Answers

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I'm strongly opposed to this "not a real question" language. What exactly is a real question? The follow-up text to this category seems to be about ambiguity and vagueness, which has nothing to do with whether something is a question or not. I think it's fine to have a "not a question" category but that should mean, precisely that:

the text of this question is not eliciting any information

because a question is:

a sentence worded or expressed so as to elicit information

As for closing things because they are vague, I really think moderators should have to provide a reason why a question is vague and agree on that.

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Argumentative is a loaded word. Saying someone is being argumentative is akin to calling them a name, it's very accusatory. Also I don't actually know what you mean by it. My dictionary has two definitions of argumentative:

  1. given to expressing divergent or opposite views : an argumentative child.
  2. using or characterized by systematic reasoning : the highest standards of argumentative rigor.

Which one is the problem? I can actually think of reasons why neither of these are bad at times. Getting the right vocabulary here is incredibly important. Perhaps you could say "... is being closed because we're worried it will lead to non-constructive antagonism."

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How about changing the word "afield" to something else? I'm a native English speaker, and I've never heard that word before...

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"Afield" is one of those words that occurs only in one phrase, like "caboodle". "Far afield" is the only way I've ever heard it. – mmyers Jul 31 at 15:04
afield: en.wiktionary.org/wiki/afield – Peter Mortensen Oct 22 at 21:15
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Which of these close reasons would apply to things like "What's your favorite C# keyword?" Currently this would probably be closed as "not a real question", but not because it would be vague in any way.

None of the descriptions seems to fit questions like this.

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I'd go with "not a real question". – ChrisF Jul 23 at 20:07
There's no way that's not a real question. Look up question in the dictionary, Chris. – Ollie Saunders Oct 15 at 19:47
The point is it's not an appropriate question, not that it's not a real question. So there should be an option that accommodates this situation. – Æther Oct 22 at 21:55
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blatantly offensive

This question contains subject matter or statements that are obviously and clearly offensive to the community.

spam

This question is an overt commercial, promotion, or advertisement for a product or service.

Are these two really necessary? I can't think of a time I would close a question as "blatantly offensive" or "spam" without flagging it as offensive or spam.

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I think there's a small grammatical error in the no longer relevant description.

Should either be:

This question was only applicable to a very narrow situation or moment in time that no longer exists, and will never exist again for anyone.

or:

This question was only applicable to a very narrow situation or moment in time that no longer exists, or will ever exist again for anyone.

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I'm not sure about the reason (and I'm sure you mean never, not ever):

no longer relevant

This question was only applicable to a very narrow situation or moment in time that no longer exists, and will ever exist again for anyone.

Most everything that has ever been in computing is relevant to someone, there are probably people still dealing with Y2K answers.

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Something along the lines of "How Can America Online Improve the Netscape Browser?" – Robert C. Cartaino Jul 14 at 15:35
...or stuff that's now wrong because the industry has changed: "Why doesn't Stackoverflow let me attach comments to someone's answer? [Closed - No Longer Relevant]" – Robert C. Cartaino Jul 14 at 16:04
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Consider "[Closed for Review or Editing]".

... for questions that have to be temporarily "cut off" until someone can fix it (or possibly delete it) before it accumulates a bunch of answers that are either reactionary or just way off the mark.

The original poster may have asked a legitimate question but it needs some serious clarification. Or the question might be one of those real edge cases that should be put on-hold until a bit of discussion takes place (perhaps in meta.stackoverflow), yet let everyone know that the question is being considered before everyone flies off the handle about its deletion.

I would reserve "[Closed - Not a Real Question]" for these cases:

  • The question cannot be rescued in any meaningful way
  • The user has literally not asked a question ("Eat me. asdf asdf asd fasd fa")
  • The user asks a purely rhetorical question that isn't really designed to solicit constructive answers ("Why does Microsoft Suck So Much?")
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Questions that are closed for review or editing should also have voting frozen -- I find it quite odd that one can still vote on the question and answers after the question has been closed. It just encourages getting your answer in quickly if you think it will be closed, and then you can rake in the upvotes as the controversy swells. – Æther Oct 23 at 17:18
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I'm not sure about the "too localized" one.

The internet is used by everyone worldwide so why do you want to remove questions that only a small group of people will be interested in. You are specifically saying this applies only to small numbers of people grouped by their geographical location. How is this any different from closing questions only of any interest to a small number of people based on the technology they use.

Using Vinko's rather amusing example: "asking about how to power computers with camel spit". This is localized to a small area, but is still a valid question, and could still be very useful to people with camels and no other power sources. Why does it matter that the people this is useful to are likely to be located in a small geographical area.

With reference to your example "do you guys know of any Java user group meetings in Dingbat, Minnesota?", this is useful to everyone who programs Java in Dingbat which is probably higher than the number of people that use an obscure language like say Dao, and you wouldn't close a question on Dao just because of a low quantity of applicable people.

I don't think that a questions geographical relevance is of any importance at all. If you are going to do this, why not also close questions because they are only relevant to a small technical community. "How can a write a script to do [something cool] on [some fairly low popularity mmorpg]?". In which case the reason should be changed to something like "only relevant to a few people".

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your point seems to be that "everything is useful to someone, somewhere!" which is true, I guess, but adds little to the discussion. Programmers in Dingbat, Minnesota should have another place to go that is more relevant to their peculiar and highly localized needs. – Jeff Atwood Jul 14 at 9:22
Not just that everything is useful to someone somewhere, but also why are you distinguishing between uselessness due to geographical location and uselessness due to technical grouping. Someone asking a question about Dao may be better off going to a forum target specifically at users of the Dao language, but your not proposing to close that question due to it's level of use to the SO community. – Simon P Stevens Jul 14 at 9:54
"why are you distinguishing between uselessness due to geographical location and uselessness due to technical grouping" uh, because they're totally different things? – Jeff Atwood Jul 14 at 10:53
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I disagree. Useless is useless regardless of why. You are saying you want to delete "too localised" questions because they are only useful to a small group. But why don't you want to delete Dao questions when they are equally only useful to a small group. What difference does it make that in one case the small group are centred around a geographical location and in the other case they aren't. I just think that it should be consistent, either delete all useless questions, or delete none. – Simon P Stevens Jul 14 at 11:11
@Simon, SO wants to be the site where people go to ask about Dao. Perhaps its not a frequently used technology (haven't even heard of it myself), but if it's a programming language, that's the audience SO is designed to reach. However, SO does not want to be the location to go to for information on meetings in Dingbat, Minnesota. – Timothy Carter Jul 14 at 12:42
Right, the point is for SO to not be localized. If there are only 5 BLooP programmers in the world, they should still be able to go to SO to talk to one another about BLooP, because their shared interest is programming-related. On the other hand, the shared interest of people looking for discussion groups in Dingbat is strongly Dingbat-related. If culling references to a geographic location from the question would make it useless to the OP, then it's too localized. – Adam Bellaire Jul 14 at 13:12
I get what you are saying. Not sure I'm 100% with you, but as long as it's been considered though, that's cool. – Simon P Stevens Jul 14 at 13:34
Why not add a locale tag. Set the taxonomy up that you can say here's a technology tag, here's a locale tag. Then everyone is happy. I can then set up my account to say I'm interested in World, Europe, UK, GB, Scotland, Glasgow. – Colin Mackay Jul 18 at 16:35
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Not to sure about, or the wording.

too localized

This question would only be relevant to a very small geographic minority, and is not generally applicable to the worldwide audience of the internet.

I'm wondering if you could give me an example of such a case Jeff which would fall into that category?

I just wondering if this could be misinterpreted wrongly, where someone asks a relevant technical question, but due the topic not widely been used, or unknown by a lot of users it might be to easily to attach 'too localized', resulting in it getting closed.

Other descriptions seem ok to me.

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"Question: do you guys know of any Java user group meetings in Dingbat, Minnesota?" – Jeff Atwood Jul 14 at 8:14
ahh... it makes more sense now! ;) – kevchadders Jul 14 at 13:36
Will you be putting in an example for each of the reasons to close (like above) in the FAQ so that users can take a quick look to see if they are using the right 'Close' reason? – kevchadders Jul 14 at 13:37
The phrase "too localized" might not mean a lot out of context (here) but I think it will be self-evident when applied to a question that is too localized. As long as the moderators know the meaning to apply it correctly. – Robert C. Cartaino Jul 14 at 15:20
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Does "subjective and argumentative" really need to put those two together? Subjective questions can still be useful, but deliberately argumentative ones usually aren't. How about reclassifying it as:

trolling

This question was asked in an inflammatory and argumentative way, provoking flames instead of useful input.

(Or something like that - I need to go and get a coffee, but you see what I'm getting at.)

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Or maybe just: argumentative, Jeff doesn't like the t word. – Vinko Vrsalovic Jul 14 at 7:41
subjective is actually OK in some situations. It's the combination of subjective+argumenetative specifically that I find obnoxious and anti-community. – Jeff Atwood Jul 14 at 7:48
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Exactly - subjective on its own is often okay, but when is argumentative okay? If it's never okay, why bother including subjective? – Jon Skeet Jul 14 at 8:00
can you provide an example of a question that is argumentative but not at all subjective? Is that possible? – Jeff Atwood Jul 14 at 8:50
This one caused a lot of strife at the time: stackoverflow.com/questions/770300 - I'd argue it's not particularly subjective, but was asked in an unnecessarily provocative way. Far from the worst culprit - and whether it should have been closed or not in its original form certainly is subjective - but an example of the kind of thing I'm thinking about. – Jon Skeet Jul 14 at 9:08
I see what you mean, but "trolling" is itself so broad as to be a useless designation -- it's also kind of a perjorative term: meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/193/… – Jeff Atwood Jul 14 at 9:27
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My conclusion is that it's extremely difficult to ask a question that is argumentative without being subjective. Enough so that this situation is rare enough to be disregarded. (or, we need a "don't ask angry questions" close reason) – Jeff Atwood Jul 14 at 9:29
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Yes, "troll" is a pejorative term. When people do this, they're acting anti-socially, deliberately riling up others. I have no problem with explicitly disapproving of that sort of behaviour. The reason why I'd want to remove the "subjective" bit of this is that it seems to give equal weight to both halves, when really the important point is that it's argumentative. – Jon Skeet Jul 14 at 9:39
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I agree with Jon. Jeff's right that "Argumentative" is usually also "Subjective", but that means we shouldn't have to list it explicitly. In a Venn diagram, the "argumentative" circle would almost completely subsumed by the (much larger) "subjective" circle. – Adam Bellaire Jul 14 at 13:07
"Argumentative" may be "Subjective" but not always the other way around. Why not just rename it to "Subjective or Argumentative"? That is much less "hostile" to a user where no hostility was intended. – Robert C. Cartaino Jul 14 at 14:34
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I agree with Jon, Adam and myself. No need to include subjective if a) argumentative is what's really wrong and b) most argumentative questions are indeed subjective. – Vinko Vrsalovic Jul 14 at 15:31
I think you guys are missing a certain class of questions: those that are argumentative because they're subjective. Examples: "What is the worst programming language?", "Which is better: vi or emacs?", "Why do people use VB?". They might be asked politely, and the author may fully intend to encourage only good, well-reasoned answers... but the very nature of the question creates an environment more friendly to arguments than answers. – Shog9 Jul 14 at 16:09
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@Shog9: That's a case where argumentative would cover it but trolling wouldn't, yes. Assuming we don't want such questions, the explanation for it should be along the lines of "the question is likely to cause arguments rather than reasoned discussion" or something similar. – Jon Skeet Jul 14 at 16:16
@Jon: that sounds like a good description. – Shog9 Jul 14 at 16:33
Yes, those questions are still argumentative, if not in form, in content! – Vinko Vrsalovic Jul 14 at 18:13
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I'm not sure the "Not a real question" reason is needed.

If someone asks an unclear question, people usually post comments to ask for clarifications, and the OP (or sometimes someone else) edits the question.

Unclear questions need rephrasing, not closing !

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they need to be closed because they lead to vague, bad answers. Garbage in, garbage out. Better to close, fix, then reopen and let good answsers appear. – Jeff Atwood Jul 14 at 7:22
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Oh, certainly it is needed. There's always the random person who is going to wander in here an ask "This place sucks asdf asdf asd asdf asd fasd fa sdf." That's literally not a real question. – Robert C. Cartaino Jul 14 at 15:28
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And clinging on RSolberg's idea, I'd probably write something like

It's difficult to tell what is being asked here. Try to make the question 
clearer by rewriting it and providing relevant examples.

But this would be good if the asker has a chance of seeing this description before the close is completed, so he has a chance to ammend his ways, else the new 'not a real question' makes more sense

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I would describe spam as

This question is an unsolicited commercial, promotion
or advertisement for a product or service.

I think overtness or covertness are orthogonal to spaminess.

OTOH, 'unsolicitedness' really defines spam. If the question asks for, say, good debugging tools one might certainly and validly offer what could be called an advertisement or promotion for a commercial debugging tool and it wouldn't be called spam.

EDIT: Thanks ChrisF, I think this nails spam.

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True, but someone could have the product that solves the OP's problem exactly. There is a very, very fine line here & I'm not sure where it should be drawn. – ChrisF Jul 14 at 8:23
See edit. In any case I think humans are pretty good at spotting what is spam and what is really answering the question – Vinko Vrsalovic Jul 14 at 15:41
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The only 2 that stick out at me as being a bit ambiguous or unclear are:

  1. Not a real question
  2. too localized

I think the thing missing with not a real question has to do with a question that is simply too vague to answer, but it is still definitely a real and valid question. I would almost like to see an option added for way to broad or ambiguous to answer or rename the not a real question to encompass this a bit more.

For the too localized tag, I'm not sure what the actual uses of this have been to date, but there are some technologies out there that not a lot of folks are using and the question may be too difficult to answer for 99% of users, but that 1% may still be able to help. I don't know if this is what too localized is getting at, but I'm not sure that leaving these questions open is really a bad thing.

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Too localized refers to being particular to a geographic minority, not to a knowledge minority. For example, asking about how to power computers with camel spit would be too localized. – Vinko Vrsalovic Jul 14 at 7:08
or, "any Java user group meetings in Dingbat, Minnesota?" – Jeff Atwood Jul 14 at 7:09
I updated the "not a real question" based on your feedback – Jeff Atwood Jul 14 at 7:11
@Vinko and @Jeff - Localized makes quite a bit more sense now. Thanks. – Chester Jul 14 at 7:12
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I actually had this type of question appear in my forums, "This guy, john, wrote some software for our office and now it doesn't seem to be working. If anyone knows someone named John who writes software in Central Florida, can you please have him give us a call?" That's local. – Robert C. Cartaino Jul 14 at 15:26

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