While trying to ask a question, I got the error message

Oops! Your question couldn't be submitted because:

  • It does not meet our quality standards.
  • Why am I getting this message?
  • What can I do to get the system to accept my question?
  • Can you be more specific?
  • What are good resources on how to ask high-quality questions?

Return to FAQ index

link|improve this question
13  
You have to admit that this error message isn't very descriptive and doesn't give a clue on how to "fix" the question. – James Poulson Jul 9 '11 at 6:06
7  
at the least the error message could provide a link to this page – user130932 Sep 5 '11 at 8:23
3  
I've got to say that this error comes up a lot when I put in a short question. But some questions are naturally short. I find myself adding a more-or-less useless sentence or two just to get around the warning. – user142332 Oct 6 '11 at 16:38
1  
this is very over sensitive and i've never had it before (in ~2 years) and now i have a short but valid question, well spelt with grammar and it won't accept it or explain why. – daniel Crabbe Oct 14 '11 at 9:06
3  
so my title didn't begin with capital letter! If your system can detect that it would of saved a lot of my time if it told me that was the issue. OR maybe just capitalised it itself. – daniel Crabbe Oct 14 '11 at 9:10
7  
Auto-capitalization is probably the worst possible solution here. The system doesn't really care about the capital letter specifically. Lack of capitalization correlates highly with posts that have other problems. We want to encourage people to fix all the problems, not merely enough to squeak by the filter. Users who obstinately refuse to do more than the bare minimum aren't really welcome. (We're all about pieces of flair here, y'know?) – Popular Demand Oct 24 '11 at 18:31
i removed a smile( :) ) form my question...and it worked!!!!! – user1190809 Feb 5 at 17:07
feedback

1 Answer

up vote 52 down vote accepted

Why am I getting this message?

All new questions are subjected to a "minimum quality" filter that checks for characteristics of extremely poor questions. Your question has been caught by the filter.

What can I do to get the system to accept my question?

Make sure your question has

  • a clear title
  • a reasonable explanation of what your question is, sharing your research on the matter
  • correct use of English and actual sentences

If your question is so brief that it could be looked up in a dictionary or reference book/site trivially, it might not be a good fit on our network. (source: Jeff)

Can you be more specific?

Exact details about the algorithm are not being released by the team.

I am against being explicit here.... Our check takes into account tags, title and body. We are not going to give breakdown of what was wrong, that is spoon feeding. (source: waffles)

If we provide a "formula" then it's just another way for users to bypass the question quality filters. (source: Jeff)

What are good resources on how to ask high-quality questions?

Fortunately, there are lots! See:

link|improve this answer
10  
Can't you at least give us an hint?! I really can't tell what's wrong with my question. I am feeling like a detective trying to guess how your algorithm works: this is ridiculous. – Knu Jul 16 '11 at 7:44
4  
@Knu, you could always post a question here on MSO that says something like "I'm getting the following error message: [fill in] / This is the text of the question I'm trying to ask: [fill in] / Could someone tell me how to improve it?" I don't think that's officially sanctioned, but there have been several such questions in the past that have been fairly well-received. – Popular Demand Jul 18 '11 at 14:03
3  
I capitalized the first letter on each sentence and that got my question past the test – user130932 Sep 5 '11 at 8:27
8  
Yes, @maurox, you must speak English to use Stack Overflow. There was a long debate, and people eventually decided that trying to support every language would be impossible. Translators do not work well enough. The good news is that, as long as someone can understand you, your question will be edited to make it clear to everyone. – Popular Demand Oct 4 '11 at 14:05
2  
Ok, thanks, i will studi english much more! – maurox Oct 4 '11 at 15:13
3  
Exact details about the algorithm are not being released by the team This is typical "Security through obscurity" - en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Security_through_obscurity , there is a reason the internet thrives on open standards... I am annoyed by this occasional validation error and it just means this team puts spammers above actual users who are trying to ask questions...Published quality standards is the way to go. – giorgio79 Dec 17 '11 at 21:17
5  
@giorgio79 That doesn't make sense. Publishing a spec for spammers makes it easier for them. Users should go for actual quality, not avoiding a subset of crappyness found in a spec. Nobody wants to read mechanically "improved" crap. Comparing this to the open formats and protocols the internet thrives on also doesn't work, since it is neither. – Matthew Read Jan 23 at 17:22
3  
@giorgio79: I'm not a big asker of questions. However, I imagine your question would have to be pretty bad in order to trigger the filter. Lack of capitalization and punctuation, for example. A couple of sentences followed by a giant block of code, as another example. Only posting two sentences (Protip: if it's a question worth asking, it's a question that requires more than 2 sentences). And so forth. I haven't looked hard, but I have yet to see a question caught by the filter that wasn't terrible. – Nicol Bolas Feb 12 at 3:04
1  
@NicolBolas I want to disable an element's hover event, is it possible? I want to bind a tooltips to some elements and then make sure they are not shown on mouse over but later when i want to show them i can simply call the event and they are shown . In other words, I want to somehow make sure that the event is not called unless i explicitly do so. i don't think there is much wrong with this question, or is there? – khizar Feb 16 at 7:05
1  
i eventually got it posted by adding extra lines of information, which may even bore someone who wants to answer, so instead of ensuring quality, this time its just making me add useless information. – khizar Feb 16 at 7:08
2  
@khizar: What's wrong? Your second sentence is a run-on and you don't bother to capitalize "I" consistently. Your question is short, shows bad grammar, and isn't very clear. Your second comment is also a good example of another run-on sentence. Lastly, if someone would be bored by actual information about your problem, then they won't be providing very good answers anyway. And if the extra info was just pointless verbage, then your question doesn't deserve much of an answer. In short, I'm not bothered by your question being caught by the filter. – Nicol Bolas Feb 16 at 7:32
2  
@NicolBolas first off, people don't come to this site to get help with grammar, i couldn't care less about my english grammar because its not my first language and i quote _ as long as someone can understand you, your question will be edited to make it clear to everyone_ . Secondly, we were talking here about the filter, not about you or what bothers you, so don't tell me if you are bothered or not, i couldn't care less. My question was complete and to the point, which is what quality standards should ensure, not capital 'I's. – khizar Feb 16 at 8:29
2  
@khizar: "Secondly, we were talking here about the filter, not about you or what bothers you, so don't tell me if you are bothered or not, i couldn't care less." I think grammar is a perfectly valid means of filtering, because most low-quality questions are laced with bad grammar. Your question is an example. It had bad grammar, but it was also not "complete and to the point" even ignoring the bad grammar. It was semi-nebulous and not well-specified. Thus I would say that the filter did its job. – Nicol Bolas Feb 16 at 8:40
1  
So you don't want to provide a formula since that would give users a way to "bypass the filters" by submitting quality questions? That makes no sense... – Chris S Feb 25 at 21:31
2  
@Nathan: You misunderstand. Someone can have a meaningful question. But if you cannot communicate that question effectively, then it's not worthwhile to us. This is a basic communication problem: no matter how well-conceived, well-reasoned, and well-researched a question is, if you can't communicate it effectively, it's not doing anyone else any good. – Nicol Bolas Apr 30 at 21:10
show 9 more comments
feedback

You must log in to answer this question.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged