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Let questions stay open for a minimum amount of time before being closed
I'm a stackoverflow user for a little more than one year now, and I have the feeling that the site quality to get answer to questions and usefull programming related stuff is currently entering a fast degradation process, at least by my standards.
For some kind of questions the site is becoming useless - at least for me - because questions are closed faster than answered.
Two examples from my own questions: some weeks ago I stumbled on a (very good) old programming book from the seventies : "Programming Proverbs" from H. Ledgard. OK, to me it looked like very good stuff, but a bit oudated. So I asked on Stack Overflow what is the current state of the art about this kind of practical programming rules of thumb. Which works, which do not. Apparently there was some likely minded fellows as I got some answers, but nevertheless it was closed in a matter of minutes "belongs to programmers". Maybe... but on programmers the question was also closed fast enough (as duplicate for "great programming quotes" which isn't true, it's like if a question asking about "names of mammals" was closed as duplicate of a question about "dictionnary words"). Worse, the answers I got from "programmers" were indeed useless junk (that comforted me in my feeling it was definitely not the right place to ask it).
OK. I assumed the way I asked my question was bad, that it missed a bit of context examples, etc. OK, my fault.
In the last weeks I also asked two other questions, very narrow focused and specific. Those were not immediately closed, but I didn't get much useful stuff either in answers.
Now I asked another question today, which is about a problem encountered by a fellow programmer. He has to remotely change a password on a Windows Box from some ACL program running on a linux box. Any programming language available on linux would do. After googling a few minutes I also found out that the problem was likely to be solved by calling some samba code (either through command line tools, python wrapper library wmi-client, or maybe some other entry point I have no idea about). This one was also closed fast enough (a matter of hours) as "off-topic".
What I'm feeling that there is people on SO who are spending their time to close as many questions as they have close points (is there a badge for that ?). We may call them the "Closing Patrol". They are laso doing it with very low standards. I'm wondering if they even bother to carefully read questions before voting to close. There also seems to be a "sheep" effect. As soon as a question get a first close vote, it is not long before it gets the other four close vote (maybe subsequents closers feels less guilty ?).
The problem is that there is no similar effect for reopening questions new questions have some kind of visibility, but old closed questions are just buried.
Now I invested some time answering other's questions on SO or upvoting good questions and answers. I'm really pissed to see that a handful of people can so easily forbid be to ask questions.
In any community as large as SO there will be people with varying standards on what should or should not be asked. The problem is that people with the most exclusive standard will always rule. Even having read the FAQ on close policy is not mandatory to close ! I feel this is not contributing to overall site quality.
OK, that is the problem. Now, I have something to suggest to solve that problem. When closing a question time is of the essence. Why not let questions live for some time before letting people vote to close them ? This time could easily be made a parameter, say as many minutes as the user has points. That would make questions from Jon Skeet impossible to close for a year, or mine stay alive for a few days, but I do not really see that effect as a problem.
EDIT: I'm answering here to some comments, as I have not enough reputation to comment back...
I'm not pretending my questions should not be closed. And I can as easily point out closed questions of other people. In another thread on meta I even complained some questions by others where closed while I was editing my answer to them. I'm definitely shocked by this overall "fast close" behavior. I see very little benefit in close feature. I understand when in some cases a question has too many answers it should not get more.
But If a question belongs to another StackExchange site it should not be closed but migrated (or if it belongs nowhere or is spam deleted)... and in that case migraters should certainly read the questions they move to some other site or they will come back.
Duplicates are in some cases a precious ressource, at it attracts attention to subjects whose answers are often incomplete (the question got out of visibility before getting good answers) or outdated.
The main effect of closing questions is forbidding people willing to answer some question to do it. As if downvoting the question to make it less visible was not enough ? Are people doing this believing that by forbidding answers to some questions "ressources" will answer to some other question ? At least for me that is not true. When questions are closed as I am typing an answer or willing to (and this is really getting more frequent) I'm pissed of, and usually go away from SO for some time. I wonder if I am the only one to react this way.
And I agree, getting a reputation of a few thousand points is not hard. I also depends on subjects people interrested in .net or Java are getting point more easily as community are bigger. But it usually means some kind of involvment anyway.
Considering the current closing policy I'm even wondering if I shouldn't create some puppet account to ask questions. Or if my policy should be to always put a bounty when asking a serious question and wanting to avoid immediate close ?