466

I answered somebody's question. It was a new person who joined Stack Overflow today. He/she thanked me and said it works, but he/she hasn't accepted my answer.

The question is here for your reference: Update Table in Access.

Is it okay to send a comment telling him/her about how to accept answers, and maybe asking him/her to accept mine? Or should I just leave it, and maybe he/she will come back at some point in time?

I haven't been on Stack Overflow for long, so I too am a bit of a newbie and not sure about the etiquette.

21
  • 12
    You'll find a lot of variants of this question in MSE, e.g.: Asking for someone to accept your answer
    – Mat
    Apr 19, 2014 at 6:22
  • 2
    Thank you... see how "newbie" I am? I didn't know about meta.stackexchange... Although now I realize meta.stackoverflow is brand new...By the way, should I delete my question or do anything with it now that you pointed me to answers in meta.stackexchange?
    – AleAssis
    Apr 19, 2014 at 6:51
  • 3
    You don't need to do anything with this question, it's a legitimate question that hasn't been answered here yet AFAIK. Just wait a bit, I'm sure someone will share their view on this here, specifically in the context of Stack Overflow. (I'm too lazy to do that :-) )
    – Mat
    Apr 19, 2014 at 7:00
  • 25
    Welcome to my world. Only about 10% of my answers are accepted on the tags I'm active on. I'm a well known expert in the subject with a 30K rating and it all comes from up votes because I'm always getting newbies who ask a question and then never accept the answer. Apr 21, 2014 at 0:08
  • 196
    @AleAssis Don't forget to accept one of the answers here ;) ... Apr 22, 2014 at 9:23
  • 1
    What exactly is it that you (and maybe other people) dislike in an answer not being accepted?
    – PlasmaHH
    Apr 23, 2014 at 15:29
  • 6
    I don't think there's anything wrong with it, but I'll note that it looks pretty pathetic to me. I've never seen it done in a way that didn't sound like reputation begging and it always makes me feel a little dirty and sad.
    – Wayne
    Apr 23, 2014 at 15:33
  • 71
    Oh the Irony that his answer has been accepted on the original thread yet this remains "Unanswered". This has made my day!
    – CaRDiaK
    Apr 23, 2014 at 15:54
  • 52
    I wish there was a "flag for acceptance" option for those times when the user has clearly accepted the answer by commenting. Apr 24, 2014 at 12:14
  • 29
    I hope I am not the only one seeing the irony in the fact that this question was asked a week ago and there still isn't an accepted answer. Apr 27, 2014 at 15:53
  • 10
    @scott.korin many months later...same irony
    – charlietfl
    Jul 27, 2014 at 22:16
  • 10
    Irony noted here Dec 7, 2014 at 0:32
  • 5
    Hi @AleAssis, did you find an answer to your question? If any answer solved your question you can consider accepting it by clicking the check-mark (please don't though). This indicates to the wider community that you've found a solution and gives some reputation to both the answerer and yourself. There is no obligation to do this (definitely no obligation in this case). Jul 21, 2017 at 23:14
  • 1
    For some reason I finally got a notification from Lafexlos comment and I do apologize for the ironic lack of acceptance of the answer :)
    – AleAssis
    Jan 16, 2019 at 17:47
  • 3
    The suggestion of @MatheusMoreira in combination with a reminder/notification pop up or later message would be the best and easiest way to solve this. Some elementary analysis on comments for identifying terms like thank you it worked, problem solved etc could easily determine if there is a possible answer or not. Finally a discrete pop up with a message such as Please don't forget to mark the answer if it solved your issue I don't think it would put any sort of pressure to users in the contrary it would contribute to the smooth operation of SO and inform the new users
    – abiratsis
    May 13, 2019 at 20:41

11 Answers 11

444

Note: This answer is no longer recommended or endorsed by the moderation team. Please see this answer for more information.

If a new user has never accepted an answer before and has thanked you for your answer it is acceptable to point them to the functionality. I normally would write something like:

Hi @user12345 if this or any answer has solved your question please consider accepting it by clicking the check-mark. This indicates to the wider community that you've found a solution and gives some reputation to both the answerer and yourself. There is no obligation to do this.

(original markdown):

Hi @user12345 if this or any answer has solved your question please consider [accepting it](https://meta.stackexchange.com/q/5234/179419) by clicking the check-mark. This indicates to the wider community that you've found a solution and gives some reputation to both the answerer and yourself. There is no obligation to do this.

If the user has ever accepted an answer before or has been around for any amount of time then they're aware of how the system works. If you comment in this situation then it would normally appear as though you are either begging for reputation or pressurising a lower reputation user into accepting your answer - neither of which the community looks too kindly upon.

tl;dr

It's okay. Once.

17
  • 18
    How about "Did you find my answer helpful, or do you need more help?" for low-reputation users who seem to have abandoned the question?
    – bjb568
    Apr 19, 2014 at 17:40
  • 8
    To be honest I wouldn't use the word "my" @bjb568. If you're going down that route I'd write something like "hi @ user12345, have the answers you've got fully answered your question? If they have [comment above] or if not can you edit your question to clarify why they haven't and include any missing information."
    – Ben
    Apr 19, 2014 at 22:34
  • 130
    This one-time limit would be reasonable if humans were robots, and you only needed to teach them something once for them to master the concept. Humans aren't robots. They often need to be instructed, and reminded multiple times. Human programmers also juggle accounts on multiple programmer Q+A/forum sites. Each may have different etiquette/rules. Just because they got it right once, doesn't mean they won't lapse into their other forum habits. If a programmer doesn't have a thick enough skin to handle a little nagging, my God, they're going to get killed in code reviews.
    – Nate
    Apr 22, 2014 at 7:20
  • 8
    But that's part of the problem @Nate; what are you nagging about? You're nagging for someone to give you a little bit of rep. The one-time thing isn't much to do with the question asker, it's to protect the community and the question answerer
    – Ben
    Apr 22, 2014 at 7:36
  • 2
    What about answers to questions where the users are now inactive? I've got one that I'd get an additional badge for but the user has been inactive for so long and never rewarded me with a tick, despite the fact it answers the question and is voted significantly higher than all other answers :(
    – Ian
    Apr 23, 2014 at 15:16
  • 73
    @Ben You're not only nagging for rep. Marking a question as accepted also helps others that come across the question later. So while it might be self serving, it has other benefits.
    – mason
    Apr 23, 2014 at 20:53
  • 6
    It might have other benefits @mason. There's no particular reason why the OP has more knowledge about the subject than the community and there are plenty of cases of completely wrong accepted answers. If I come across an answer to a question I'd normally try the one with the highest number of votes first.
    – Ben
    Apr 23, 2014 at 20:55
  • 2
    I agree with this answer but not on the part where you say [the user] has been around for any amount of time. There are many users that register, ask a question, grab the answer and then disapper. They reappears after a long time (months, years?) ask a new question and leave agein. So the time parameter should not be considered if they have never accepted an answer.
    – Steve
    Oct 25, 2014 at 9:37
  • If that's the case they haven't been "around" @Steve, they've been elsewhere... You could have a good guess from their act try as to which is is.
    – Ben
    Oct 25, 2014 at 9:39
  • 1
    The problem is that I don't know a method to discover if a user has been around or not. I could talk of active users or lurkers (no offense intended) In any case I personally don't look at the seniority of registration but only to the fact that they never accepted answers or are new users. So I say: Since you are a new user (or Since you are not a very active user) of this site I recommend to read [How To Accept Answers] .... then I could continue with your proposed comment
    – Steve
    Oct 25, 2014 at 9:59
  • 1
    It would be helpful for other users to be able to "suggest an answer" to a post. Jun 19, 2015 at 18:28
  • 30
    whats with the BEGGING thing, do you think after working a full 8 hours job daily for a full month or contributing to a freelance project, you don't get paid off timely and you ask the person to pay off is begging NO that's your right, I think it is unethical if someone continuously show up on a forum to ask for help and someone spares out some of his personal time to solve OP's problem, and OP doesnt even bothers to pay him off with some reputation points, thats more rude than asking someone in a nice way to mark any of the anwers posted that helped him out. Feb 11, 2019 at 0:43
  • 1
    We can't completely prevent how we appear to others @Muhammad. Your intentions might be noble, but can be misinterpreted. If you don't want to write answers for people who don't accept answers, even though they know how to do it, you do have that option; you can look at their recent questions and see if they're in the habit of clicking the accept button and decide not to answer if you don't want to.
    – Ben
    Feb 11, 2019 at 16:57
  • 1
    @Ben , yeah i agree that we can avoid answering on their question if we feel like, but then it would mean that others having the same problem might be suffering due to that person, that is what my intentions are contributing to stackoverflow, and i still answer the question, asking once might be OK, but not more than that, sorry if you found my comment rude in any way, was just discussing never ment to offend you or anyone else having different opinion. IDIOS Feb 11, 2019 at 18:15
  • 3
    I've written a new answer here with more details but this is no longer recommended and you may find yourself at odds with the moderation team if you continue to follow this advice today.
    – codewario
    Apr 19, 2022 at 13:48
69

I sometimes use standard verbiage to encourage a new user to accept an answer. I use it very sparingly (these days) when I'm one contender among several, but will definitely use it when there's a 'Thanks' comment on someone else's answer and no acceptance, and sometimes when mine is the only answer.

If the advice has been followed, or is now moot because the user is not registered on Stack Overflow, or hasn't been seen for several years (yes, I mean years!) then I'll remove the comment when I next spot it.

Formatted:

Welcome to Stack Overflow. Please note that the preferred way of saying 'thanks' around here is by up-voting good questions and helpful answers (once you have enough reputation to do so), and by accepting the most helpful answer to any question you ask (which also gives you a small boost to your reputation). Please see the [About] page and also How do I ask questions here?

In a comment, the [About] becomes a link.

Raw Markup:

Welcome to Stack Overflow.
Please note that the preferred way of saying 'thanks' around here is by
up-voting good questions and helpful answers (once you have enough
reputation to do so), and by accepting the most helpful answer to any
question you ask (which also gives you a small boost to your
reputation).
Please see the [About] page and also [How do I ask questions
here?](https://stackoverflow.com/help/how-to-ask)
1
36

In general, yes, you can post something. How exactly you word it depends on the asker.

For an inexperienced asker (based primarily on reputation, number of questions/answers, etc.), it is good etiquette to explain how to accept an answer and remind them to do so, always with the qualifier of "if it answers your question." If there are many answers, you might consider commenting on the question itself and wording it to encourage them to accept an answer, rather than yours.

If the user is more experienced, a different approach is required as they already know all this. Chances are they just forgot to accept an answer. In this case, I start by waiting a while. A couple days, usually. After some time has passed, I ask if one of the proposed answers sufficiently answers their question or if they still have a problem. I usually also ask for them to provide some clarification or to elaborate if the answers don't work for them. This kind of comment serves a triple purpose: 1) It reminds them to accept an answer, without being rude. 2) It asks if any of the answers work, which is useful information for anyone else viewing the question. 3) It prompts them to provide additional details if the answers don't work, giving everyone who answered a chance to revise their answers or for the OP to post their own answer if they figured it out on their own. This all works toward one end goal: providing a full answer to the question that is clearly marked for other users having a similar problem. I have yet to have anyone respond negatively to such a comment.

In short: You can generally find some polite way of addressing the lack of an accepted answer in a comment. Don't be pushy. Assume the OP knows what they're doing, unless it is clearly a new user. If it's clearly a new user, you can provide brief instructions on how the site works.

20

I have always said something, regardless of their status. What's the harm? Worst case they already know and just accept at a later time.

11
  • 29
    It's rude, that's the harm.
    – Servy
    Apr 22, 2014 at 19:59
  • 59
    @Servy lol, I didn't know people had such touchy feelings on here
    – FastTrack
    Apr 23, 2014 at 12:36
  • 14
    It's rude, and sometimes will get your answer downvotes from those who think so - especially if the badgering-for-accept is posted quickly (or even in the answer itself) or on an answer with isn't of very high quality to begin with. Apr 24, 2014 at 20:55
  • 80
    What?! Surely its rude to ask people for help and ignore their effort afterwards. Mar 30, 2016 at 13:53
  • 6
    @Servy , I think it is unethical if someone continuously show up on a forum to ask for help and someone spares out some of his personal time to solve OP's problem, and OP doesnt even bothers to pay him off with some reputation points, thats more rude than asking someone in a nice way to mark any of the anwers posted that helped him out, but i think these are manners, i always accepted the answer right from the start when i joined, If you are by nature not a thankless person you will always remember who helped you in your bad time, and will always be thankfull. Feb 11, 2019 at 0:52
  • 4
    @MuhammadOmerAslam You appear to be answering questions because you care about Imaginary Internet Points, rather than because you want to contribute to creating a useful repository of knowledge. Going around accepting answers because you feel compelled to "pay people off" rather than because you simply want to indicate what answer was most helpful to you, hurts the ability of the site to be that useful repository of knowledge. Prioritizing reputation and your own recognition over being helpful isn't something many people are interested in doing, and it makes you look rude in the process.
    – Servy
    Feb 11, 2019 at 14:15
  • 3
    @Servy i never said that I would contact the person again or be rude with him in process of getting the answer accepted, what I said that there isn't any harm to say ONCE, you noticed about paying off people but you forgot that I mentioned about being thankful too. So you are JUDGING about WHY i contribute, yes I do care about the reputation points to some extent as it shows to the community that I am contributing a fair amount, and i dont like to be an UN-SUNG hero it aint a war going on dude. Feb 11, 2019 at 14:26
  • 2
    @MuhammadOmerAslam Yes, there is harm in trying to badger people into accepting answers, rather than letting them accept the answers they naturally choose to when they decide on their own, to mark an answer as helpful. I'm judging your motivations because it's harming others to prioritize reputation over helping others.
    – Servy
    Feb 11, 2019 at 14:32
  • 2
    @Servy dude, you ARE touchy, asking once isn't badgering, badgering means To persuade someone through constant annoying efforts, once is OK, thats all what i meant to say, just look into my answers i have alot of answers posted for new comers although they were about to be closed for being too broad, if they dont accept it even being the right one,i would still add an answer next time if they post, atleast it can help others having the same problem, i dont mean to harm anyone feelings over here, everyone has different opinion, i cant judge others for being different than me. IDIOS Feb 11, 2019 at 18:22
  • 2
    @MuhammadOmerAslam So now you're saying you are frequently posting answers to questions that are too broad, and merit closure appropriately? That's a whole new problem. But when all of a person's questions result in comments by people demanding to have their answers accepted, and who consider someone not accepting an answer to be rude, as you are demonstrating is your opinion here, and when they see that behavior on the questions of others that they see, it absolutely comes off as badgering.
    – Servy
    Feb 11, 2019 at 18:34
  • 2
    nopes, i said that in context to the intent of helping others not just looking for reputation points, even if i know the guy hasnt been able to narrow down the problem being a new bee to programming or SO, i would still help them out, they accept or not i would just ask them once after a week or so, if they dont accept i wont bother again, dude chill out, having a different opinion doesnt mean the other person is wrong, you are constantly trying to do that just to prove your point, and what i just described isnt badgering at all or what i said in my previous comment, chill. Feb 11, 2019 at 19:03
19

If I answer a question and the OP never accepts any answer, I usually just don't do anything. However, if I come across a question that:

  1. Was asked some time ago, and
  2. I did not place an answer on, and
  3. Has an answer that does address the problem

Then, I leave a comment reminding the asker to accept an answer and I might even hint that one of the given answers does address his issue.

3
  • 2
    you can do the same for yours too, reminding someone once after posting an answer, lets say after 7 days and you dont see any update or replies from the person you can ask the person in a nicer way if he is still facing the problem and wasnt able to solve, i almost have around 25 answers where i posted a comment after more than a month in the same way and the OP accepted it right away with an apology, and alot of them never replied back, i leave them alone. Feb 11, 2019 at 0:58
  • @MuhammadOmerAslam Apparently there's a risk of looking rude doing it for your own although I feel that risk is overblown. If we all get in the habit of issuing reminders for each other, we mitigate that risk.
    – John
    Feb 15, 2019 at 18:54
  • @John, yes there is a risk until we choose the correct words or approach, rather than forcing the person to accept the answer, i would ask the person if he wasn't able to solve the problem yet so i can help out, that mostly gets the answer accepted if the problem was solved and if the user checks in frequently otherwise i won't ask him a second time. Feb 16, 2019 at 4:37
16

I always point new users to this if they do not accept an answer of mine on which they commented it solved their problem.

I do this by pointing to the fact accepting an answer indicates the question is resolved and that the chosen answer is validated as working. Hence, you won't be wasting the time of people who are:

  1. Looking to answer unresolved questions
  2. Looking for validated answers

It makes it more difficult to look for good questions and answers when they're not marked as accepted, so I try to explain this to new users. Something along the lines of:

Glad the solution worked. Would you mind accepting this answer? It might help people experiencing a similar issue and will help getting your question noticed. For more information, take a look at our FAQ. Thanks and welcome to SO!

Original mark down:

Glad the solution worked. Would you mind accepting this answer? It might help people
experiencing a similar issue and will help getting your question noticed. For more
information, take a look at our [FAQ](https://stackoverflow.com/help/accepted-answer). Thanks and welcome to SO!

I agree you should comment in sucha way on experienced users, they know how the system works (hopefully (:) and spamming these comments will make you look like you're begging for reputation.

There's one exception though, and that is users with low accept rate. To me, it makes perfectly sense to keep on trying to educate them. You don't even have to do this for your own answers, if you spot an unresolved question, which has an answer that should be the accepted one, simply point this out to the OP.

Avoid spamming these comments, if someone's not willing, it simply won't happen.

2
  • 2
    I'm not sure about this comment... why your answer and not anyone else's? Acceptance also won't help people with a similar issues, your answer will do that. It won't help with getting the question noticed either - and this is beside the point for someone who's just got a working answer.
    – Ben
    Apr 22, 2014 at 9:45
  • 3
    I only ever add it when the OP indicated (in comments) it helped him/her with his/her problem. I'm not spamming this around on every answer I provide :). Acceptance indicates very clearly the question was resolved. I'm not saying acceptance is always a measure for a good quality answer (there are countless examples out there), I just know when I'm looking for answers my first focus will be on questions that have an accepted answer.
    – thomaux
    Apr 22, 2014 at 11:48
16

While Ben's answer was once considered the correct behavior on the site, site features since his answer was posted have improved and users are now encouraged in-application to accept or upvote answers. As such, the mod team no longer endorses the practice of encouraging users, however new to the site they may be, to accept answers or vote in either direction via post comments.

It is actually now considered a violation of community rules and may draw the ire of the moderation team if this type of engagement continues, so while there is a historical appreciation of Ben's answer, following its advice today may get you in some trouble. Do not use the comment sections to encourage or otherwise nudge users towards accepting answers or voting, as the site functionality covers this today.

This answer is not an endorsement of these rules, but rather, a signpost as to what the moderator expectations in this case are as it starkly juxtaposes the highest-voted-and-accepted answer here.

41
  • 6
    I'm not suggesting you do so, but i would be good to see a revision of the (currently) accepted answer; which has a much large number of (up)votes compared to other answers on this post. In truth, perhaps a FAQ type question would be better, which can be used as a canonical in the future/
    – Thom A
    Apr 19, 2022 at 13:57
  • 3
    Before doing that I'd like to see what Cody or another mod responds with to my comment in the other thread where I ask what the mod team would prefer we do in the case their position clashes with previously established norms they-themselves have recommended in the past.
    – codewario
    Apr 19, 2022 at 14:04
  • 2
    As your comment under the accepted answer is the 17th, it's very easy to miss. You might consider editing a pointer to this answer into the accepted one. Apr 19, 2022 at 14:21
  • 2
    Hi - I'm in agreement with the original goal of Stack Exchange. Please edit my answer to make Cody's comment clear and change the emphasis. Cerberus' answer deals with a different topic and doesn't appear to answer this question as asked.
    – Ben
    Apr 19, 2022 at 18:02
  • 2
    I've community wikied the answer, even though I get no rep to make this more palatable.
    – Ben
    Apr 19, 2022 at 18:02
  • 13
    I do not understand the reasoning for this at all. New users need to be trained in the ways of the site and an appropriately worded comment can help them understand the process on the site in many ways (not just in this way). Whatever stuff the site thinks it is showing the user, it VERY often doesn't work. The emphasis should be on the attitude and style of the communication, not on there being no communication on the topic at all. Where is this "rule" written down? Or did some moderators just take this up on their own and decide this is the way it should be?
    – jfriend00
    Apr 19, 2022 at 23:05
  • 6
    @OlegValteriswithUkraine - First, I ask where the actual written rule is or is this just what a few moderators now think? Second, I restate my objection to banning ALL communication on the topic. There are plenty of styles of communication that would be beneficial to both the site and to the OP so the emphasis should be on what styles are appropriate and what are not rather than banning any discussion of it at all. Just look at your last sentence. It implies that because some abuse it, we must ban all forms of it. Why not just decide what is and isn't appropriate rather than banning all?
    – jfriend00
    Apr 19, 2022 at 23:34
  • 3
    @OlegValteriswithUkraine - Since you want to prevent me from helping to educate new users on the ways of the site in any way, this is making me consider whether I may just stop engaging with questions from new users with no history of understanding how the site works. FYI, in the 13,293 answers I've provided in almost 11 years, I've never once seen any objection to coaching a new user on how the site works (either from the OP or from a mod) and I've certainly helped thousands of new users to understand the ways of the site better than they did before.
    – jfriend00
    Apr 19, 2022 at 23:40
  • 3
    @OlegValteriswithUkraine - And, how is "accepting" a best answer not the way of the site any more? When did that change? Why is the feature still there, then? Your link is about not pinning the best answer to the top and nothing else.
    – jfriend00
    Apr 19, 2022 at 23:45
  • 3
    @OlegValteriswithUkraine - The exact same bias happens on the most upvoted answer. The answer with the most upvotes is more likely to get more upvotes. And, newer answers that may even have more complete or more up-to-date info in them are very unlikely to get many upvotes. So, are you going to get rid of upvotes for the same reason. This place is going nuts. For myself, my main point of writing answers is to compete for the psychic reward of winning the best answer competition. I do this for my own entertainment and that's a significant part of why I participate.
    – jfriend00
    Apr 20, 2022 at 0:19
  • 5
    @OlegValteriswithUkraine - I mention questions from new users for several reasons. First off, they need the most help in learning how to write a good question. Second, they need the most coaching on editing questions to add clarification, on not just disappearing for days at a time when people have engaged and are trying to help, on communicating when their problem has been solved or not solved yet, etc.... If the site implements policies that make it less likely for experienced SO users to engage with new users, I would think that's not good for the site as a whole.
    – jfriend00
    Apr 20, 2022 at 0:40
  • 4
    I think what jfriend is asking for is a post or something overriding the canonical answer from a moderator, saying the policy has changed. Right now it seems like a 180 to them as well as several others on the site. I myself have mixed feelings here because I don't disagree with the new direction, but there has also been zero communication from the mod team about the policy changing from suddenly getting slapped on the wrist for previously allowed and recommended behavior. Experiments around sorting and updating outdated answers don't preclude written rules about expected decorum.
    – codewario
    Apr 20, 2022 at 0:51
  • 4
    @OlegValteriswithUkraine - Where is this "policy change" written down? I'd like to read it. I've asked several times and you and others have not responded with a link to any specific document of the policy. That makes me think this is just some momentum thing among a few moderators. Is that how site policies are made here? How are such site policies communicated to the general public when they change?
    – jfriend00
    Apr 20, 2022 at 5:21
  • 3
    @jfriend00 I cannot speak about the others, but I tried to respond to your comments in order, and due to sheer number of followups and 4AM for me could not get to it. I don't think there is a written one apart from several mod responses over the years that do not condone this (I linked them in my replies to Bender above, though). To be honest, in general, there are no written down mod policies apart from a couple of cases (e.g. deletion of a post under Meta discussion), and I agree with you this is unfortunate and with Bender that it would be nice to see an "official" policy written down. Apr 20, 2022 at 12:26
  • 5
    @OlegValteriswithUkraine - OK, I guess you agree that's an issue. Some moderators are attempting to change a long history of how things are done, but there is no written policy and I (and presumably other long running, active users) have received no communication about such policy changes. That seems to a recipe for confusion..
    – jfriend00
    Apr 20, 2022 at 14:02
3

You can definitely do something like that. The user may simply be unaware of SO guidelines and/or etiquette. A fundamental assumption that you as the answer-giver have to work with though is that there are some people who:

  1. Have a problem
  2. Sign up for SO
  3. Ask their question
  4. Get their answer
  5. Leave without ever being heard from again or sign up for a new account when they have a new problem.

That is part of the "risk" of using you time to answer a question. There is no mechanism for the community or moderators (that I am aware of) to retroactively assign best answers based upon this scenario.

1
  • 4
    There is no mechanism, no. It's been rejected multiple (read hundreds) of times. Acceptance doesn't even indicate that an answer is the "best"; that's what your votes are for (and why they're so important). Acceptance only indicates that this was the answer which helped the OP the most.
    – Ben
    Apr 21, 2014 at 18:04
2

I feel like there's something wrong with asking someone to accept your answer. That seems a bit pretentious.

I think its OK to ask them to accept some answer. Stack Overflow is a Q&A site, not a Q site.

I've even been in situations where I land on Stack Overflow in an unfamiliar area and I have to ask "what's wrong with Answer X since you did not accept it (or any others). It seems OK to me, but I don't know the technology".

You can also cite How does accepting an answer work?. I often do it to nudge a new user and help him/her learn how to use the site.

-4

I think the following can be a possible solution:

New users should automatically receive a message that welcomes them and gives them information about Stack Overflow's "recommended rules of etiquette", if they can be called that, or points them towards useful resources or answers that clarify these. Perhaps Community can do this by automatically sending a message to new users which tells them to take the tour.

This could potentially reduce the amount of questions about what new users should or should not do.

The "recommended rules of etiquette" can be guidelines for the "recommended behaviour", if it can be called that, that is expected on Stack Overflow.

8
  • 1
    We already try to have new users take the tour and that doesn't work either.
    – user9420984
    Jan 8, 2019 at 15:02
  • @Codeer, I have just received the "Informed" badge by reading the entire tour page. Why was I not told about the tour when I became a new user? Do existing users expect new users to already know about the tour?
    – user6419919
    Jan 8, 2019 at 15:24
  • I can't answer that for you. I do know that users tend to link to the tour page when they stumble upon new users, but most of the time new users just skim the page so (some) people just... give up trying to do so.
    – user9420984
    Jan 8, 2019 at 15:30
  • 6
    We also put quite a bit of information in front of new users before their first post. Even one where they have to click, "Yes, I have read this and understand". And they still don't get it right. Users don't read. You can't make them; they actively ignore and bypass everything that doesn't relate to accomplishing their goal, which is to get an answer to their problem.
    – fbueckert
    Jan 8, 2019 at 15:31
  • @fbueckert, if new users "actively ignore and bypass everything that doesn't relate to accomplishing their goal, which is to get an answer to their problem", shouldn't they deserve to face the ensuing consequences?
    – user6419919
    Jan 8, 2019 at 15:54
  • 5
    You'd think so; it only makes sense to try to familiarize yourself with a site before trying to use it. But apparently the vast majority of new users just think we're hostile, because they have a problem, and we're being mean when we don't help them. Just search meta for, "hostility"; dollars to donuts it's a new user that doesn't like their crappy question got closed or downvoted.
    – fbueckert
    Jan 8, 2019 at 15:57
  • @fbueckert, I think new users should be informed of the information you have provided in order to change the way they perceive existing users and the community in general. How can that be done effectively though?
    – user6419919
    Jan 8, 2019 at 16:12
  • 3
    That's a thorny issue; most of it comes from properly setting expectations, I feel. We've got a test of the new question wizard which will help, but how much is up for debate. Those expectations need to be set before they can post their problem; doing it after the fact means it'll just be ignored. So if the system can indicate that their question will get a rough reception, and are they sure they want to post it gets a confirmation, well, they know going in it's bad. We'll never completely eliminate complaints, but expecting veterans to onboard all new users just isn't working.
    – fbueckert
    Jan 8, 2019 at 16:22
-7

Reminding users, regardless of their status, to accept and/or upvote answers that help them is in the best interest of the question asker, the question answerer, S.O., and the community at large.

Reminders do need to contain the qualification of 'helpful', it's counterproductive to upvote or accept bad or useless answers, and they shouldn't be repeated for any given question, but within that limit reminders are a strong net positive.

Voting/accepting answers has two main functions, it helps users looking at existing questions evaluate the answer(s), and it helps motivate users to post answers through gamification. Gamification works. It's used successfully in numerous situations including language learning applications, fitness, etc., and S.O. knows this. Both of these functions work best when there is a high percentage of question askers using them, and reminders (not nagging, but tactful reminders) improve this rate.

For the question asker, the reminder gives them a chance to earn a small amount of reputation, to feel a part of the community, and helps keep them from gaining a reputation as a sponge. It also encourages question answerers to take a risk on users without a history of accepting answers.

Some answers take considerable work to develop, and a low accept rate from new users exerts pressure on some potential answerers to focus on questions from users with a track record of accepting answers. It certainly won't stop all answers to questions from new askers, but it will exert a downward pressure.

For the question answer, the reminder improves the chance of getting reputation, feedback, and a thank you. This keeps answerers engaged and active. Not everyone is motivated equally, but it's foolish to artificially shrink the pool of potential answerers.

For S.O., reminders increase the use of the voting system, which they clearly put in on purpose. It generates more traffic in numerous ways including askers are encouraged to return and vote, answerers feel more rewarded and participate more, and users and answerers get notifications which they check up on. It also makes the site more useful because viewers can more easily identify useful answers, and it makes the site appear more active and therefore more relevant.

For the community at large, reminders encourage more acceptance/voting and therefore they can better tell what answers are good answers. If most askers accept and/or vote on answers, then an answer without votes or acceptance is likely to be low quality, but if most askers don't vote then searchers have to spend more effort evaluating each potential answer.

Obviously reminders can be taken too far and become nags that drive users off or pressure them to accept bad answers, but answers can be bad too and we don't ban answers in general just because they might be abused, we'd have no S.O. if we did that. Allowing and even encouraging tasteful reminders is a win for all involved.

Many sites, including Microsoft, allow answers to include reminders in their posts or even their signatures, and S.O. should do so as well, and should even reject edits that remove tasteful reminders.

7
  • 3
    The first thing I want to do when I see someone begging for accepts/votes from the Question author is downvote. The second thing I want to do is put a link to the most upvoted Answer on this post, which basically says "Don't beg for reputation points".
    – Scratte
    Sep 9, 2021 at 15:46
  • 4
    Informing a new member about accepting, as described in Ben's answer, is fine. Soliciting for votes is not ok. And anyway, it's pointless to ask new members for votes because they don't have enough rep to cast votes. Presumably, once they've earned enough rep to vote they can make their own voting decisions without needing reminders. ;)
    – PM 2Ring
    Sep 9, 2021 at 15:52
  • 1
    @PM2Ring Note that it is no longer okay
    – codewario
    Apr 20, 2022 at 13:07
  • @Bender Thanks for that info. I hope that an appropriate FAQ (or equivalent) gets created. In the meantime, I've upvoted your linked answer, but I'll wait to see the FAQ before deleting my comment to Robert. I must admit that I'm somewhat surprised by this apparent change of policy. FWIW, a prominent SO mod has posted numerous "how to accept" comments (via a userscript), but I don't know if he still does that.
    – PM 2Ring
    Apr 20, 2022 at 14:08
  • 1
    You are not the only one. I don't even disagree with the new guideline, but the moderator position on this issue seems to have done a 180. I certainly didn't know anything had changed around guiding new members towards the upvote and answer accept policy. Ben's original answer on this question has been the canonical reference for dealing with users who don't accept answers since 2014. Seeing prominent members of the site admonished for following the canonical advice is very concerning. There needs to be better communication from mods to the community when their policies change.
    – codewario
    Apr 20, 2022 at 14:17
  • 1
    Frankly, I don't see the harm in a purely educational comment that links to meta.stackexchange.com/q/5234 and doesn't try to beg or coerce. I've posted such comments on other people's good answers, not just my own, and also on the question itself, eg "If an answer below has helped you, please consider accepting it". And I only do it if the OP is very new, or if they've asked a dozen or so questions with virtually no accepts despite having received numerous good answers.
    – PM 2Ring
    Apr 20, 2022 at 14:39
  • 1
    OTOH, I have no hesitation in flagging comments that blatantly beg or pester the OP for a vote or accept.
    – PM 2Ring
    Apr 20, 2022 at 14:42

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