Many of us seem quite unhappy with the scarcity of quality questions on the site.
If you're reading this, you're probably more than qualified to ask good questions.
If you are also unhappy with question scarcity, then...
Why aren't you asking more questions?
Possible reasons
I'll speculate as to possible reasons (enumerated for ease of referencing):
Do you feel that you will lose face if you, probably an expert in some domain, ask a question that you don't know the answer to?
Do you feel that question reception is capricious or unfair?
Do you think you will face easy recrimination or revenge from users whose posts you or others have criticized, downvoted, and closed in the past?
Do you feel that it will simply take too long for you to write up a question that is considered "good"?
Do you just always know what you need to know (because of experience or you know how to research or read documentation) without asking someone else, so you don't see the point in asking?
(I expect to keep this open-ended, if more canonical reasons appear, I'll add them here.)
My experience
Let me tell you why I don't ask very many questions. I feel question reception is frequently unprincipled and capricous. In fact I warn others when I talk about how to engage on this site to just avoid asking questions altogether, unless they're willing to risk the following sort of treatment.
I did a self Q&A here: Python, what's the Enum type good for?
I was unable to find a dupe target, so I put some effort into writing up the question as well, keeping in mind the downvote mouseover text:
This question does not show any research effort; it is unclear or not useful
So I attempted to ensure that I demonstrated that I did my homework, demonstrating the alternatives to Python's new Enum while not actually attempting to answer the question in the question.
The drubbing
The question was almost immediately downvoted to net -7 or -8 (I don't recall exactly). Some of the commenters were unaware that you are encouraged to "Answer your own question – share your knowledge, Q&A-style", and some were questioning my motives, saying things like:
it's suspect, theres no way in hell he could type that in 60 seconds
and
Probably because he posted this question, then proceeds to produce a fully cited and complete answer a minute later. Producing a self answer is fine, but doing it to gain rep doesn't seem to be within the spirit of the "self answer" rules.
One commenter seemed to think that information that might be available elsewhere shouldn't be here commented this on the answer:
I get that the answer is fine and all, but I really don't think should be a question here. There is already a lot of information on the topic of enum in the form of blogs, other SO questions, python docs, tutorials, etc. Really no need for this
(logically obviating the need for the site altogether.)
Another said:
The question itself seems long-winded and not particularly useful to me
To which I responded: "A common criticism of questions is that they demonstrate no knowledge or research, or that the asker did not do his homework, or show his work. I'm attempting to demonstrate all of the above." They replied:
I see your point actually, guess I was a bit harsh..
But I don't recall an indication of a retracted downvote.
I then got three or more close votes as "primarily opinion based" for this reason:
"Many good questions generate some degree of opinion based on expert experience, but answers to this question will tend to be almost entirely based on opinions, rather than facts, references, or specific expertise."
I was befuddled by this close reason, because my answer had almost nothing but facts, demonstrations, and references.
Evidence from elsewhere
But recent comments other users on a different meta post of mine said:
There is an overwhelming community consensus that these [other] questions should not be allowed. So if there exists an explicit close reason or not is quite irrelevant, such questions should be closed. Mostly people pick "too broad" for closing them and that's fine.
and
everyone just votes to close these ["gimme teh codez"] type of question with some random reason anyway, usually "too broad", even if they are not actually to broad. so i don't understand what SO is trying to accomplish by not giving us an accurate close reason. but then again, I don't understand much of what SO is trying to accomplish in general these days...
Both of these comments suggest unprincipled or dishonest application of close votes.
(Yes a dupe target for my example Q&A was eventually found, and that's totally fair, but that was more than an hour after I got that reception. No one was aware of a dupe target while they were excoriating my question.)
My conclusion based on my experience
I feel that question reception could be improved.
At this point, I might risk asking more questions, but I pretty much refuse to ask questions without researching the answer myself and posting it with my question so that users who find my question difficult to answer don't look for excuses to close it without my own answer at least supporting the question's existence (or perhaps even standing as the canonical answer).
You're not asking questions.
I recently interacted with several meta users, all who were unhappy with scarcity of questions with quality, all who seemed willing to bend the rules to shut down bad questions, and all whom had lots of answers (in the thousands), and very very few questions (in the tens or even none at all).
I'm concluding that there are many users who want more high quality questions. So why aren't they asking more questions?
Recap and potential followup questions:
I sometimes get poor and unprincipled question reception, and that's why I don't ask very much. I suppose you think you will too, which is why you don't ask very much either.
Perhaps I'm wrong, so I'm asking you,
Why aren't you asking more Questions?
And if I'm right, how can we improve question reception for established users?
Do we need a privilege that makes downvotes cost the voter on questions? (Like for every 10k rep you get to ask 1 "privileged" question per month.)
Or do we just need to improve our culture of welcoming questions from established users?
It would be a great boon to all of us to have a new population of really smart and experienced users asking questions here, right?
If you're reading this, you're probably really smart and part of that ideal population, but are you afraid to ask?
The question was almost immediately downvoted to net -7 or -8
. The timeline says otherwise...Jun 2 '16 votes daily summary N/A Up: 9 Down: 8
I might risk asking more questions, but I pretty much refuse to ask questions without researching the answer myself
- MISSION ACCOMPLISHED!