18

A user asked a legitimate (but poorly worded) question, which I took the time to research and answer.

Screenshot of deleted question

After answering, I intended to edit the question to fit the SO question guidelines. However, the question was deleted by the community before I could do so.

It appeared that the question was deleted immediately after the OP accepted my answer. From my perspective, my answer was evidence that the question was active, and so the question should have been given a chance to be corrected.

Users with more rep than myself surely have the ability to edit deleted questions and revive them, but I don't, and had the community not been so aggressive in deleting this (answered and active) question, it could have provided value to the community after a quick edit.

Before my question is started to be seen as a rant: what could I have done differently in this situation to keep the question on SO and/or show that my answer provided value?

If I were to answer this question myself, I would say to edit the poorly worded question first before answering, so that it has less time to be flagged. Does anyone have any other suggestions?

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  • 12
    Just ask the question yourself if it is interesting and salvageable. And answer it. Apr 1, 2018 at 1:08
  • 18
    Can I answer my own question?. - Yes, it is allowed and encouraged.
    – n8te
    Apr 1, 2018 at 1:24
  • 7
    It's exactly in the spirit. SO is designed to help future visitors.
    – user202729
    Apr 1, 2018 at 1:35
  • 46
    I was one of those who voted to close this question. You should have edited the question first to bring it on topic which you already realized in hindsight, that would have at least slowed the vote to close. When I came across the question it was not in standing with the guidelines of the site. the OP had more than enough time to edit it into shape.
    – Nkosi
    Apr 1, 2018 at 1:35
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    About Github repo... our rules contain "Questions must be self-contained", pointing to an external repo without including any code inside is delete-worthy.
    – user202729
    Apr 1, 2018 at 1:38
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    @eclecticist at this stage I would suggest you go with the self answer route and in future first try to get the OP to fix their question if it is off topic. You souldn't really be the one to fix it, but if you see room for improving the post then you are free to do so at your own expense.
    – Nkosi
    Apr 1, 2018 at 1:45
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    @eclecticist Remember that questions should be self-contained. If you ask "What does A do at the link my.toolbox.com" then, no. Otherwise, make sure that your question can be helpful to future users.
    – user202729
    Apr 1, 2018 at 1:51
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    It shouldn't have been deleted so quickly. That should be reserved for things that are utterly unsalvageable even if the advice in the close notice was taken on board. If you get the impression a question may be deleted then obviously prioritise fixing it over providing an answer though but I'm not sure you will see delete votes at 6 rep. Apr 1, 2018 at 8:48
  • 3
    @MartinSmith It was put on hold 40 minutes after being posted and deleted after an additional 16 minutes.
    – Jake Reece
    Apr 1, 2018 at 16:19
  • 7
    Thanks - no way it should have been deleted in those time scales IMO Apr 1, 2018 at 16:42
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    I had a similar problem yesterday with a question that was marked as a duplicate of an existing question. It was a duplicate, but the existing answer was 8 years out of date, so marking it as a duplicate was really unhelpful. Apr 1, 2018 at 16:48
  • 8
    @MartinSmith deleting an hour after it was posted seems more than enough. I frequently check low score open questions and you'll be surprised how quickly do sensible askers correct their questions after getting a bunch of downvotes. It regularly happens in a matter of few minutes. If asker didn't bother to improve in about an hour it is most likely that they won't do it at all
    – gnat
    Apr 2, 2018 at 10:48
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    If you see gold in a lump of rock, EDIT so that everyone else can see it too.
    – jscs
    Apr 2, 2018 at 16:28
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    Be careful about self answered questions, while they are "encouraged" officially by the site, it can be rather difficult to make a successful Q/A pair and I think the commenters are glossing over that. 1) the question must have somewhat broad appeal, or it will get automatically deleted if it fails to get any votes, and 2) your question must show all of the usual signs of quality (research effort, etc.). It might feel like you're repeating yourself, but putting these details only in the answer is generally not sufficient and will probably result in downvotes.
    – jrh
    Apr 3, 2018 at 12:35
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    @jrh It's pretty rare for a suggested edit to take more than an hour. The guidance against turd polishing is that you shouldn't be editing a question that is still a bad question after your edits. Turning a bad question into a good one is the ideal case for edits (although most people fail to actually accomplish that).
    – Servy
    Apr 3, 2018 at 13:52

2 Answers 2

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IMHO, Poorly worded doesn't even begin to describe this question.
Questions like this should not be encouraged by answering them.
I mean, take a look at the screenshot you took, and imagine having no prior knowledge about this question. Can you even guess what the problem, or the error message is?

Questions should be self contained - meaning they should have a clear definition of the problem, if it's a question about code they should contain the minimal version of the code needed to replicate the problem (MCVE), and the error message, if there is one, should be included in the message body as text, not as an image.
They should also show the OP's (Original Poster) effort of solving the problem prior to asking the community's help.

A question like that should be flagged as very low quality (which you can do once you have at least 15 reputation points). Once you have 50 reputation points, You should also leave a comment on the question detailing the problems in the question to the OP.

I admit this is more a rule of thumb, and I've answered a few low quality questions myself, but it usually turns out to be a mistake. Some community members think they should downvote even good answers if the question is poor (I think they shouldn't - because I think that it is possible to post good, helpful answers to some law quality questions), and of course, there's always a chance that the question will be deleted either by a moderator or by the community itself (once you have 10,000 reputation points you can vote to delete/undelete questions; at 20,000 reputation you get expanded delete-/undelete-vote privileges).

So, to summarize: Answering such questions is a mistake. If you think the only thing wrong with a question is the way it's worded, you should first edit it, and only then answer. In this case, you might want to post a self answered question as noted by some of the comments to your question.

To address the conversation I've had with Servy in the comments - here is a detailed explanation of good, helpful answers to low quality questions:

I answer a lot of SQL questions, mainly SQL-Server related. Most of the questions I see being asked lacks a mcve. A lot of people are posting their sample data in the form of a visual table, thinking (rightfully) that it's easy to read and understand.
However, when you want to answer such questions, you can't just copy and paste the sample data, and then use it as is to check your answer before posting. What I do in cases like this, where the question itself is good but the sample data is malformed, (and as I wrote, it's very common) is to copy the sample data from the question, refactor it into DDL and DML, and incorporate that into my answer. So most of my SQL answers are built like this:

Explanation
Sample Data
SQL Statement
Results
Link to online demo

When I do post sample data, I start with the following sentence:

First, create and populate sample table (Please save us this step in your future questions):

Most of the time, especially if I actually helped to solve the problem, I get a response from the OP saying they will post sample data as DDL+DML in their next questions.

So this is an example of how a good answer can be helpful not only to future readers having similar problems, but to future questions posted by the same person.

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    So you think that answering questions like these is harmful, and that it shouldn't be done, but you think those answers should be upvoted, even though they're not helpful, and not downvoted, even though they aren't helpful. You are expected to vote based on the usefulness of the post. A question being bad doesn't automatically make the answer useful (or prevent it from being unhelpful).
    – Servy
    Apr 2, 2018 at 13:55
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    @Servy Not quite; I think that even if the question is badly formed, it can still have good answers. If a question is so badly formed it should be completely re-written, such as the question in this case, then it's not worth answering before it's edited to fit at least minimal standard. Apr 2, 2018 at 14:19
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    So you think that the question shouldn't be answered, because answering it wouldn't be helpful, but you think that answers to it are helpful, even though you've only ever stated reasons for why they're not helpful and provided no reasons for why they're helpful. If you think that answering such questions is useful, why say that it's not useful, and why haven't you explained why it's useful to support your assertion that it's useful?
    – Servy
    Apr 2, 2018 at 14:21
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    @Servy as I wrote, I think that this particular question should not have been answered. However, I don't think downvoting answers just because the question was very low quality is Ok either. Sometimes, badly formed questions can be edited into good, helpful questions. In such cases, I think it's better to first edit the question and then post an answer. Had the question starting this post been edited to fit the "standard", (include the code and error message), it might have prove useful for some future readers. some question are salvageable, that's kinda my entire point. Apr 2, 2018 at 14:27
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    You should be voting based on how useful an answer actually is, not how useful a post might become after a bunch of heroic edits (that in practice almost never actually happen) get made. If the question gets edited into a good question, and as a result the answer has become useful then it would merit an upvote. But until that happens, the answer isn't useful, and its vote should reflect it. If you are posting an answer and want it to be upvoted, and not downvoted, you should ensure that it's helpful right away, rather than hoping it becomes useful in the future.
    – Servy
    Apr 2, 2018 at 14:29
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    @Servy I agree, that's why I wrote in the last paragraph of my answer "If you think the only thing wrong with a question is the way it's worded, you should first edit it, and only then answer." Apr 2, 2018 at 14:32
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    So then why also say that people should vote contrary to a post's actual usefulness whenever there is a bad question? Telling people to not post bad answers is good advice. Telling people to falsely indicate the actual value of answers posted is not good advice. We want people providing accurate feedback on how useful a given answer actually is, in addition to encouraging people to post good answers. (Providing accurate feedback is in fact how we encourage people to post good answers.)
    – Servy
    Apr 2, 2018 at 14:34
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    @Servy because I think that an answer might be good and helpful even if the question is not that good. I've seen good answers getting downvoted just because the question was "too basic" - not even badly formed, just an RTM question. I think that's wrong. Apr 2, 2018 at 14:40
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    So then why are you telling people not to answer such questions as such answers wouldn't be useful? If you think that answering these questions is helpful, then explain why it's helpful to answer bad questions like these. If you actually think that answers to these questions have a good shot at being useful, then by all means, explain as much. But as it stands you're telling people that the answers aren't useful, but that they should vote as if they were useful even though they aren't.
    – Servy
    Apr 2, 2018 at 14:43
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    @Servy I feel like we are going in circles here. I think I've explained my position in our conversation. Of course, that's my opinion and you are free to disagree with me. In fact, there is even a badge for posting good answers to poor questions - called Reversal - awarded for providing a +20 answer to a -5 question... Apr 2, 2018 at 14:52
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    But you haven't explained your position. You've just stated repeatedly that answers to bad questions aren't useful, and that you shouldn't downvote those answers even though they aren't useful. You haven't explained why posting these types of answers is actually useful, or why the explanation you've given for why they aren't useful doesn't apply.
    – Servy
    Apr 2, 2018 at 14:55
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    @Servy I think that even bad questions can have good answers. I understand you think that's wrong. I have explained my position repeatedly. I don't think I can explain it better and frankly, I'm not interested in doing that any more. Apr 2, 2018 at 14:59
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    Like I said, if you think that it's useful to answer bad questions, then that's fine, but you should edit your answer to explain why editing questions like these is helpful, because right now your answer is explaining why answering questions like these isn't useful. Currently you haven't explained why answering questions like these is useful, you've just stated, without reasoning, that such answers are useful, again and again, despite your answer only ever explaining why they aren't useful.
    – Servy
    Apr 2, 2018 at 15:03
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    I'm sorry, but I have to disagree about down voting an answer to a bad question. You should down vote those answers. They are not useful because they are detrimental to the site by feeding help vampires. They encourage questioners to not improve.
    – zero298
    Apr 2, 2018 at 16:22
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    @zero298 I don't think all very low quality questions are from help vampires. Questions like that should not get answers at all. However, some low quality questions are legitimate questions. Not every OP goes to the tour and reads how-to-ask before posting their first question. There are many variables to consider - such as - Is this a question from someone that's new here? If not, is it from someone that only asks questions, all poor quality (a sign of the help vampire), and so on. Apr 3, 2018 at 7:16
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This seems absurd to me. Those timescales are far too short. This question wasn't even given a chance.

@MartinSmith It was put on hold 40 minutes after being posted and deleted after an additional 16 minutes. – eclecticist 23 hours ago

Yeah, it was a terrible question that took more work than should be necessary to figure out what has been asked. But apparently there was a real question there because someone was able to give it a good answer. That answer wasn't given a chance either. The whole thing was just thrown in the bin seemingly because people are so caught up with "it isn't following the rules!!" and want to be rid of it.

I've personally edited terrible questions into decent ones because I understood the topic. This is especially true in more niche topics like SSIS or something where if you don't really understand the topic the question almost looks like nonsense. I've also seen questions I could have answered closed.

It's this strange militant seeking out of anything that is even borderline unacceptable so that they can cast close and delete vote instead of actually putting any effort into improving the post. I've never really liked it and it's always made me feel like this is not a community I want to be a part of. So I generally stay on the sidelines and just ask/answer and try to ignore all of the strange politics that goes on.

I think it would have been much more useful to the OP to have their question edited into something useful and good by an experienced SO user. As it stands they learned nothing except that if they don't write the perfect question they aren't going to get any help here and no one is going to help them figure out what is the right way.

Sure, some questions are garbage. But 40 minutes to close and then 16 minutes to delete is not enough time to accurately assess anything but the most nonsense spam posts. It's always seemed to me that people here are far more interested in handing out punishment than help. I don't honestly understand why. It's a help site.

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    "*Borderline* unacceptable"?! There's isn't even a question there. It's a screenshot of an error message. This isn't anywhere close to the border. 40 minutes of time that this person forced others to waste because they couldn't be bothered to extend the basic courtesy of explaining their problem.
    – jscs
    Apr 2, 2018 at 16:30
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    How long do we have to wait before closing/deleting questions like these? One hour? Two? A day? Are we supposed to start keeping huge lists of all these terrible questions to revisit again and again just to check if someone's fixed them yet?
    – Mike M.
    Apr 2, 2018 at 16:42
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    This is the wrong hill for you to pick to die on. A question like this has never, ever been acceptable quality on this site. Yes, maybe it could be edited, and if so, it should be. But you know what? The asker could also show some respect for the site and the people from whom they want help. It's a two-way street.
    – jscs
    Apr 2, 2018 at 17:05
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    This answer reflects my initial thoughts. But Mike M.'s question of, "If we don't immediately flag garbage questions, how long do we wait?" is an excellent one. We don't have a system for tracking "currently-bad-but-maybe-somebody-will-edit" questions, and if we did, it would be a lot of overhead for the community. I think that voting to close questions that don't adhere to the guidelines upon seeing them is the easiest way to keep the quality of content on SO high, and to encourage posters of bad questions to post better questions.
    – Jake Reece
    Apr 2, 2018 at 17:16
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    The question could have been improved... You can't tell that by looking at it though. The OP makes reference to their code but then doesn't provide it. To anyone reviewing flags on it, the question looks unfixable by anyone other than the OP because only they can provide their code.
    – BSMP
    Apr 2, 2018 at 17:18
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    @MikeD. I think you are among the few looking at other poster's rep in this discussion. It doesn't do your argument any favors.
    – yivi
    Apr 2, 2018 at 17:20
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    @MikeD. If you want to participate in a site that doesn't have quality standards for posts, that's fine. There are lots of places around the internet that don't bother with quality standards. SO is in face one of very few sites that does have non-trivial quality standards for posts. The users of this site feel that it is more beneficial to the programming community to have a site that has some quality standards. If you prefer participating in a community that doesn't have quality standards, and that lets anyone post anything, then there are plenty of places that offer that.
    – Servy
    Apr 2, 2018 at 17:25
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    @MikeD. And what about all of the problems caused between now and then? And it takes a lot of people to close and delete a question, and votes expire over time, making it much harder for the proper moderation to happen if it doesn't happen when the question has most of its traffic. and of course if everyone just decides to not bother and hope someone else handles it then nothing gets done. The point of community moderation is that the community actually moderates, not that it refuses to moderate in the hopes that other people will moderate for them.
    – Servy
    Apr 2, 2018 at 17:36
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    @MikeD. Yes, it is hurting other questions. It's consuming the time of people, who'll end up looking at it instead of being able to spend that time on a useful question. Wasting a bunch of people's time hurts both the other questions on the site, and the individual users of the site. It's far preferable for the first few people who see the question to properly mark it as needing improvement to be answered (or even unsalvageable) so that everyone else can just see that and not waste their time with it. Just because the question isn't committing physical violence doesn't mean it's not harmful.
    – Servy
    Apr 2, 2018 at 17:41
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    @MikeD. You're right, there is no rule that you have to delete every bad question. The rule is that you should vote to delete questions that you think aren't salvageable. And I did answer you on why has to be "you". Because it has to be someone. If everyone just says it should be someone else, then it never gets done. At some point people that think a question is unsalvageable need to actually indicate as much, otherwise you're effectively saying the system shouldn't exist at all.
    – Servy
    Apr 2, 2018 at 18:30
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    @MikeD. The OP here had lots of time to edit the question. They choose not to. There was over 35 minutes between when they posted their answer and the question was deleted, and the question had no edits to it. Like this user here, if you think that a bad question can be salvaged into a good one then actually take the time to improve the question, and only try to answer the question after it has been turned into a good question, it results in far better and more useful answers in addition to preventing it from being deleted while writing an answer.
    – Servy
    Apr 2, 2018 at 19:17
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    The author blew their chance when they posted a link to a screenshot with 2 errors and an isolated block of code. It was given a chance, though; 6 distinct users saw it to close it and delete it. All of them reviewed it and came to the correct decision according to site rules and guidance. This one blatantly violates several requirements and community expectations. It was open for over 40 minutes and wasn't deleted for over 15 more. Comments requesting improvements were left less than 5 minutes after the post was made.
    – jpmc26
    Apr 3, 2018 at 3:01
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    Garbage is garbage. The site's too big and busy now. There are literally millions of questions the OP could have used as guidance for how to form a proper question. There are posts and posts about how to do it. There is a Help Centre. They shouldn't need "teaching". There is literally zero excuse for a post like this. Could it have been salvaged? Probably. But do we have time to optimise for junk like this? No. Well, I don't. Clearly eclectist thinks he/she does but then they should have edited the post first. Otherwise, just delete it; it's almost entirely a lost cause. Apr 3, 2018 at 10:31
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    FWIW I'd advise against deleting this answer, while it's a viewpoint that's frequently downvoted on meta, in my opinion it's a rather common complaint that many people have and is worth discussing. Remember that downvotes on meta can mean disagreement, and don't necessarily mean that the post is low quality.
    – jrh
    Apr 3, 2018 at 12:53
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    We don't have a system in place to delay votes on a condition. If you come across a post that is low quality, downvote it. If later on you come across it and it is no longer low quality, reverse the vote. it's simple. In this case, no improvement occurred and the question was closed. working as intended.
    – Kevin B
    Apr 3, 2018 at 22:06

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