Nobody wants to read more than they have to. The longer your question, the more likely nobody is going to read it. TL;DR. If you're going to write something very long out of necessity – and really decide how necessary it really is first – you'll need to establish something that pulls the reader in very quickly in the title and first paragraph. Your post is one among thousands posted every day, there's no reason anyone would waste time on it unless it is interesting for some reason.
Ask exactly what you need to ask, no more, no less. Supply enough context for your question to be answerable, no more, no less. Obviously this can be hard to judge, so try reading your own post from the perspective of somebody who is not you. If you pulled a random (competent) stranger from the street, would they understand what you want?
Your post should obviously be formatted. Formatted properly that is. Formatting does not mean to randomly
interject all the various formatting MarKUp that is available. That just makes your post unreadable. Formatting is to be used properly. Ensure code is formatted properly as code. Quotes are formatted as quotes. Use italics or bold only to highlight important parts which must stand out for some reason or another. Don't highlight too much; if everything is highlighted, then nothing is. The point of proper formatting is to make it easier for the reader to absorb the information. If you're overusing it, it has the exact opposite effect.
In the end, this all just comes down to good writing. You may want to visit https://writing.stackexchange.com for tips with that.