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Remove ambiguity from multi clause sentence.
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Raedwald
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Don't over-protect users, and judge. Judge the quality of the post dispassionately:

  • Poorly written question? Downvote and move on.

  • Fed up with OP's wall of hideous spaghetti code? Downvote and move on.

  • Did the OP obviously forego googling? Downvote and move on.

  • Did the OP obviously forego reading the documentation? Downvote and move on.

  • Is the OP confusing Stack Overflow with a free version of Mechanical Turk? Downvote and move on.

The list goes on, and on, ad nauseam.

As things stand, perhaps 99% of the questions on certain tags merit a downvote or ten. Browse your favorite tags, open a dozen questions in new tabs, and don't even try to parse the question if it's obviously low quality: downvote and move on.

For the few that don't immediately qualify for a down vote, actually scan through the question to pick up an overall impression. If the post is too long, unclear, hard to understand, lazy, downvote and move on.

By laziness here, I mean not demonstrating the minimum amount of effort you'd expect from a co-worker who shows up with a question. If he obviously went through the documentation, googled his problem, perhaps tried a thing or two, and now needs a hand, some direction, or a second pair of eyes, that's absolutely fine and that's what colleagues (or Stack Overflow enthusiasts) are for. Anything short of that is broadcasting the message that you're expected to do his work.

On the right tags, you'll plough through your 40-vote limit per day in a matter of minutes.

Moreover, a question ban will only kick in if an OP's questions are sufficiently downvoted. So don't be afraid to downvote stuff that deserves it.

Don't over-protect users, and judge the quality of the post dispassionately:

  • Poorly written question? Downvote and move on.

  • Fed up with OP's wall of hideous spaghetti code? Downvote and move on.

  • Did the OP obviously forego googling? Downvote and move on.

  • Did the OP obviously forego reading the documentation? Downvote and move on.

  • Is the OP confusing Stack Overflow with a free version of Mechanical Turk? Downvote and move on.

The list goes on, and on, ad nauseam.

As things stand, perhaps 99% of the questions on certain tags merit a downvote or ten. Browse your favorite tags, open a dozen questions in new tabs, and don't even try to parse the question if it's obviously low quality: downvote and move on.

For the few that don't immediately qualify for a down vote, actually scan through the question to pick up an overall impression. If the post is too long, unclear, hard to understand, lazy, downvote and move on.

By laziness here, I mean not demonstrating the minimum amount of effort you'd expect from a co-worker who shows up with a question. If he obviously went through the documentation, googled his problem, perhaps tried a thing or two, and now needs a hand, some direction, or a second pair of eyes, that's absolutely fine and that's what colleagues (or Stack Overflow enthusiasts) are for. Anything short of that is broadcasting the message that you're expected to do his work.

On the right tags, you'll plough through your 40-vote limit per day in a matter of minutes.

Moreover, a question ban will only kick in if an OP's questions are sufficiently downvoted. So don't be afraid to downvote stuff that deserves it.

Don't over-protect users. Judge the quality of the post dispassionately:

  • Poorly written question? Downvote and move on.

  • Fed up with OP's wall of hideous spaghetti code? Downvote and move on.

  • Did the OP obviously forego googling? Downvote and move on.

  • Did the OP obviously forego reading the documentation? Downvote and move on.

  • Is the OP confusing Stack Overflow with a free version of Mechanical Turk? Downvote and move on.

The list goes on, and on, ad nauseam.

As things stand, perhaps 99% of the questions on certain tags merit a downvote or ten. Browse your favorite tags, open a dozen questions in new tabs, and don't even try to parse the question if it's obviously low quality: downvote and move on.

For the few that don't immediately qualify for a down vote, actually scan through the question to pick up an overall impression. If the post is too long, unclear, hard to understand, lazy, downvote and move on.

By laziness here, I mean not demonstrating the minimum amount of effort you'd expect from a co-worker who shows up with a question. If he obviously went through the documentation, googled his problem, perhaps tried a thing or two, and now needs a hand, some direction, or a second pair of eyes, that's absolutely fine and that's what colleagues (or Stack Overflow enthusiasts) are for. Anything short of that is broadcasting the message that you're expected to do his work.

On the right tags, you'll plough through your 40-vote limit per day in a matter of minutes.

Moreover, a question ban will only kick in if an OP's questions are sufficiently downvoted. So don't be afraid to downvote stuff that deserves it.

added 7 characters in body
Source Link
TylerH
  • 21.2k
  • 22
  • 229
  • 328

Don't over-protect users, and judge the quality of the post coldlydispassionately:

  • Poorly written question? Downvote and move on.

  • Fed up with OP's wall of hideous spaghetti code? Downvote and move on.

  • Did the OP obviously forego googling? Downvote and move on.

  • Did the OP obviously forego reading the documentation? Downvote and move on.

  • Is the OP confusing Stack Overflow with a free version of Mechanical Turk? Downvote and move on.

The list goes on, and on, ad nauseamad nauseam.

As things stand, perhaps 99% of the questions on certain tags merit a downvote or ten. Browse your favorite tags, open a dozen questions in new tabs, and don't even try to parse the question if it's obviously low quality: downvote and move on.

For the few that don't immediately qualify for a down vote, actually scan through the question to pick up an overall impression. If the post is too long, unclear, hard to understand, lazy, downvote and move on.

By laziness here, I mean not demonstrating the minimum amount of effort you'd expect from a co-worker who shows up with a question. If he obviously went through the documentation, googled his problem, perhaps tried a thing or two, and now needs a hand, some direction, or a second pair of eyes, that's absolutely fine and that's what colleagues (or Stack Overflow enthusiasts) are for. Anything short of that is broadcasting the message that you're expected to do his work.

On the right tags, you'll plough through your 40 downvote-vote limit per day in a matter of minutes.

Moreover, a question ban will only kick in if an OP's questions are sufficiently downvoted. So don't be afraid to downvote stuff that deserves it.

Don't over-protect users, and judge the quality of the post coldly:

  • Poorly written question? Downvote and move on.

  • Fed up with OP's wall of hideous spaghetti code? Downvote and move on.

  • Did the OP obviously forego googling? Downvote and move on.

  • Did the OP obviously forego reading the documentation? Downvote and move on.

  • Is the OP confusing Stack Overflow with a free version of Mechanical Turk? Downvote and move on.

The list goes on, and on, ad nauseam.

As things stand, perhaps 99% of the questions on certain tags merit a downvote or ten. Browse your favorite tags, open a dozen questions in new tabs, and don't even try to parse the question if it's obviously low quality: downvote and move on.

For the few that don't immediately qualify for a down vote, actually scan through the question to pick up an overall impression. If the post is too long, unclear, hard to understand, lazy, downvote and move on.

By laziness here, I mean not demonstrating the minimum amount of effort you'd expect from a co-worker who shows up with a question. If he obviously went through the documentation, googled his problem, perhaps tried a thing or two, and now needs a hand, some direction, or a second pair of eyes, that's absolutely fine and that's what colleagues (or Stack Overflow enthusiasts) are for. Anything short of that is broadcasting the message that you're expected to do his work.

On the right tags, you'll plough through your 40 downvote limit per day in a matter of minutes.

Moreover, a question ban will only kick in if an OP's questions are sufficiently downvoted. So don't be afraid to downvote stuff that deserves it.

Don't over-protect users, and judge the quality of the post dispassionately:

  • Poorly written question? Downvote and move on.

  • Fed up with OP's wall of hideous spaghetti code? Downvote and move on.

  • Did the OP obviously forego googling? Downvote and move on.

  • Did the OP obviously forego reading the documentation? Downvote and move on.

  • Is the OP confusing Stack Overflow with a free version of Mechanical Turk? Downvote and move on.

The list goes on, and on, ad nauseam.

As things stand, perhaps 99% of the questions on certain tags merit a downvote or ten. Browse your favorite tags, open a dozen questions in new tabs, and don't even try to parse the question if it's obviously low quality: downvote and move on.

For the few that don't immediately qualify for a down vote, actually scan through the question to pick up an overall impression. If the post is too long, unclear, hard to understand, lazy, downvote and move on.

By laziness here, I mean not demonstrating the minimum amount of effort you'd expect from a co-worker who shows up with a question. If he obviously went through the documentation, googled his problem, perhaps tried a thing or two, and now needs a hand, some direction, or a second pair of eyes, that's absolutely fine and that's what colleagues (or Stack Overflow enthusiasts) are for. Anything short of that is broadcasting the message that you're expected to do his work.

On the right tags, you'll plough through your 40-vote limit per day in a matter of minutes.

Moreover, a question ban will only kick in if an OP's questions are sufficiently downvoted. So don't be afraid to downvote stuff that deserves it.

sorry for the multiple edits. Trying to keep the original message whilst removing the vengeful tone
Source Link

Please stop being a care bearDon't over-protect users, and proceed to be harsher at once.judge the quality of the post coldly:

  • Poorly written question? Downvote and move on.

  • Fed up with OP's wall of hideous spaghetti code? Downvote and move on.

  • Did the OP obviously forego googling? Downvote and move on.

  • Did the OP obviously forego reading the documentation? Downvote and move on.

  • Is the OP confusing Stack Overflow with a free version of Mechanical Turk? Downvote and move on.

The list goes on, and on, ad nauseam.

As things stand, perhaps 99% of the questions on certain tags merit a downvote or ten. Browse your favorite tags, open a dozen questions in new tabs, and don't even try to parse the question if it's obviously junklow quality: downvote and move on.

For the few that don't immediately qualify for a down vote, actually scan through the question to pick up an overall impression. If the post is too long, unclear, hard to understand, downvote and move onlazy, downvote and move on.

By incompetencelaziness here, I mean not demonstrating the minimum amount of effort you'd expect from a co-worker who shows up with a question. If he obviously went through the documentation, googled his problem, perhaps tried a thing or two, and now needs a hand, some direction, or a second pair of eyes, that's absolutely fine and that's what colleagues (or Stack Overflow enthusiasts) are for. Anything short of that is broadcasting the message that you're expected to do his work.

On the right tags, you'll plough through your 40 downvote limit per day in a matter of minutes.

Moreover, a question ban will only kick in if an OP's questions are sufficiently downvoted. So don't be afraid to downvote stuff that deserves it.

Please stop being a care bear, and proceed to be harsher at once.

  • Poorly written question? Downvote and move on.

  • Fed up with OP's wall of hideous spaghetti code? Downvote and move on.

  • Did the OP obviously forego googling? Downvote and move on.

  • Did the OP obviously forego reading the documentation? Downvote and move on.

  • Is the OP confusing Stack Overflow with a free version of Mechanical Turk? Downvote and move on.

The list goes on, and on, ad nauseam.

As things stand, perhaps 99% of the questions on certain tags merit a downvote or ten. Browse your favorite tags, open a dozen questions in new tabs, and don't even try to parse the question if it's obviously junk: downvote and move on.

For the few that don't immediately qualify for a down vote, actually scan through the question to pick up an overall impression. If the post is too long, unclear, hard to understand, downvote and move on.

By incompetence here, I mean not demonstrating the minimum amount of effort you'd expect from a co-worker who shows up with a question. If he obviously went through the documentation, googled his problem, perhaps tried a thing or two, and now needs a hand, some direction, or a second pair of eyes, that's absolutely fine and that's what colleagues (or Stack Overflow enthusiasts) are for. Anything short of that is broadcasting the message that you're expected to do his work.

On the right tags, you'll plough through your 40 downvote limit per day in a matter of minutes.

Moreover, a question ban will only kick in if an OP's questions are sufficiently downvoted. So don't be afraid to downvote stuff that deserves it.

Don't over-protect users, and judge the quality of the post coldly:

  • Poorly written question? Downvote and move on.

  • Fed up with OP's wall of hideous spaghetti code? Downvote and move on.

  • Did the OP obviously forego googling? Downvote and move on.

  • Did the OP obviously forego reading the documentation? Downvote and move on.

  • Is the OP confusing Stack Overflow with a free version of Mechanical Turk? Downvote and move on.

The list goes on, and on, ad nauseam.

As things stand, perhaps 99% of the questions on certain tags merit a downvote or ten. Browse your favorite tags, open a dozen questions in new tabs, and don't even try to parse the question if it's obviously low quality: downvote and move on.

For the few that don't immediately qualify for a down vote, actually scan through the question to pick up an overall impression. If the post is too long, unclear, hard to understand, lazy, downvote and move on.

By laziness here, I mean not demonstrating the minimum amount of effort you'd expect from a co-worker who shows up with a question. If he obviously went through the documentation, googled his problem, perhaps tried a thing or two, and now needs a hand, some direction, or a second pair of eyes, that's absolutely fine and that's what colleagues (or Stack Overflow enthusiasts) are for. Anything short of that is broadcasting the message that you're expected to do his work.

On the right tags, you'll plough through your 40 downvote limit per day in a matter of minutes.

Moreover, a question ban will only kick in if an OP's questions are sufficiently downvoted. So don't be afraid to downvote stuff that deserves it.

removed borderline rude stuff
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Copy edited (e.g. ref. <https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/downvote#Verb>). Expansion.
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Peter Mortensen
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added 4 characters in body
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Denis de Bernardy
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added 451 characters in body
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Denis de Bernardy
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lead by example
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Shog9
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Radiodef
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Denis de Bernardy
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