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Although I agree that some questions are vague or opinion oriented, I would like to see some thoughts from experts in the area that might be useful for people new to the subject.

Stack Overflow decided to go for a Q/A format. That means one question, one answer. This format has made Stack Overflow extremely popular.

However, this decision does come with some cons, one of which is that it doesn't allow to "see some thoughts from experts in the area that might be useful for people new to the subject". Those topics are often one question, thousands answers. That just doesn't fit this website.

But other people already filled this gap by creating communities which a forum format, in which discussions are more welcome than the Q/A things on Stack Overflow. A site like quora.com is an example of this.

I think a vetoing system allowing questions to be reopened if people think they are of value would be good.

There is already a reopen featurereopen feature:

If you see a question and you disagree with the stated reason of its closure, you should first try to edit the question to improve it as much as possible. Read the close notice and any comments carefully to address concerns raised there. Closed questions that receive edits within the first 5 days of closure are automatically put into a review queue to be considered for reopening.

Additionally, you can:

  1. Leave a comment on the question itself calling for it to be reopened. Be detailed: explain why the question shouldn't have been closed. Be constructive: name-calling is as likely to drive folks away as it is win them to your cause. Remember, anyone on the site with at least 3,000 reputation points can vote to reopen a question - even if a moderator closed it.
  2. Be sure that you've read the close notice and any comments on the question so you can address any concerns raised there. Addressing the concerns often means editing the post, which any user may do.
  3. Flag the question for moderator attention. Again, explain why it should be reopened. There is more than one moderator, and moderators do reconsider their decisions.
  4. If you have at least 3,000 reputation points, vote to reopen yourself.

Although I agree that some questions are vague or opinion oriented, I would like to see some thoughts from experts in the area that might be useful for people new to the subject.

Stack Overflow decided to go for a Q/A format. That means one question, one answer. This format has made Stack Overflow extremely popular.

However, this decision does come with some cons, one of which is that it doesn't allow to "see some thoughts from experts in the area that might be useful for people new to the subject". Those topics are often one question, thousands answers. That just doesn't fit this website.

But other people already filled this gap by creating communities which a forum format, in which discussions are more welcome than the Q/A things on Stack Overflow. A site like quora.com is an example of this.

I think a vetoing system allowing questions to be reopened if people think they are of value would be good.

There is already a reopen feature:

If you see a question and you disagree with the stated reason of its closure, you should first try to edit the question to improve it as much as possible. Read the close notice and any comments carefully to address concerns raised there. Closed questions that receive edits within the first 5 days of closure are automatically put into a review queue to be considered for reopening.

Additionally, you can:

  1. Leave a comment on the question itself calling for it to be reopened. Be detailed: explain why the question shouldn't have been closed. Be constructive: name-calling is as likely to drive folks away as it is win them to your cause. Remember, anyone on the site with at least 3,000 reputation points can vote to reopen a question - even if a moderator closed it.
  2. Be sure that you've read the close notice and any comments on the question so you can address any concerns raised there. Addressing the concerns often means editing the post, which any user may do.
  3. Flag the question for moderator attention. Again, explain why it should be reopened. There is more than one moderator, and moderators do reconsider their decisions.
  4. If you have at least 3,000 reputation points, vote to reopen yourself.

Although I agree that some questions are vague or opinion oriented, I would like to see some thoughts from experts in the area that might be useful for people new to the subject.

Stack Overflow decided to go for a Q/A format. That means one question, one answer. This format has made Stack Overflow extremely popular.

However, this decision does come with some cons, one of which is that it doesn't allow to "see some thoughts from experts in the area that might be useful for people new to the subject". Those topics are often one question, thousands answers. That just doesn't fit this website.

But other people already filled this gap by creating communities which a forum format, in which discussions are more welcome than the Q/A things on Stack Overflow. A site like quora.com is an example of this.

I think a vetoing system allowing questions to be reopened if people think they are of value would be good.

There is already a reopen feature:

If you see a question and you disagree with the stated reason of its closure, you should first try to edit the question to improve it as much as possible. Read the close notice and any comments carefully to address concerns raised there. Closed questions that receive edits within the first 5 days of closure are automatically put into a review queue to be considered for reopening.

Additionally, you can:

  1. Leave a comment on the question itself calling for it to be reopened. Be detailed: explain why the question shouldn't have been closed. Be constructive: name-calling is as likely to drive folks away as it is win them to your cause. Remember, anyone on the site with at least 3,000 reputation points can vote to reopen a question - even if a moderator closed it.
  2. Be sure that you've read the close notice and any comments on the question so you can address any concerns raised there. Addressing the concerns often means editing the post, which any user may do.
  3. Flag the question for moderator attention. Again, explain why it should be reopened. There is more than one moderator, and moderators do reconsider their decisions.
  4. If you have at least 3,000 reputation points, vote to reopen yourself.
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Wouter J
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Although I agree that some questions are vague or opinion oriented, I would like to see some thoughts from experts in the area that might be useful for people new to the subject.

Stack Overflow decided to go for a Q/A format. That means one question, one answer. This format has made Stack Overflow extremely popular.

However, this decision does come with some cons, one of which is that it doesn't allow to "see some thoughts from experts in the area that might be useful for people new to the subject". Those topics are often one question, thousands answers. That just doesn't fit this website.

But other people already filled this gap by creating communities which a forum format, in which discussions are more welcome than the Q/A things on Stack Overflow. A site like quora.com is an example of this.

I think a vetoing system allowing questions to be reopened if people think they are of value would be good.

There is already a reopen feature:

If you see a question and you disagree with the stated reason of its closure, you should first try to edit the question to improve it as much as possible. Read the close notice and any comments carefully to address concerns raised there. Closed questions that receive edits within the first 5 days of closure are automatically put into a review queue to be considered for reopening.

Additionally, you can:

  1. Leave a comment on the question itself calling for it to be reopened. Be detailed: explain why the question shouldn't have been closed. Be constructive: name-calling is as likely to drive folks away as it is win them to your cause. Remember, anyone on the site with at least 3,000 reputation points can vote to reopen a question - even if a moderator closed it.
  2. Be sure that you've read the close notice and any comments on the question so you can address any concerns raised there. Addressing the concerns often means editing the post, which any user may do.
  3. Flag the question for moderator attention. Again, explain why it should be reopened. There is more than one moderator, and moderators do reconsider their decisions.
  4. If you have at least 3,000 reputation points, vote to reopen yourself.