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(While we are at it.) [<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sentence_clause_structure#Run-on_sentences>]. Added some context.
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Peter Mortensen
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While you may have seen hundreds (or thousands) of questions that fit this category (and I feel your pain about it), there are a few reasons why we shouldn't have that close reason:

  • we have a policy against LMGTFYLMGTFY links either as comments or answers. The reasons you've specified for having aan RTFM reason are very similar or the same to the reasons why people left LMGTFY links.

  • it might be a basic question, but that in itself is no reason to prevent having it asked and answered on Stack Overflow. Subsequent questions about the same thing should be duplicate linked to the original question/answer.

  • frequently the basic question could be asked and answered in a way that isn't represented in the official online documentation. For example, we still see questions asking the difference between pre and post incrementation - oneincrementation—one of the more basic topics - buttopics—but people are still confused about it despite the numerous articles out there.

  • aan RTFM close reason will be used as the lazy person's close reason (much like the old not constructive close reason was) when in fact the question can be answered and/or duplicate linked.

Edit

A couple of new angles on this have occurred to me and they should be noted here as well. (Keep in mind that at no stage am I advocating that we allow lazy or junk questions - thesequestions—these are well discussed in the past. This is purely about "RTFM" as a close reason).)

Remember all the recent moderator candidates who promised to "help the newbies because we're too harsh on them"? They were making that promise because there is a perceived problem, and users are already finding the bar to active participation quite high. Introducing aan RTFM close reason will help undo any progress in that area.

Do you doubt what I'm saying? Take a trip back to UsenetUsenet days, where "RTFM you n00b!" was the standard answer for any new user. That made Usenet a scary and challenging place for newbies,newbies; you had to have massive persistence to be able to stick around and eventually earn the right to issue the statement to newbies yourself.

If the RTFM close reason was introduced here, who is going to police it? Who is going to make sure that it isn't getting out of control? Who is going to answer all the Meta questions from discouraged users who had a question closed for it? Who is going to check the target documentation and make sure it is clear enough and of sufficient quality that every newbie (of any culture, including non-English speaking) should be able to understand it?

Question: what is the difference between a newbie asking a question that's covered by the documentation and an experienced user asking a more technical question that is also covered by the documentation?

Answer: there is absolutely no difference. Yet, we have no issues with creating a good answer for those experienced user'susers' questions, pointing them to the relevant documentation as a reference, and then filling in the gaps for them. Why can't we do the same for newbies?

While you may have seen hundreds (or thousands) of questions that fit this category (and I feel your pain about it), there are a few reasons why we shouldn't have that close reason:

  • we have a policy against LMGTFY links either as comments or answers. The reasons you've specified for having a RTFM reason are very similar or the same to the reasons why people left LMGTFY links.

  • it might be a basic question, but that in itself is no reason to prevent having it asked and answered on Stack Overflow. Subsequent questions about the same thing should be duplicate linked to the original question/answer.

  • frequently the basic question could be asked and answered in a way that isn't represented in the official online documentation. For example we still see questions asking the difference between pre and post incrementation - one of the more basic topics - but people are still confused about it despite the numerous articles out there.

  • a RTFM close reason will be used as the lazy person's close reason (much like the old not constructive close reason was) when in fact the question can be answered and/or duplicate linked.

Edit

A couple of new angles on this have occurred to me and they should be noted here as well. (Keep in mind that at no stage am I advocating that we allow lazy or junk questions - these are well discussed in the past. This is purely about "RTFM" as a close reason).

Remember all the recent moderator candidates who promised to "help the newbies because we're too harsh on them"? They were making that promise because there is a perceived problem, users are already finding the bar to active participation quite high. Introducing a RTFM close reason will help undo any progress in that area.

Do you doubt what I'm saying? Take a trip back to Usenet days, where "RTFM you n00b!" was the standard answer for any new user. That made Usenet a scary and challenging place for newbies, you had to have massive persistence to be able to stick around and eventually earn the right to issue the statement to newbies yourself.

If the RTFM close reason was introduced here, who is going to police it? Who is going to make sure that it isn't getting out of control? Who is going to answer all the Meta questions from discouraged users who had a question closed for it? Who is going to check the target documentation and make sure it is clear enough and of sufficient quality that every newbie (of any culture, including non-English speaking) should be able to understand it?

Question: what is the difference between a newbie asking a question that's covered by the documentation and an experienced user asking a more technical question that is also covered by the documentation?

Answer: there is absolutely no difference. Yet we have no issues with creating a good answer for those experienced user's questions, pointing them to the relevant documentation as a reference, and then filling in the gaps for them. Why can't we do the same for newbies?

While you may have seen hundreds (or thousands) of questions that fit this category (and I feel your pain about it), there are a few reasons why we shouldn't have that close reason:

  • we have a policy against LMGTFY links either as comments or answers. The reasons you've specified for having an RTFM reason are very similar or the same to the reasons why people left LMGTFY links.

  • it might be a basic question, but that in itself is no reason to prevent having it asked and answered on Stack Overflow. Subsequent questions about the same thing should be duplicate linked to the original question/answer.

  • frequently the basic question could be asked and answered in a way that isn't represented in the official online documentation. For example, we still see questions asking the difference between pre and post incrementation—one of the more basic topics—but people are still confused about it despite the numerous articles out there.

  • an RTFM close reason will be used as the lazy person's close reason (much like the old not constructive close reason was) when in fact the question can be answered and/or duplicate linked.

Edit

A couple of new angles on this have occurred to me and they should be noted here as well. (Keep in mind that at no stage am I advocating that we allow lazy or junk questions—these are well discussed in the past. This is purely about "RTFM" as a close reason.)

Remember all the recent moderator candidates who promised to "help the newbies because we're too harsh on them"? They were making that promise because there is a perceived problem, and users are already finding the bar to active participation quite high. Introducing an RTFM close reason will help undo any progress in that area.

Do you doubt what I'm saying? Take a trip back to Usenet days, where "RTFM you n00b!" was the standard answer for any new user. That made Usenet a scary and challenging place for newbies; you had to have massive persistence to be able to stick around and eventually earn the right to issue the statement to newbies yourself.

If the RTFM close reason was introduced here, who is going to police it? Who is going to make sure that it isn't getting out of control? Who is going to answer all the Meta questions from discouraged users who had a question closed for it? Who is going to check the target documentation and make sure it is clear enough and of sufficient quality that every newbie (of any culture, including non-English speaking) should be able to understand it?

Question: what is the difference between a newbie asking a question that's covered by the documentation and an experienced user asking a more technical question that is also covered by the documentation?

Answer: there is absolutely no difference. Yet, we have no issues with creating a good answer for those experienced users' questions, pointing them to the relevant documentation as a reference, and then filling in the gaps for them. Why can't we do the same for newbies?

added 7 characters in body
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slugster
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While you may have seen hundreds (or thousands) of questions that fit this category (and I feel your pain about it), there are a few reasons why we shouldn't have that close reason:

  • we have a policy against LMGTFY links either as comments or answers. The reasons you've specified for having a RTFM reason are very similar or the same to the reasons why people left LMGTFY links.

  • it might be a basic question, but that in itself is no reason to prevent having it asked and answered on Stack Overflow. Subsequent questions about the same thing should be duplicate linked to the original question/answer.

  • frequently the basic question could be asked and answered in a way that isn't represented in the official online documentation. For example we still see questions asking the difference between pre and post incrementation, - one of the more basic topics, - but people are still confused about it despite the numerous articles out there.

  • a RTFM close reason will be used as the lazy man'sperson's close reason (much like the old not constructive close reason was) when in fact the question can be answered and/or duplicate linked.

Edit

A couple of new angles on this have occurred to me and they should be noted here as well. (Keep in mind that at no stage am I advocating that we allow lazy or junk questions - these are well discussed in the past. This is purely about "RTFM" as a close reason).

Remember all the recent moderator candidates who promised to "help the newbies because we're too harsh on them"? They were making that promise because there is a perceived problem, users are already finding the bar to active participation quite high. Introducing a RTFM close reason will help undo any progress in that area.

Do you doubt what I'm saying? Take a trip back to Usenet days, where "RTFM you n00b!""RTFM you n00b!" was the standard answer for any new user. That made Usenet a scary and challenging place for newbies, you had to have massive persistence to be able to stick around and eventually earn the right to issue the statement to newbies yourself.

If the RTFM close reason was introduced here, who is going to police it? Who is going to make sure that it isn't getting out of control? Who is going to answer all the Meta questions from discouraged users who had a question closed for it? Who is going to check the target documentation and make sure it is clear enough and of sufficient quality that every newbie (of any culture, including non-English speaking) should be able to understand it?

Question: what is the difference between a newbie asking a question that's covered by the documentation and an experienced user asking a more technical question that is also covered by the documentation?

Answer: there is absolutely no difference. Yet we have no issues with creating a good answer for those experienced user's questions, pointing them to the relevant documentation as a reference, and then filling in the gaps for them. Why can't we do the same for newbies?

While you may have seen hundreds (or thousands) of questions that fit this category (and I feel your pain about it), there are a few reasons why we shouldn't have that close reason:

  • we have a policy against LMGTFY links either as comments or answers. The reasons you've specified for having a RTFM reason are very similar or the same to the reasons why people left LMGTFY links.

  • it might be a basic question, but that in itself is no reason to prevent having it asked and answered on Stack Overflow. Subsequent questions about the same thing should be duplicate linked to the original question/answer.

  • frequently the basic question could be asked and answered in a way that isn't represented in the official online documentation. For example we still see questions asking the difference between pre and post incrementation, one of the more basic topics, but people are still confused about it despite the numerous articles out there.

  • a RTFM close reason will be used as the lazy man's close reason (much like the old not constructive close reason was) when in fact the question can be answered and/or duplicate linked.

Edit

A couple of new angles on this have occurred to me and they should be noted here as well. (Keep in mind that at no stage am I advocating that we allow lazy or junk questions - these are well discussed in the past. This is purely about "RTFM" as a close reason).

Remember all the recent moderator candidates who promised to "help the newbies because we're too harsh on them"? They were making that promise because there is a perceived problem, users are already finding the bar to active participation quite high. Introducing a RTFM close reason will help undo any progress in that area.

Do you doubt what I'm saying? Take a trip back to Usenet days, where "RTFM you n00b!" was the standard answer for any new user. That made Usenet a scary and challenging place for newbies, you had to have massive persistence to be able to stick around and eventually earn the right to issue the statement to newbies yourself.

If the RTFM close reason was introduced here, who is going to police it? Who is going to make sure that it isn't getting out of control? Who is going to answer all the Meta questions from discouraged users who had a question closed for it? Who is going to check the target documentation and make sure it is clear enough and of sufficient quality that every newbie (of any culture, including non-English speaking) should be able to understand it?

Question: what is the difference between a newbie asking a question that's covered by the documentation and an experienced user asking a more technical question that is also covered by the documentation?

Answer: there is absolutely no difference. Yet we have no issues with creating a good answer for those experienced user's questions, pointing them to the relevant documentation as a reference, and then filling in the gaps for them. Why can't we do the same for newbies?

While you may have seen hundreds (or thousands) of questions that fit this category (and I feel your pain about it), there are a few reasons why we shouldn't have that close reason:

  • we have a policy against LMGTFY links either as comments or answers. The reasons you've specified for having a RTFM reason are very similar or the same to the reasons why people left LMGTFY links.

  • it might be a basic question, but that in itself is no reason to prevent having it asked and answered on Stack Overflow. Subsequent questions about the same thing should be duplicate linked to the original question/answer.

  • frequently the basic question could be asked and answered in a way that isn't represented in the official online documentation. For example we still see questions asking the difference between pre and post incrementation - one of the more basic topics - but people are still confused about it despite the numerous articles out there.

  • a RTFM close reason will be used as the lazy person's close reason (much like the old not constructive close reason was) when in fact the question can be answered and/or duplicate linked.

Edit

A couple of new angles on this have occurred to me and they should be noted here as well. (Keep in mind that at no stage am I advocating that we allow lazy or junk questions - these are well discussed in the past. This is purely about "RTFM" as a close reason).

Remember all the recent moderator candidates who promised to "help the newbies because we're too harsh on them"? They were making that promise because there is a perceived problem, users are already finding the bar to active participation quite high. Introducing a RTFM close reason will help undo any progress in that area.

Do you doubt what I'm saying? Take a trip back to Usenet days, where "RTFM you n00b!" was the standard answer for any new user. That made Usenet a scary and challenging place for newbies, you had to have massive persistence to be able to stick around and eventually earn the right to issue the statement to newbies yourself.

If the RTFM close reason was introduced here, who is going to police it? Who is going to make sure that it isn't getting out of control? Who is going to answer all the Meta questions from discouraged users who had a question closed for it? Who is going to check the target documentation and make sure it is clear enough and of sufficient quality that every newbie (of any culture, including non-English speaking) should be able to understand it?

Question: what is the difference between a newbie asking a question that's covered by the documentation and an experienced user asking a more technical question that is also covered by the documentation?

Answer: there is absolutely no difference. Yet we have no issues with creating a good answer for those experienced user's questions, pointing them to the relevant documentation as a reference, and then filling in the gaps for them. Why can't we do the same for newbies?

Expanded questionable abbreviation.
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user456814
user456814

While you may have seen hundreds (or thousands) of questions that fit this category (and I feel your pain about it), there are a few reasons why we shouldn't have that close reason:

  • we have a policy against LMGTFY links either as comments or answers. The reasons you've specified for having a RTFM reason are very similar or the same to the reasons why people left LMGTFY links.

  • it might be a basic question, but that in itself is no reason to prevent having it asked and answered on StackOverflowStack Overflow. Subsequent questions about the same thing should be duplicate linked to the original question/answer.

  • frequently the basic question could be asked and answered in a way that isn't represented in the official online docodocumentation. For example we still see questions asking the difference between pre and post incrementation, one of the more basic topics, but people are still confused about it despite the numerous articles out there.

  • a RTFM close reason will be used as the lazy man's close reason (much like the old not constructive close reason was) when in fact the question can be answered and/or duplicate linked.

Edit

A couple of new angles on this have occurred to me and they should be noted here as well. (Keep in mind that at no stage am I advocating that we allow lazy or junk questions - these are well discussed in the past. This is purely about "RTFM" as a close reason).

Remember all the recent moderator candidates who promised to "help the newbies because we're too harsh on them"? They were making that promise because there is a perceived problem, users are already finding the bar to active participation quite high. Introducing a RTFM close reason will help undo any progress in that area.

Do you doubt what I'm saying? Take a trip back to Usenet days, where "RTFM you n00b!" was the standard answer for any new user. That made Usenet a scary and challenging place for newbies, you had to have massive persistence to be able to stick around and eventually earn the right to issue the statement to newbies yourself.

If the RTFM close reason was introduced here, who is going to police it? Who is going to make sure that it isn't getting out of control? Who is going to answer all the Meta questions from discouraged users who had a question closed for it? Who is going to check the target docodocumentation and make sure it is clear enough and of sufficient quality that every newbie (of any culture, including non-English speaking) should be able to understand it?

Question: what is the difference between a newbie asking a question that's covered by the docodocumentation and an experienced user asking a more technical question that is also covered by the docodocumentation?

Answer: there is absolutely no difference. Yet we have no issues with creating a good answer for those experienced user's questions, pointing them to the relevant docodocumentation as a reference, and then filling in the gaps for them. Why can't we do the same for newbies?

While you may have seen hundreds (or thousands) of questions that fit this category (and I feel your pain about it), there are a few reasons why we shouldn't have that close reason:

  • we have a policy against LMGTFY links either as comments or answers. The reasons you've specified for having a RTFM reason are very similar or the same to the reasons why people left LMGTFY links.

  • it might be a basic question, but that in itself is no reason to prevent having it asked and answered on StackOverflow. Subsequent questions about the same thing should be duplicate linked to the original question/answer.

  • frequently the basic question could be asked and answered in a way that isn't represented in the official online doco. For example we still see questions asking the difference between pre and post incrementation, one of the more basic topics, but people are still confused about it despite the numerous articles out there.

  • a RTFM close reason will be used as the lazy man's close reason (much like the old not constructive close reason was) when in fact the question can be answered and/or duplicate linked.

Edit

A couple of new angles on this have occurred to me and they should be noted here as well. (Keep in mind that at no stage am I advocating that we allow lazy or junk questions - these are well discussed in the past. This is purely about "RTFM" as a close reason).

Remember all the recent moderator candidates who promised to "help the newbies because we're too harsh on them"? They were making that promise because there is a perceived problem, users are already finding the bar to active participation quite high. Introducing a RTFM close reason will help undo any progress in that area.

Do you doubt what I'm saying? Take a trip back to Usenet days, where "RTFM you n00b!" was the standard answer for any new user. That made Usenet a scary and challenging place for newbies, you had to have massive persistence to be able to stick around and eventually earn the right to issue the statement to newbies yourself.

If the RTFM close reason was introduced here, who is going to police it? Who is going to make sure that it isn't getting out of control? Who is going to answer all the Meta questions from discouraged users who had a question closed for it? Who is going to check the target doco and make sure it is clear enough and of sufficient quality that every newbie (of any culture, including non-English speaking) should be able to understand it?

Question: what is the difference between a newbie asking a question that's covered by the doco and an experienced user asking a more technical question that is also covered by the doco?

Answer: there is absolutely no difference. Yet we have no issues with creating a good answer for those experienced user's questions, pointing them to the relevant doco as a reference, and then filling in the gaps for them. Why can't we do the same for newbies?

While you may have seen hundreds (or thousands) of questions that fit this category (and I feel your pain about it), there are a few reasons why we shouldn't have that close reason:

  • we have a policy against LMGTFY links either as comments or answers. The reasons you've specified for having a RTFM reason are very similar or the same to the reasons why people left LMGTFY links.

  • it might be a basic question, but that in itself is no reason to prevent having it asked and answered on Stack Overflow. Subsequent questions about the same thing should be duplicate linked to the original question/answer.

  • frequently the basic question could be asked and answered in a way that isn't represented in the official online documentation. For example we still see questions asking the difference between pre and post incrementation, one of the more basic topics, but people are still confused about it despite the numerous articles out there.

  • a RTFM close reason will be used as the lazy man's close reason (much like the old not constructive close reason was) when in fact the question can be answered and/or duplicate linked.

Edit

A couple of new angles on this have occurred to me and they should be noted here as well. (Keep in mind that at no stage am I advocating that we allow lazy or junk questions - these are well discussed in the past. This is purely about "RTFM" as a close reason).

Remember all the recent moderator candidates who promised to "help the newbies because we're too harsh on them"? They were making that promise because there is a perceived problem, users are already finding the bar to active participation quite high. Introducing a RTFM close reason will help undo any progress in that area.

Do you doubt what I'm saying? Take a trip back to Usenet days, where "RTFM you n00b!" was the standard answer for any new user. That made Usenet a scary and challenging place for newbies, you had to have massive persistence to be able to stick around and eventually earn the right to issue the statement to newbies yourself.

If the RTFM close reason was introduced here, who is going to police it? Who is going to make sure that it isn't getting out of control? Who is going to answer all the Meta questions from discouraged users who had a question closed for it? Who is going to check the target documentation and make sure it is clear enough and of sufficient quality that every newbie (of any culture, including non-English speaking) should be able to understand it?

Question: what is the difference between a newbie asking a question that's covered by the documentation and an experienced user asking a more technical question that is also covered by the documentation?

Answer: there is absolutely no difference. Yet we have no issues with creating a good answer for those experienced user's questions, pointing them to the relevant documentation as a reference, and then filling in the gaps for them. Why can't we do the same for newbies?

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slugster
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slugster
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Made list easier to read.
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user456814
user456814
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slugster
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