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I have come across SO questions where the asker struggles to frame the question in English, obviously because he is a not-native English speaker.
And most recently this question: How to close the appHow to close the app.
Another case in which SO user Deceze answered a good enough solution for this: Non-native English speakers and asking a bilingual question.

I, personaly, think that a tag would be a more unified approach to this. Also people, in no time, will be knowing, it's there and it's not illegal if I don't know much English.

For ex: A post tagged like or maybe just will have the entire question as if the quotation wasn't so that everyone can understand it and will also contain a quote in Hindi that briefs the question's base idea so that someone can edit the question to make it exactly what asker wants.

"I have created one android application....in my application the user press the home key on current activity or open activity , the application will be closed and if he open the activity again the launcher activity will be open ...i have done everything is right....

I am not good at English and I am briefly explaining the question in this quote, in Hindi. I know someone will come and edit the question for me. Also, I must be trying hard and framing the rest of question in English, as well."

This way a non-native English user would feel less alienated in SO. What do you think?

I have come across SO questions where the asker struggles to frame the question in English, obviously because he is a not-native English speaker.
And most recently this question: How to close the app.
Another case in which SO user Deceze answered a good enough solution for this: Non-native English speakers and asking a bilingual question.

I, personaly, think that a tag would be a more unified approach to this. Also people, in no time, will be knowing, it's there and it's not illegal if I don't know much English.

For ex: A post tagged like or maybe just will have the entire question as if the quotation wasn't so that everyone can understand it and will also contain a quote in Hindi that briefs the question's base idea so that someone can edit the question to make it exactly what asker wants.

"I have created one android application....in my application the user press the home key on current activity or open activity , the application will be closed and if he open the activity again the launcher activity will be open ...i have done everything is right....

I am not good at English and I am briefly explaining the question in this quote, in Hindi. I know someone will come and edit the question for me. Also, I must be trying hard and framing the rest of question in English, as well."

This way a non-native English user would feel less alienated in SO. What do you think?

I have come across SO questions where the asker struggles to frame the question in English, obviously because he is a not-native English speaker.
And most recently this question: How to close the app.
Another case in which SO user Deceze answered a good enough solution for this: Non-native English speakers and asking a bilingual question.

I, personaly, think that a tag would be a more unified approach to this. Also people, in no time, will be knowing, it's there and it's not illegal if I don't know much English.

For ex: A post tagged like or maybe just will have the entire question as if the quotation wasn't so that everyone can understand it and will also contain a quote in Hindi that briefs the question's base idea so that someone can edit the question to make it exactly what asker wants.

"I have created one android application....in my application the user press the home key on current activity or open activity , the application will be closed and if he open the activity again the launcher activity will be open ...i have done everything is right....

I am not good at English and I am briefly explaining the question in this quote, in Hindi. I know someone will come and edit the question for me. Also, I must be trying hard and framing the rest of question in English, as well."

This way a non-native English user would feel less alienated in SO. What do you think?

replaced http://meta.stackoverflow.com/ with https://meta.stackoverflow.com/
Source Link

I have come across SO questions where the asker struggles to frame the question in English, obviously because he is a not-native English speaker.
And most recently this question: How to close the app.
Another case in which SO user Deceze answered a good enough solution for this: Non-native English speakers and asking a bilingual questionNon-native English speakers and asking a bilingual question.

I, personaly, think that a tag would be a more unified approach to this. Also people, in no time, will be knowing, it's there and it's not illegal if I don't know much English.

For ex: A post tagged like or maybe just will have the entire question as if the quotation wasn't so that everyone can understand it and will also contain a quote in Hindi that briefs the question's base idea so that someone can edit the question to make it exactly what asker wants.

"I have created one android application....in my application the user press the home key on current activity or open activity , the application will be closed and if he open the activity again the launcher activity will be open ...i have done everything is right....

I am not good at English and I am briefly explaining the question in this quote, in Hindi. I know someone will come and edit the question for me. Also, I must be trying hard and framing the rest of question in English, as well."

This way a non-native English user would feel less alienated in SO. What do you think?

I have come across SO questions where the asker struggles to frame the question in English, obviously because he is a not-native English speaker.
And most recently this question: How to close the app.
Another case in which SO user Deceze answered a good enough solution for this: Non-native English speakers and asking a bilingual question.

I, personaly, think that a tag would be a more unified approach to this. Also people, in no time, will be knowing, it's there and it's not illegal if I don't know much English.

For ex: A post tagged like or maybe just will have the entire question as if the quotation wasn't so that everyone can understand it and will also contain a quote in Hindi that briefs the question's base idea so that someone can edit the question to make it exactly what asker wants.

"I have created one android application....in my application the user press the home key on current activity or open activity , the application will be closed and if he open the activity again the launcher activity will be open ...i have done everything is right....

I am not good at English and I am briefly explaining the question in this quote, in Hindi. I know someone will come and edit the question for me. Also, I must be trying hard and framing the rest of question in English, as well."

This way a non-native English user would feel less alienated in SO. What do you think?

I have come across SO questions where the asker struggles to frame the question in English, obviously because he is a not-native English speaker.
And most recently this question: How to close the app.
Another case in which SO user Deceze answered a good enough solution for this: Non-native English speakers and asking a bilingual question.

I, personaly, think that a tag would be a more unified approach to this. Also people, in no time, will be knowing, it's there and it's not illegal if I don't know much English.

For ex: A post tagged like or maybe just will have the entire question as if the quotation wasn't so that everyone can understand it and will also contain a quote in Hindi that briefs the question's base idea so that someone can edit the question to make it exactly what asker wants.

"I have created one android application....in my application the user press the home key on current activity or open activity , the application will be closed and if he open the activity again the launcher activity will be open ...i have done everything is right....

I am not good at English and I am briefly explaining the question in this quote, in Hindi. I know someone will come and edit the question for me. Also, I must be trying hard and framing the rest of question in English, as well."

This way a non-native English user would feel less alienated in SO. What do you think?

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I have come across SO questions where the asker struggles to frame the question in English, obviously because he is a not-native English speaker.
And most recently this question: How to close the app.
Another case in which SO user Deceze answered a good enough solution for this: Non-native English speakers and asking a bilingual question.

I, personaly, think that a tag would be a more unified approach to this. Also people, in no time, will be knowing, it's there and it's not illegal if I don't know much English.

For ex: A post tagged like or maybe just will have the entire question as if the quotation wasn't so that everyone can understand it and will also contain a quote in Hindi, and that briefs the question's base idea so that someone who knows Hindi as well as good at English can edit the question accordinglyto make it exactly what asker wants.

"I have created one android application....in my application the user press the home key on current activity or open activity , the application will be closed and if he open the activity again the launcher activity will be open ...i have done everything is right....

I am not good at English and I am briefly explaining the question in this quote, in Hindi. I know someone will come and edit the question for me. Also, I must be trying hard and framing the rest of question in English, as well."

This way a non-native English user would feel less alienated in SO. What do you think?

I have come across SO questions where the asker struggles to frame the question in English, obviously because he is a not-native English speaker.
And most recently this question: How to close the app.
Another case in which SO user Deceze answered a good enough solution for this: Non-native English speakers and asking a bilingual question.

I, personaly, think that a tag would be a more unified approach to this. Also people, in no time, will be knowing, it's there and it's not illegal if I don't know much English.

For ex: A post tagged like or maybe just can contain a quote in Hindi, and someone who knows Hindi as well as good at English can edit the question accordingly.

I am not good at English and I am briefly explaining the question in this quote, in Hindi. I know someone will come and edit the question for me. Also, I must be trying hard and framing the rest of question in English, as well.

This way a non-native English user would feel less alienated in SO. What do you think?

I have come across SO questions where the asker struggles to frame the question in English, obviously because he is a not-native English speaker.
And most recently this question: How to close the app.
Another case in which SO user Deceze answered a good enough solution for this: Non-native English speakers and asking a bilingual question.

I, personaly, think that a tag would be a more unified approach to this. Also people, in no time, will be knowing, it's there and it's not illegal if I don't know much English.

For ex: A post tagged like or maybe just will have the entire question as if the quotation wasn't so that everyone can understand it and will also contain a quote in Hindi that briefs the question's base idea so that someone can edit the question to make it exactly what asker wants.

"I have created one android application....in my application the user press the home key on current activity or open activity , the application will be closed and if he open the activity again the launcher activity will be open ...i have done everything is right....

I am not good at English and I am briefly explaining the question in this quote, in Hindi. I know someone will come and edit the question for me. Also, I must be trying hard and framing the rest of question in English, as well."

This way a non-native English user would feel less alienated in SO. What do you think?

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