Timeline for I've asked an XY question. What should I do with it?
Current License: CC BY-SA 3.0
12 events
when toggle format | what | by | license | comment | |
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Feb 1, 2019 at 23:47 | comment | added | Braiam | It seems that this comment was lost. The thing is, that the old question doesn't need to exist anymore. It outlived it usefulness for anyone the moment we discovered what we actually want to ask. | |
Feb 25, 2017 at 21:45 | comment | added | Nathan Tuggy | @Braiam: I feel like you're missing the obvious point here. My recommendation is to create exactly such a potential canonical. Just... in a new question! The only possible problem with this is the idea that such a post could never begin to catch up with the searchability the original question had, and thus the original question must be hijacked in order to take over its search stream. I reject this, and apparently you do too; therefore, there is no possible objection to my proposal! | |
Feb 25, 2017 at 21:37 | comment | added | Braiam | Is not about "google juice" is about offering the best conceivable answer while preventing duplicates. Look at this case. All the questions are Y: "I'm trying to do Y, but it fails". How Y fails is not obvious, yet it seems there's no stop to the stream of questions. How do you feel instead someone asks "How to do X The Right Way?"? It prevents all the scattered Y question, so experts has more time to answer more questions, instead of closing/answering the same yet not the same drivel. How wonderful, isn't it? One canonical to rule them all? | |
Feb 25, 2017 at 21:00 | comment | added | Nathan Tuggy | @Braiam: So the fact that there is an indexable question about X directly in my recommendation is meaningless, because only the originally-asked question can possibly get the googlejuice? Yeah, no. | |
Feb 25, 2017 at 20:57 | comment | added | Braiam | Remember that people jump to the answer, we trained them to do so. They read the question when the answer makes no sense (if they don't just hit back). So, such "benefit" is lost. It's better that a answer about "X" to a question about "X", not using artifacts that doesn't help. | |
Feb 25, 2017 at 20:48 | comment | added | Nathan Tuggy | @Braiam: I really don't see how it could, if both questions link to the other. This can only possibly improve searchability and clarity. | |
Feb 25, 2017 at 15:55 | comment | added | Braiam | This will make a mess of search results for people looking "how to solve X". It's preferable that questions ask directly about X rather than Y, as X is a generic problem, while Y's has several ramifications for each X. | |
Oct 22, 2015 at 18:04 | comment | added | Lightness Races in Orbit | "you should also consider editing in a short postscript to explain the reason this actually turned out to be the wrong question to ask in your case." I disagree. It's likely to be more noisy than interesting. Just keep your XY issue abstracted away. You asked a question you didn't mean to ask. Deal with it — leave it up, as if you did mean to ask it. Act as if everything's fine. There is no reason to clutter the original question with noise about the new one you realise you now need to ask. | |
Oct 22, 2015 at 16:45 | history | edited | Nathan Tuggy | CC BY-SA 3.0 |
added 191 characters in body
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Oct 21, 2015 at 13:37 | vote | accept | HPierce | ||
Oct 20, 2015 at 22:53 | comment | added | BlackVegetable | Man, I had never thought of this and I've found myself in this situation more than once. | |
Oct 20, 2015 at 22:11 | history | answered | Nathan Tuggy | CC BY-SA 3.0 |