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May 23, 2017 at 12:38 history edited CommunityBot
replaced http://stackoverflow.com/ with https://stackoverflow.com/
Mar 20, 2017 at 7:31 comment added Lundin Of course it will always be possible to stop people from asking bad questions. It's just a matter of how restrictive the site should be. Ideally the scripts would detect and block bad questions automatically. If that doesn't work out, there's also the possibility of a mandatory, manual review of first-time/low rep posters, where their question has to pass review before it becomes visible on the site.
Mar 18, 2017 at 16:13 comment added Frédéric If they just post bad question ignoring all we can do for having them better, we should just close them. After losing time getting rejected, it is likely some of them will end up reading what they should do. So such messages would be useful in my opinion.
Mar 17, 2017 at 19:19 comment added Damien_The_Unbeliever @Vlad274 - or, to put it another way - please link to a well researched/described question where the only fault was that they used one of these words in their title, in the first version.
Mar 17, 2017 at 19:10 comment added Damien_The_Unbeliever @Vlad274 - again, consider the type of users where the issue arises. They don't spend time thinking. They don't search for existing answers. They haven't spent time thinking carefully to describe their problem. They've found a Q&A Site where they're determined to post their question and get an answer. The people who would read and react to informational alerts are already far removed from 99% of the question posters. I don't have a ready solution, I'm just suggesting that the proposed remedy will not work.
Mar 17, 2017 at 18:45 comment added Vlad274 @Damien_The_Unbeliever But in that case I don't think there's ever going to be anything we can do. If the user is that committed to posting a bad question, it will always be impossible for us to stop them. However if the user is trying to post a good question, then pushing them in a direction that will decrease the time for them to get a good answer can only be a good thing.
Mar 17, 2017 at 15:12 comment added Damien_The_Unbeliever @Lundin - For the type of users who post the bad titles, they just want to post their question, dag-nammit. The quickest solution for them, on presented with the above message, is just to mispell the "bad words" that some warning message was talking about.
Mar 17, 2017 at 15:08 comment added Lundin @Damien_The_Unbeliever If that's not working, then the solution is obviously to block them from posting. For example, if the [SQL] tag is picked, they must also pick one of several listed DBMS or they can't even post the question. Or as in this case, block the post from getting posted if it contains mentioned words in the title.
Mar 17, 2017 at 14:34 comment added Damien_The_Unbeliever @ChrisHayes - yes, and what a success that's been. Almost every SQL question I seem to see ends up with an early comment along the lines of "please edit your question and add a tag for your database product". Warnings, pop/ups, etc are all just obstacles to people posting their question and people get rid of them as quickly as possible by finding the right button to press. You don't think they're reading them, do you?
Mar 17, 2017 at 2:45 comment added o11c The wording should say "you should first follow the instructions under XXX, and then post an MCVE".
Mar 17, 2017 at 1:05 comment added Chris Hayes @jpmc26 We already have things like this though, based on tags. If you use sql, it will prompt you to tag a specific RDBMS. Just because we can't hypothetically scale to infinity doesn't mean it can't be part of the solution.
Mar 16, 2017 at 22:41 comment added jpmc26 I don't like the idea of putting in restrictions based on specific, technical keywords. Where does it end if we do this? Does every language/tool get a set of words that trigger something? That seems unmanageable in the long run.
Mar 16, 2017 at 12:53 history answered Lundin CC BY-SA 3.0