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Cody Gray Mod
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Is that ok to ask for edit on my own questions to fix my english? If yes, how should I do that?

No. Stuff like that is just noise. Questions should include only relevant information, not meta-commentary and procedural requests.

Stack Overflow is collaboratively edited, so it is assumed that you want other users to fix your English mistakes (or, indeed, any other obvious mistakes). You don't need to specify what is already assumed.

If one of your posts is difficult to read, and someone who has time comes across it, then they will edit it. If not, it'll sit unedited until such time as someone comes across it and is willing to edit it. We don't need another "queue" where "posts in need of grammar edits" rot wait. The editing process works best when editors come across it organically.

If you need or want immediate help on composing English syntax, then you could consider either asking for help in a topical chat room or asking a question on English Language Learners. (Obviously, if you ask a question on ELL, don't just dump in a link to your Stack Overflow post. Put the relevant bits in the question itself, just like you would code for a question you ask here!)

See also: Advice for non-native English speakers

Is that ok to ask for edit on my own questions to fix my english? If yes, how should I do that?

No. Stuff like that is just noise. Questions should include only relevant information, not meta-commentary and procedural requests.

Stack Overflow is collaboratively edited, so it is assumed that you want other users to fix your English mistakes (or, indeed, any other obvious mistakes). You don't need to specify what is already assumed.

If one of your posts is difficult to read, and someone who has time comes across it, then they will edit it. If not, it'll sit unedited until such time as someone comes across it and is willing to edit it. We don't need another "queue" where "posts in need of grammar edits" rot wait. The editing process works best when editors come across it organically.

Is that ok to ask for edit on my own questions to fix my english? If yes, how should I do that?

No. Stuff like that is just noise. Questions should include only relevant information, not meta-commentary and procedural requests.

Stack Overflow is collaboratively edited, so it is assumed that you want other users to fix your English mistakes (or, indeed, any other obvious mistakes). You don't need to specify what is already assumed.

If one of your posts is difficult to read, and someone who has time comes across it, then they will edit it. If not, it'll sit unedited until such time as someone comes across it and is willing to edit it. We don't need another "queue" where "posts in need of grammar edits" rot wait. The editing process works best when editors come across it organically.

If you need or want immediate help on composing English syntax, then you could consider either asking for help in a topical chat room or asking a question on English Language Learners. (Obviously, if you ask a question on ELL, don't just dump in a link to your Stack Overflow post. Put the relevant bits in the question itself, just like you would code for a question you ask here!)

See also: Advice for non-native English speakers

Source Link
Cody Gray Mod
  • 244.2k
  • 84
  • 721
  • 763

Is that ok to ask for edit on my own questions to fix my english? If yes, how should I do that?

No. Stuff like that is just noise. Questions should include only relevant information, not meta-commentary and procedural requests.

Stack Overflow is collaboratively edited, so it is assumed that you want other users to fix your English mistakes (or, indeed, any other obvious mistakes). You don't need to specify what is already assumed.

If one of your posts is difficult to read, and someone who has time comes across it, then they will edit it. If not, it'll sit unedited until such time as someone comes across it and is willing to edit it. We don't need another "queue" where "posts in need of grammar edits" rot wait. The editing process works best when editors come across it organically.