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user3458

The essence of the problem is that the people who post low-quality questions DO NOT come to SO to ask a question. They come to SO to solve a problem.

This is an important distinction. The "good" OP actually wants to know what's going on, so they ask a proper question. The "usual" OP just wants the blooming thing to compile/run/produce results. Stack Overflow is just a magic wand they can wave to make the problem go away.

The question becomes, how do you make the problem solvers to cooperate at producing answerable questions (good questions would be too much to ask for)?

My suggestion is to lure them by explicitly offering to solve their problem.

At least one section of the Wizard should start:

"Help! My program does not work!"

From there you can branch into "Compilation error" (whole screen, with detailed explanation of what compiler is and may be links to many language-specific pages), "IDE error", "Linker Error", "I don't know what this thing is saying" and so on.

Eventually we'd get to ask for MCVE and maybe even post the question. But the first step has to offer help in solving the problem, or the authors of "Question: how do I do this?" will not even see the rest.

To illustrate the point: here is a typical problem solving question that would benefit from a wizard (at least in the state it is as of this edit):

https://stackoverflow.com/questions/46835918/c-battleship-game-variable-update-doesnt-work

The essence of the problem is that the people who post low-quality questions DO NOT come to SO to ask a question. They come to SO to solve a problem.

This is an important distinction. The "good" OP actually wants to know what's going on, so they ask a proper question. The "usual" OP just wants the blooming thing to compile/run/produce results. Stack Overflow is just a magic wand they can wave to make the problem go away.

The question becomes, how do you make the problem solvers to cooperate at producing answerable questions (good questions would be too much to ask for)?

My suggestion is to lure them by explicitly offering to solve their problem.

At least one section of the Wizard should start:

"Help! My program does not work!"

From there you can branch into "Compilation error" (whole screen, with detailed explanation of what compiler is and may be links to many language-specific pages), "IDE error", "Linker Error", "I don't know what this thing is saying" and so on.

Eventually we'd get to ask for MCVE and maybe even post the question. But the first step has to offer help in solving the problem, or the authors of "Question: how do I do this?" will not even see the rest.

The essence of the problem is that the people who post low-quality questions DO NOT come to SO to ask a question. They come to SO to solve a problem.

This is an important distinction. The "good" OP actually wants to know what's going on, so they ask a proper question. The "usual" OP just wants the blooming thing to compile/run/produce results. Stack Overflow is just a magic wand they can wave to make the problem go away.

The question becomes, how do you make the problem solvers to cooperate at producing answerable questions (good questions would be too much to ask for)?

My suggestion is to lure them by explicitly offering to solve their problem.

At least one section of the Wizard should start:

"Help! My program does not work!"

From there you can branch into "Compilation error" (whole screen, with detailed explanation of what compiler is and may be links to many language-specific pages), "IDE error", "Linker Error", "I don't know what this thing is saying" and so on.

Eventually we'd get to ask for MCVE and maybe even post the question. But the first step has to offer help in solving the problem, or the authors of "Question: how do I do this?" will not even see the rest.

To illustrate the point: here is a typical problem solving question that would benefit from a wizard (at least in the state it is as of this edit):

https://stackoverflow.com/questions/46835918/c-battleship-game-variable-update-doesnt-work

Source Link
user3458
user3458

The essence of the problem is that the people who post low-quality questions DO NOT come to SO to ask a question. They come to SO to solve a problem.

This is an important distinction. The "good" OP actually wants to know what's going on, so they ask a proper question. The "usual" OP just wants the blooming thing to compile/run/produce results. Stack Overflow is just a magic wand they can wave to make the problem go away.

The question becomes, how do you make the problem solvers to cooperate at producing answerable questions (good questions would be too much to ask for)?

My suggestion is to lure them by explicitly offering to solve their problem.

At least one section of the Wizard should start:

"Help! My program does not work!"

From there you can branch into "Compilation error" (whole screen, with detailed explanation of what compiler is and may be links to many language-specific pages), "IDE error", "Linker Error", "I don't know what this thing is saying" and so on.

Eventually we'd get to ask for MCVE and maybe even post the question. But the first step has to offer help in solving the problem, or the authors of "Question: how do I do this?" will not even see the rest.