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Oct 20, 2017 at 11:59 comment added l4mpi Agree that the best outcome in many cases would be if the OP does not ask a question. I think the wizard idea may be helpful, but only if enough of its paths end in a message such as "the question you are trying to ask is not on topic for SO" and redirects the user to google to do some research.
Oct 20, 2017 at 5:18 comment added Passer By @TinyGiant It is not entirely obvious what is unhelpful nonsense unless you already know the root of the problem, which is exactly what is being asked in debug questions.
Oct 19, 2017 at 23:17 comment added user4639281 @Yakk Handwaving about imagined questions in an overly general manner is not helpful. If "frozzbubble" is a well defined task, and implementing and explaning the implementation of said task is not too broad of a topic for Stack Overflow, then it doesn't need a back-story, the last ten code snippets that the user wrote that didn't solve the problem, etc. Such questions are "how-to" style questions, and those questions are inherently on-topic without all of that unhelpful nonsense that people nag about unnecessarily in the comments.
Oct 19, 2017 at 23:12 comment added user4639281 I would refer to the question linked at the bottom of your post as a "debugging style question". Many questions present a problem in need of solving, not all problems in need of solving are debugging problems.
Oct 19, 2017 at 18:32 comment added user3458 Indeed, and that's why I propose a wizard. The wizard may be able to turn "My program does not frozzbubble!" Into "The code below, when compiled with such and such compiler, run with such and such arguments, does bubble then froz. I expect it to do froz then bubble. I expect it to do froz first because the froz() function is first in the file. Why is froz not done first?" This is still a "solve my problem" question, but at least it can be answered.
Oct 19, 2017 at 18:27 comment added Yakk - Adam Nevraumont @Arkadiy Questions not backed by actual problems tend to be relatively useless. You get people asking "how do I frozzbubble", without actually explaining what frozzbubble is well enough to work out what they actually need. Instead they have some nebulous concept in their head and answerers have to read their mind. Concrete questions about real problems that are well framed both well define the problem and permit "actually, your real problem is 1 step removed" answers. Both groundless questions, and random code spew, aren't good questions.
Oct 19, 2017 at 17:54 history edited user3458 CC BY-SA 3.0
added 247 characters in body
Oct 18, 2017 at 14:49 comment added user3458 @ImportanceOfBeingErnest People come to us with problems no matter what. The template (It should rather be a wizard) allows us an opportunity to extract relevant information out of them and in some cases solve the problem before they post the question.
Oct 18, 2017 at 14:47 comment added ImportanceOfBeingErnest Ah ok, I may have misinterpreted that. Now my problem with that approach would be that you actually do invite people to come up with their actual problem instead of the filtered, minimal and verifiable version of it. But it's definitely worth thinking about.
Oct 18, 2017 at 14:42 comment added user3458 @ImportanceOfBeingErnest To address your actual comment: what I propose is not to prevent the "solve my problem" questions from being asked. My goal is same as yours: "we want them to ask for it according to the rules". The point I am making is that the best way to achieve that goal is to recognize the "solve my problem" as a type of question that needs guidance, and provide that guidance in a way that would appeal to the problem solvers. Catching flies with honey and all that.
Oct 18, 2017 at 14:39 comment added user3458 @ImportanceOfBeingErnest To be fair, I'd prefer the "problem solvers" to not ask at all. But I realize I am at best a minority and maybe a lonely misanthrope around here.
Oct 18, 2017 at 14:37 comment added ImportanceOfBeingErnest That's an interesting point of view. But I would argue that we do not want people not to ask for their problem. However, we want them to ask for it according to the rules, such that the question and any potential answer is useful for everyone, or at least those with a similar problem.
Oct 18, 2017 at 14:32 history answered user3458 CC BY-SA 3.0