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jpp
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There needs to be guidance as to what constitutes acceptable and "welcoming" as a response to poor questions. For requirement-dump questions specifically, in my opinion, SO is not a code-writing service is unhelpful.

Frequently, a new SO asker will:

  • not understand what such a comment means
  • glance confusedly at a stream of upvoted comments criticising their question
  • vent at the -10 and dropping score
  • see their "important" question put down by a "Closed... Too broad" banner
  • halfheartedly skim a page of instructions on what they are meant to be doing
  • give up as they don't know enough to pinpoint the nature of their problem

It's not all a result of the comment, but the aggregate impression is akin to a personal attack. The response is more emotional than rational. Educating beforehand that the comment or score isn't a reflection on the questioner but the question doesn't work.

More helpful:

Welcome to SO. Please provide a Minimal, Complete, and Verifiable example. Show us the code for your latest attempt and where you got stuck.

Simple and concise. But, more importantconcise, indirect. Show us your code can only yield a Boolean response. In my experience, it often reaps dividends. Moreover, I have never been accused of being harsh, critical or unhelpful on the basis of such a comment, even when I add a downvote + vote-to-close.

Often, I come back and see a good edit, or my comment upvoted 3 times and the question closed or deleted. All good outcomes.

There needs to be guidance as to what constitutes acceptable and "welcoming" as a response to poor questions. For requirement-dump questions specifically, in my opinion, SO is not a code-writing service is unhelpful.

Frequently, a new SO asker will:

  • not understand what such a comment means
  • glance confusedly at a stream of upvoted comments criticising their question
  • vent at the -10 and dropping score
  • see their "important" question put down by a "Closed... Too broad" banner
  • halfheartedly skim a page of instructions on what they are meant to be doing
  • give up as they don't know enough to pinpoint the nature of their problem

It's not all a result of the comment, but the aggregate impression is akin to a personal attack. The response is more emotional than rational. Educating beforehand that the comment or score isn't a reflection on the questioner but the question doesn't work.

More helpful:

Welcome to SO. Please provide a Minimal, Complete, and Verifiable example. Show us the code for your latest attempt and where you got stuck.

Simple and concise. But, more important, in my experience it often reaps dividends. Moreover, I have never been accused of being harsh, critical or unhelpful on the basis of such a comment, even when I add a downvote + vote-to-close.

Often, I come back and see a good edit, or my comment upvoted 3 times and the question closed or deleted. All good outcomes.

There needs to be guidance as to what constitutes acceptable and "welcoming" as a response to poor questions. For requirement-dump questions specifically, in my opinion, SO is not a code-writing service is unhelpful.

Frequently, a new SO asker will:

  • not understand what such a comment means
  • glance confusedly at a stream of upvoted comments criticising their question
  • vent at the -10 and dropping score
  • see their "important" question put down by a "Closed... Too broad" banner
  • halfheartedly skim a page of instructions on what they are meant to be doing
  • give up as they don't know enough to pinpoint the nature of their problem

It's not all a result of the comment, but the aggregate impression is akin to a personal attack. The response is more emotional than rational. Educating beforehand that the comment or score isn't a reflection on the questioner but the question doesn't work.

More helpful:

Welcome to SO. Please provide a Minimal, Complete, and Verifiable example. Show us the code for your latest attempt and where you got stuck.

Simple, concise, direct. Show us your code can only yield a Boolean response. In my experience, it often reaps dividends. Moreover, I have never been accused of being harsh, critical or unhelpful on the basis of such a comment, even when I add a downvote + vote-to-close.

Often, I come back and see a good edit, or my comment upvoted 3 times and the question closed or deleted. All good outcomes.

Source Link
jpp
  • 164.3k
  • 4
  • 29
  • 58

There needs to be guidance as to what constitutes acceptable and "welcoming" as a response to poor questions. For requirement-dump questions specifically, in my opinion, SO is not a code-writing service is unhelpful.

Frequently, a new SO asker will:

  • not understand what such a comment means
  • glance confusedly at a stream of upvoted comments criticising their question
  • vent at the -10 and dropping score
  • see their "important" question put down by a "Closed... Too broad" banner
  • halfheartedly skim a page of instructions on what they are meant to be doing
  • give up as they don't know enough to pinpoint the nature of their problem

It's not all a result of the comment, but the aggregate impression is akin to a personal attack. The response is more emotional than rational. Educating beforehand that the comment or score isn't a reflection on the questioner but the question doesn't work.

More helpful:

Welcome to SO. Please provide a Minimal, Complete, and Verifiable example. Show us the code for your latest attempt and where you got stuck.

Simple and concise. But, more important, in my experience it often reaps dividends. Moreover, I have never been accused of being harsh, critical or unhelpful on the basis of such a comment, even when I add a downvote + vote-to-close.

Often, I come back and see a good edit, or my comment upvoted 3 times and the question closed or deleted. All good outcomes.