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Asking how to improve a (badly received) question is absolutely the right thing to do. It shows you are actually interested in improving the quality of your contributions. With the sole exception of "@Downvoters" the inappropriateness of which has already explained in comments and the answer of yivi, your comment reads okay to me. You clearly ask for directions and give a bit more context. If I were a mod, I might have considered only deleting the "@Downvoters" and leaving the rest of the comment there or commenting a bit on why the comment was deleted.

I recommend you to edit "The same type of question gets asked for many other plotting libraries. I simply don't know where to start because ECharts seems to use a different terminology to other plotting libraries." into the question and leave "What can I do to improve the question? Any help is greatly appreciated." as a comment below it. A comment like this should not get deleted.

If you cannot further improve the question and it remains negatively scored and you really want to know why it wasn't that good, you could ask on meta about why it was received badly.

Asking how to improve a (badly received) question is absolutely the right thing to do. It shows you are actually interested in improving the quality of your contributions. With the sole exception of "@Downvoters" the inappropriateness of which has already explained in comments and the answer of yivi, your comment reads okay to me. You clearly ask for directions and give a bit more context. If I were a mod, I might have considered only deleting the "@Downvoters" and leaving the rest of the comment there or commenting a bit on why the comment was deleted.

I recommend you to edit "The same type of question gets asked for many other plotting libraries. I simply don't know where to start because ECharts seems to use a different terminology to other plotting libraries." into the question and leave "What can I do to improve the question? Any help is greatly appreciated." as a comment below it.

If you cannot further improve the question and it remains negatively scored and you really want to know why it wasn't that good, you could ask on meta about why it was received badly.

Asking how to improve a (badly received) question is absolutely the right thing to do. It shows you are actually interested in improving the quality of your contributions. With the sole exception of "@Downvoters" the inappropriateness of which has already explained in comments and the answer of yivi, your comment reads okay to me. You clearly ask for directions and give a bit more context. If I were a mod, I might have considered only deleting the "@Downvoters" and leaving the rest of the comment there or commenting a bit on why the comment was deleted.

I recommend you to edit "The same type of question gets asked for many other plotting libraries. I simply don't know where to start because ECharts seems to use a different terminology to other plotting libraries." into the question and leave "What can I do to improve the question? Any help is greatly appreciated." as a comment below it. A comment like this should not get deleted.

If you cannot further improve the question and it remains negatively scored and you really want to know why it wasn't that good, you could ask on meta about why it was received badly.

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Asking how to improve a (badly received) question is absolutely the right thing to do. It shows you are actually interested in improving the quality of your contributions. With the sole exception of "@Downvoters" the inappropriateness of which has already explained in comments and the answer of yivi, your comment reads okay to me. You clearly ask for directions and give a bit more context. If I were a mod, I might have considered only deleting the "@Downvoters" and leaving the rest of the comment there or commenting a bit on why the comment was deleted.

I recommend you to edit "The same type of question gets asked for many other plotting libraries. I simply don't know where to start because ECharts seems to use a different terminology to other plotting libraries." into the question and leave "What can I do to improve the question? Any help is greatly appreciated." as a comment below it.

If you cannot further improve the question and it remains negatively scored and you really want to know why it wasn't that good, you could ask on meta about why it was received badly.