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Here's a first-time question-asker at -11, fifteen minutes after he asked the question. He hasn't been back yet to see the comments. I see this sort of thing fairly regularly.

I know as well as anybody that he probably wouldn't improve the question into anything reasonably answerable, even if it weren't closed as a duplicate of "what's a debugger and why do you think I should have been born knowing how to use one". However, he hasn't had the chance to disappoint anybody yet, the odds really aren't improved by this kind of reception. And an awful lot of people here never come back later to reassess their votes.

#tl;dr

tl;dr

Has anybody suggested that we block downvoting on first-time questions until the user has been back to engage with requests for improvements? If they're recalcitrant or hopeless then, by all means get out the pitchforks.

IMO, closing questions is not like voting. Coming back to find "your answer can already be found over there", or "we can't answer that" is not like coming back to a pile of downvotes. Personally, I suspect most people are going to interpret downvotes as a contentless internet "f*** you" instead of "this question is of poor quality because...". But I don't have any data to back that up.

Update:

Free t-shirt for the first commenter who can show clear signs of having read and understood what I wrote above. Agree or not, doesn't matter.

Here's a first-time question-asker at -11, fifteen minutes after he asked the question. He hasn't been back yet to see the comments. I see this sort of thing fairly regularly.

I know as well as anybody that he probably wouldn't improve the question into anything reasonably answerable, even if it weren't closed as a duplicate of "what's a debugger and why do you think I should have been born knowing how to use one". However, he hasn't had the chance to disappoint anybody yet, the odds really aren't improved by this kind of reception. And an awful lot of people here never come back later to reassess their votes.

#tl;dr

Has anybody suggested that we block downvoting on first-time questions until the user has been back to engage with requests for improvements? If they're recalcitrant or hopeless then, by all means get out the pitchforks.

IMO, closing questions is not like voting. Coming back to find "your answer can already be found over there", or "we can't answer that" is not like coming back to a pile of downvotes. Personally, I suspect most people are going to interpret downvotes as a contentless internet "f*** you" instead of "this question is of poor quality because...". But I don't have any data to back that up.

Update:

Free t-shirt for the first commenter who can show clear signs of having read and understood what I wrote above. Agree or not, doesn't matter.

Here's a first-time question-asker at -11, fifteen minutes after he asked the question. He hasn't been back yet to see the comments. I see this sort of thing fairly regularly.

I know as well as anybody that he probably wouldn't improve the question into anything reasonably answerable, even if it weren't closed as a duplicate of "what's a debugger and why do you think I should have been born knowing how to use one". However, he hasn't had the chance to disappoint anybody yet, the odds really aren't improved by this kind of reception. And an awful lot of people here never come back later to reassess their votes.

tl;dr

Has anybody suggested that we block downvoting on first-time questions until the user has been back to engage with requests for improvements? If they're recalcitrant or hopeless then, by all means get out the pitchforks.

IMO, closing questions is not like voting. Coming back to find "your answer can already be found over there", or "we can't answer that" is not like coming back to a pile of downvotes. Personally, I suspect most people are going to interpret downvotes as a contentless internet "f*** you" instead of "this question is of poor quality because...". But I don't have any data to back that up.

Update:

Free t-shirt for the first commenter who can show clear signs of having read and understood what I wrote above. Agree or not, doesn't matter.

added 6 characters in body
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Here's a first-time question-asker at -11, fifteen minutes after he asked the question. He hasn't been back yet to see the comments. I see this sort of thing fairly regularly.

I know as well as anybody that he probably wouldn't improve the question into anything reasonably answerable, even if it weren't closed as a duplicate of "what's a debugger and why do you think I should have been born knowing how to use one". However, he hasn't had the chance to disappoint anybody yet, the odds really aren't improved by this kind of reception. And an awful lot of people here never come back later to reassess their votes.

#tl;dr

Has anybody suggested that we block downvoting on first-time questions until the user has been back to engage with requests for improvements? If they're recalcitrant or hopeless then, by all means get out the pitchforks.

IMO, closing questions is not like voting. Coming back to find "your answer can already be found over there", or "we can't answer that" is not like coming back to a pile of downvotes. Personally, I suspect most people are going to interpret downvotes as a contentless internet "f*** you" instead of "this question is of poor quality because...". But I don't have any data to back that up.

Update:

Free t-shirt for the first commenter who can show proofclear signs of having read and understood what I wrote above. Agree or not, doesn't matter.

Here's a first-time question-asker at -11, fifteen minutes after he asked the question. He hasn't been back yet to see the comments. I see this sort of thing fairly regularly.

I know as well as anybody that he probably wouldn't improve the question into anything reasonably answerable, even if it weren't closed as a duplicate of "what's a debugger and why do you think I should have been born knowing how to use one". However, he hasn't had the chance to disappoint anybody yet, the odds really aren't improved by this kind of reception. And an awful lot of people here never come back later to reassess their votes.

#tl;dr

Has anybody suggested that we block downvoting on first-time questions until the user has been back to engage with requests for improvements? If they're recalcitrant or hopeless then, by all means get out the pitchforks.

IMO, closing questions is not like voting. Coming back to find "your answer can already be found over there", or "we can't answer that" is not like coming back to a pile of downvotes. Personally, I suspect most people are going to interpret downvotes as a contentless internet "f*** you" instead of "this question is of poor quality because...". But I don't have any data to back that up.

Update:

Free t-shirt for the first commenter who can show proof of having read and understood what I wrote above. Agree or not, doesn't matter.

Here's a first-time question-asker at -11, fifteen minutes after he asked the question. He hasn't been back yet to see the comments. I see this sort of thing fairly regularly.

I know as well as anybody that he probably wouldn't improve the question into anything reasonably answerable, even if it weren't closed as a duplicate of "what's a debugger and why do you think I should have been born knowing how to use one". However, he hasn't had the chance to disappoint anybody yet, the odds really aren't improved by this kind of reception. And an awful lot of people here never come back later to reassess their votes.

#tl;dr

Has anybody suggested that we block downvoting on first-time questions until the user has been back to engage with requests for improvements? If they're recalcitrant or hopeless then, by all means get out the pitchforks.

IMO, closing questions is not like voting. Coming back to find "your answer can already be found over there", or "we can't answer that" is not like coming back to a pile of downvotes. Personally, I suspect most people are going to interpret downvotes as a contentless internet "f*** you" instead of "this question is of poor quality because...". But I don't have any data to back that up.

Update:

Free t-shirt for the first commenter who can show clear signs of having read and understood what I wrote above. Agree or not, doesn't matter.

added 152 characters in body
Source Link

Here's a first-time question-asker at -11, fifteen minutes after he asked the question. He hasn't been back yet to see the comments. I see this sort of thing fairly regularly.

I know as well as anybody that he probably wouldn't improve the question into anything reasonably answerable, even if it weren't closed as a duplicate of "what's a debugger and why do you think I should have been born knowing how to use one". However, he hasn't had the chance to disappoint anybody yet, the odds really aren't improved by this kind of reception. And an awful lot of people here never come back later to reassess their votes.

#tl;dr

Has anybody suggested that we block downvoting on first-time questions until the user has been back to engage with requests for improvements? If they're recalcitrant or hopeless then, by all means get out the pitchforks.

IMO, closing questions is not like voting. Coming back to find "your answer can already be found over there", or "we can't answer that" is not like coming back to a pile of downvotes. Personally, I suspect most people are going to interpret downvotes as a contentless internet "f*** you" instead of "this question is of poor quality because...". But I don't have any data to back that up.

Update:

Free t-shirt for the first commenter who can show proof of having read and understood what I wrote above. Agree or not, doesn't matter.

Here's a first-time question-asker at -11, fifteen minutes after he asked the question. He hasn't been back yet to see the comments. I see this sort of thing fairly regularly.

I know as well as anybody that he probably wouldn't improve the question into anything reasonably answerable, even if it weren't closed as a duplicate of "what's a debugger and why do you think I should have been born knowing how to use one". However, he hasn't had the chance to disappoint anybody yet, the odds really aren't improved by this kind of reception. And an awful lot of people here never come back later to reassess their votes.

#tl;dr

Has anybody suggested that we block downvoting on first-time questions until the user has been back to engage with requests for improvements? If they're recalcitrant or hopeless then, by all means get out the pitchforks.

IMO, closing questions is not like voting. Coming back to find "your answer can already be found over there", or "we can't answer that" is not like coming back to a pile of downvotes. Personally, I suspect most people are going to interpret downvotes as a contentless internet "f*** you" instead of "this question is of poor quality because...". But I don't have any data to back that up.

Here's a first-time question-asker at -11, fifteen minutes after he asked the question. He hasn't been back yet to see the comments. I see this sort of thing fairly regularly.

I know as well as anybody that he probably wouldn't improve the question into anything reasonably answerable, even if it weren't closed as a duplicate of "what's a debugger and why do you think I should have been born knowing how to use one". However, he hasn't had the chance to disappoint anybody yet, the odds really aren't improved by this kind of reception. And an awful lot of people here never come back later to reassess their votes.

#tl;dr

Has anybody suggested that we block downvoting on first-time questions until the user has been back to engage with requests for improvements? If they're recalcitrant or hopeless then, by all means get out the pitchforks.

IMO, closing questions is not like voting. Coming back to find "your answer can already be found over there", or "we can't answer that" is not like coming back to a pile of downvotes. Personally, I suspect most people are going to interpret downvotes as a contentless internet "f*** you" instead of "this question is of poor quality because...". But I don't have any data to back that up.

Update:

Free t-shirt for the first commenter who can show proof of having read and understood what I wrote above. Agree or not, doesn't matter.

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