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Active reading [<https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/reopen#Verb> <http://stackoverflow.com/legal/trademark-guidance> (the last section)].
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Peter Mortensen
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I agree something is broken here, but I don't think the proposed solution would work out as well as one might like.

The whole point of closed questions has been, historically, to guide the user to edit and then subsequently flag to reopen (with the exception of dupes). This is how quality was controlled in the early days and it worked well when the site was substantially smaller.

It's not supposed to be a dead-end.

The fact this flow doesn't currently work has two root issues, in my opinion:

  1. The notice and 'stigma' surrounding closed questions has never felt very encouraging to the user. This is a long-standing issue StackOverflowStack Overflow has had, especially for new developers coming to SO for help for the first time - there's a reputation of posting a question, having it closed immediately, and then giving up on SO entirely.
  2. The re-openreopen queue lags and takes quite a while to effect change, if at all. This is time taken away from potentially legitimate problems that might be blocking the user.

These two things alone amount to lost time (on the asker's part) and often leaves a bad taste in their mouth.

If anything, we should be encouraging edits to questions with much, much more guidance on how to ask good questions, and then streamlining the VTO queue somehow. Closed questions get buried and quite often left unanswered regardless of if the user has edited to improve it.

Unleashing a shotgun blast of notifications to users after voting to close a number of them shouldn't be the solution here. It'll only add confusion and it isn't a straightforward problem.

I agree something is broken here, but I don't think the proposed solution would work out as well as one might like.

The whole point of closed questions has been, historically, to guide the user to edit and then subsequently flag to reopen (with the exception of dupes). This is how quality was controlled in the early days and it worked well when the site was substantially smaller.

It's not supposed to be a dead-end.

The fact this flow doesn't currently work has two root issues, in my opinion:

  1. The notice and 'stigma' surrounding closed questions has never felt very encouraging to the user. This is a long-standing issue StackOverflow has had, especially for new developers coming to SO for help for the first time - there's a reputation of posting a question, having it closed immediately, and then giving up on SO entirely.
  2. The re-open queue lags and takes quite a while to effect change, if at all. This is time taken away from potentially legitimate problems that might be blocking the user.

These two things alone amount to lost time (on the asker's part) and often leaves a bad taste in their mouth.

If anything, we should be encouraging edits to questions with much, much more guidance on how to ask good questions, and then streamlining the VTO queue somehow. Closed questions get buried and quite often left unanswered regardless of if the user has edited to improve it.

Unleashing a shotgun blast of notifications to users after voting to close a number of them shouldn't be the solution here. It'll only add confusion and it isn't a straightforward problem.

I agree something is broken here, but I don't think the proposed solution would work out as well as one might like.

The whole point of closed questions has been, historically, to guide the user to edit and then subsequently flag to reopen (with the exception of dupes). This is how quality was controlled in the early days and it worked well when the site was substantially smaller.

It's not supposed to be a dead-end.

The fact this flow doesn't currently work has two root issues, in my opinion:

  1. The notice and 'stigma' surrounding closed questions has never felt very encouraging to the user. This is a long-standing issue Stack Overflow has had, especially for new developers coming to SO for help for the first time - there's a reputation of posting a question, having it closed immediately, and then giving up on SO entirely.
  2. The reopen queue lags and takes quite a while to effect change, if at all. This is time taken away from potentially legitimate problems that might be blocking the user.

These two things alone amount to lost time (on the asker's part) and often leaves a bad taste in their mouth.

If anything, we should be encouraging edits to questions with much, much more guidance on how to ask good questions, and then streamlining the VTO queue somehow. Closed questions get buried and quite often left unanswered regardless of if the user has edited to improve it.

Unleashing a shotgun blast of notifications to users after voting to close a number of them shouldn't be the solution here. It'll only add confusion and it isn't a straightforward problem.

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I agree something is broken here, but I don't think the proposed solution would work out as well as one might like.

The whole point of closed questions has been, historically, to guide the user to edit and then subsequently flag to reopen (with the exception of dupes). This is how quality was controlled in the early days and it worked well when the site was substantially smaller.

It's not supposed to be a dead-end.

The fact this flow doesn't currently work has two root issues, in my opinion:

  1. The notice and 'stigma' surrounding closed questions has never felt very encouraging to the user. This is a long-standing issue StackOverflow has had, especially for new developers coming to SO for help for the first time - there's a reputation of posting a question, having it closed immediately, and then giving up on SO entirely.
  2. The re-open queue lags and takes quite a while to effect change, if at all. This is time taken away from potentially legitimate problems that might be blocking the user.

These two things alone amount to lost time (on the asker's part) and often leaves a bad taste in their mouth.

If anything, we should be encouraging edits to questions with much, much more guidance on how to ask good questions, and then streamlining the VTO queue somehow. Closed questions get buried and quite often left unanswered regardless of if the user has edited to improve it.

Unleashing a shotgun blast of notifications to users after voting to close a number of them shouldn't be the solution here. It'll only add confusion and it isn't a straightforward problem.