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Don Branson
  • 13.7k
  • 16
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Using the link can be useful - or useless. If it's just the bare link, I don't see how it would be helpful or welcoming. Done right, I have seen questions improved on a number of occasions.

First, frequently when someone gets downvotes or close votes they want to know why, and a silent response can be frustrating.

So, noticing which comments seem to result in helpful changes and also convey welcomeness, I stole one from David. Then, I made changes to communicate better that we really are interested to help, that other people out there want to help, and OPs aren't greeted with downvotes plus unexplained silence. I also wanted to communicate less "here are the rules and you better follow them or get harangued" and more "here are some tips so more people take time to consider your question and make a response."

Also, it's kind of tuned to questions where I am inclined to close-vote, but am not really satisfied the close options explain why. Often that's a question like, "Here's my homework, please do it for me because I have to turn it in tomorrow." There are others, of course.

Now I keep a prepared comment which I'll use from time to time and tweak as needed:

Welcome to Stack Overflow! Certain questions here are more likely to get helpful answers. The more specific, the better. Questions with no code are generally more difficult to answer - people often skip right over them. So show your code for best results. If you encounter a specific technical problem during that attempt, we can help with that, and we want to - that’s part of why we’re here. To learn more about helping us help you, please start with How to Ask. If you’re really ambitious, read the tour.

I like having a ready comment stashed away on my phone so I don't have to make one up on the fly, and I've had a chance to think about what it says and the tone it conveys. And hopefully others that would ordinarily immediately close-vote a particular question will give the question time to ferment into something better, having seen a questioncomment to guide the OP.

Using the link can be useful - or useless. If it's just the bare link, I don't see how it would be helpful or welcoming. Done right, I have seen questions improved on a number of occasions.

First, frequently when someone gets downvotes or close votes they want to know why, and a silent response can be frustrating.

So, noticing which comments seem to result in helpful changes and also convey welcomeness, I stole one from David. Then, I made changes to communicate better that we really are interested to help, that other people out there want to help, and OPs aren't greeted with downvotes plus unexplained silence. I also wanted to communicate less "here are the rules and you better follow them or get harangued" and more "here are some tips so more people take time to consider your question and make a response."

Also, it's kind of tuned to questions where I am inclined to close-vote, but am not really satisfied the close options explain why. Often that's a question like, "Here's my homework, please do it for me because I have to turn it in tomorrow." There are others, of course.

Now I keep a prepared comment which I'll use from time to time and tweak as needed:

Welcome to Stack Overflow! Certain questions here are more likely to get helpful answers. The more specific, the better. Questions with no code are generally more difficult to answer - people often skip right over them. So show your code for best results. If you encounter a specific technical problem during that attempt, we can help with that, and we want to - that’s part of why we’re here. To learn more about helping us help you, please start with How to Ask. If you’re really ambitious, read the tour.

I like having a ready comment stashed away on my phone so I don't have to make one up on the fly, and I've had a chance to think about what it says and the tone it conveys. And hopefully others that would ordinarily immediately close-vote a particular question will give the question time to ferment into something better, having seen a question to guide the OP.

Using the link can be useful - or useless. If it's just the bare link, I don't see how it would be helpful or welcoming. Done right, I have seen questions improved on a number of occasions.

First, frequently when someone gets downvotes or close votes they want to know why, and a silent response can be frustrating.

So, noticing which comments seem to result in helpful changes and also convey welcomeness, I stole one from David. Then, I made changes to communicate better that we really are interested to help, that other people out there want to help, and OPs aren't greeted with downvotes plus unexplained silence. I also wanted to communicate less "here are the rules and you better follow them or get harangued" and more "here are some tips so more people take time to consider your question and make a response."

Also, it's kind of tuned to questions where I am inclined to close-vote, but am not really satisfied the close options explain why. Often that's a question like, "Here's my homework, please do it for me because I have to turn it in tomorrow." There are others, of course.

Now I keep a prepared comment which I'll use from time to time and tweak as needed:

Welcome to Stack Overflow! Certain questions here are more likely to get helpful answers. The more specific, the better. Questions with no code are generally more difficult to answer - people often skip right over them. So show your code for best results. If you encounter a specific technical problem during that attempt, we can help with that, and we want to - that’s part of why we’re here. To learn more about helping us help you, please start with How to Ask. If you’re really ambitious, read the tour.

I like having a ready comment stashed away on my phone so I don't have to make one up on the fly, and I've had a chance to think about what it says and the tone it conveys. And hopefully others that would ordinarily immediately close-vote a particular question will give the question time to ferment into something better, having seen a comment to guide the OP.

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Source Link
Don Branson
  • 13.7k
  • 16
  • 7

Using the link can be useful - or useless. If it's just the bare link, I don't see how it would be helpful or welcoming. Done right, I have seen questions improved on a number of occasions.

First, frequently when someone gets downvotes or close votes they want to know why, and a silent response can be frustrating.

So, noticing which comments seem to result in helpful changes and also convey welcomeness, I stole one from David. Then, I made changes to communicate better that we really are interested to help, that other people out there want to help, and OPs aren't greeted with downvotes plus unexplained silence. I also wanted to communicate less "here are the rules and you better follow them or get harangued" and more "here are some tips so more people take time to consider your question and make a response."

Also, it's kind of tuned to questions where I am inclined to close-vote, but am not really satisfied the close options explain why. Often that's a question like, "Here's my homework, please do it for me because I have to turn it in tomorrow." There are others, of course.

Now I keep a prepared comment which I'll use from time to time and tweak as needed:

Welcome to Stack Overflow! Certain questions here are more likely to get helpful answers. The more specific, the better. Questions with no code are generally more difficult to answer - people often skip right over them. So show your code for best results. If you encounter a specific technical problem during that attempt, we can help with that, and we want to - that’s part of why we’re here. To learn more about helping us help you, please start with How to Ask. If you’re really ambitious, read the tour.

I like having a ready comment stashed away on my phone so I don't have to make one up on the fly, and I've had a chance to think about what it says and the tone it conveys. And hopefully others that would ordinarily immediately close-vote a particular question will give the question time to ferment into something better, having seen a question to guide the OP.

Using the link can be useful - or useless. If it's just the bare link, I don't see how it would be helpful or welcoming. Done right, I have seen questions improved on a number of occasions.

First, frequently when someone gets downvotes or close votes they want to know why, and a silent response can be frustrating.

So, noticing which comments seem to result in helpful changes and also convey welcomeness, I stole one from David. Then, I made changes to communicate better that we really are interested to help, that other people out there want to help, and OPs aren't greeted with downvotes plus unexplained silence. I also wanted to communicate less "here are the rules and you better follow them or get harangued" and more "here are some tips so more people take time to consider your question and make a response."

Also, it's kind of tuned to questions where I am inclined to close-vote, but am not really satisfied the close options explain why. Often that's a question like, "Here's my homework, please do it for me because I have to turn it in tomorrow." There are others, of course.

Now I keep a prepared comment which I'll use from time to time and tweak as needed:

Welcome to Stack Overflow! Certain questions here are more likely to get helpful answers. The more specific, the better. Questions with no code are generally more difficult to answer - people often skip right over them. So show your code for best results. If you encounter a specific technical problem during that attempt, we can help with that, and we want to - that’s part of why we’re here. To learn more about helping us help you, please start with How to Ask. If you’re really ambitious, read the tour.

I like having a ready comment stashed away on my phone so I don't have to make one up on the fly, and I've had a chance to think about what it says and the tone it conveys.

Using the link can be useful - or useless. If it's just the bare link, I don't see how it would be helpful or welcoming. Done right, I have seen questions improved on a number of occasions.

First, frequently when someone gets downvotes or close votes they want to know why, and a silent response can be frustrating.

So, noticing which comments seem to result in helpful changes and also convey welcomeness, I stole one from David. Then, I made changes to communicate better that we really are interested to help, that other people out there want to help, and OPs aren't greeted with downvotes plus unexplained silence. I also wanted to communicate less "here are the rules and you better follow them or get harangued" and more "here are some tips so more people take time to consider your question and make a response."

Also, it's kind of tuned to questions where I am inclined to close-vote, but am not really satisfied the close options explain why. Often that's a question like, "Here's my homework, please do it for me because I have to turn it in tomorrow." There are others, of course.

Now I keep a prepared comment which I'll use from time to time and tweak as needed:

Welcome to Stack Overflow! Certain questions here are more likely to get helpful answers. The more specific, the better. Questions with no code are generally more difficult to answer - people often skip right over them. So show your code for best results. If you encounter a specific technical problem during that attempt, we can help with that, and we want to - that’s part of why we’re here. To learn more about helping us help you, please start with How to Ask. If you’re really ambitious, read the tour.

I like having a ready comment stashed away on my phone so I don't have to make one up on the fly, and I've had a chance to think about what it says and the tone it conveys. And hopefully others that would ordinarily immediately close-vote a particular question will give the question time to ferment into something better, having seen a question to guide the OP.

Source Link
Don Branson
  • 13.7k
  • 16
  • 7

Using the link can be useful - or useless. If it's just the bare link, I don't see how it would be helpful or welcoming. Done right, I have seen questions improved on a number of occasions.

First, frequently when someone gets downvotes or close votes they want to know why, and a silent response can be frustrating.

So, noticing which comments seem to result in helpful changes and also convey welcomeness, I stole one from David. Then, I made changes to communicate better that we really are interested to help, that other people out there want to help, and OPs aren't greeted with downvotes plus unexplained silence. I also wanted to communicate less "here are the rules and you better follow them or get harangued" and more "here are some tips so more people take time to consider your question and make a response."

Also, it's kind of tuned to questions where I am inclined to close-vote, but am not really satisfied the close options explain why. Often that's a question like, "Here's my homework, please do it for me because I have to turn it in tomorrow." There are others, of course.

Now I keep a prepared comment which I'll use from time to time and tweak as needed:

Welcome to Stack Overflow! Certain questions here are more likely to get helpful answers. The more specific, the better. Questions with no code are generally more difficult to answer - people often skip right over them. So show your code for best results. If you encounter a specific technical problem during that attempt, we can help with that, and we want to - that’s part of why we’re here. To learn more about helping us help you, please start with How to Ask. If you’re really ambitious, read the tour.

I like having a ready comment stashed away on my phone so I don't have to make one up on the fly, and I've had a chance to think about what it says and the tone it conveys.