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A few weeks after I joined Stack Overflow, I was given a project by my manager, Cesar, called “Question Close Reasons.” In short, the project was to create a community-wiki post on Meta Stack Overflow that can serve as a resource to help the community know when to use each close reason when closing questions and to help users who had their questions closed understand the reason behind it.

A new user story

To say I felt ill-equipped to tackle this project was an understatement. How could I, a new employee/user, come up with such an important and valuable resource for the community? I immediately went head-first into researching all of the definitions and guidance across Meta Stack Overflow.

I made a rough draft of the proposal, but I still felt lost. I had never had a question closed. I had never flagged, or voted to close a question. I had never reviewed questions in the queue. So how could I build this resource?

That was my answer: I couldn't – not alone, at least.

This resource belongs to you.

A tool is only useful if it fits the hands who are meant to wield it.

The same had to be true for this project. I am not a typical user of Stack Overflow, so while I had data, I could not truly envision what was needed for the project. So I asked for help – and the community answered.

The project you are about to see has come from months of working side-by-side in direct collaboration with the community. Moderators and regular users gave countless hours of their time and expertise to help define and build this community-wiki post as a canonical repository – but it is still incomplete.

That’s where you all come in.

This wiki belongs to the broader community that has not seen it – until today.

You can find the Question Close Reasons - Definitions and Guidance community-wiki post here.

You can find the Question Close Reasons - Definitions and Guidance community-wiki post here.

It’s already 80-90% done, but we need your help to make it even better. While we have worked hard on these definitions and workflows, we recognize that our understanding might not be complete, so like all content on Stack Overflow, we welcome revisions. We hope that this wiki becomes a fixture within the community, but that will only happen if it is moldable to the needs of the users. As such, we hand it and its ownership over to you. This resource will need the community to keep it relevant and up to date so that it may continue to be valuable as definitions change and workflows evolve.

Lastly, while I know it is not customary to include thanks in posts, it feels wrong to not acknowledge the vast amount of support and goodwill that I received from everyone who helped bring this project to fruition. All the success of this project lies solely in their contributions.

What about changing existing close reasons?

The scope of this project is to formalize and clarify existing close reasons. If you have feedback or suggestions on improving or rethinking Stack Overflow community-specific close reasons, you might be interested in the follow-up discussion:

Overhauling our community's closure reasons and guidance

Any questions?

This was a new collaborative project, and I haven't gone into as much detail about the process behind it as I could have. If you have specific questions about the project or the process, please feel free to post them as an answer below, and I will be happy to answer them.

A few weeks after I joined Stack Overflow, I was given a project by my manager, Cesar, called “Question Close Reasons.” In short, the project was to create a community-wiki post on Meta Stack Overflow that can serve as a resource to help the community know when to use each close reason when closing questions and to help users who had their questions closed understand the reason behind it.

A new user story

To say I felt ill-equipped to tackle this project was an understatement. How could I, a new employee/user, come up with such an important and valuable resource for the community? I immediately went head-first into researching all of the definitions and guidance across Meta Stack Overflow.

I made a rough draft of the proposal, but I still felt lost. I had never had a question closed. I had never flagged, or voted to close a question. I had never reviewed questions in the queue. So how could I build this resource?

That was my answer: I couldn't – not alone, at least.

This resource belongs to you.

A tool is only useful if it fits the hands who are meant to wield it.

The same had to be true for this project. I am not a typical user of Stack Overflow, so while I had data, I could not truly envision what was needed for the project. So I asked for help – and the community answered.

The project you are about to see has come from months of working side-by-side in direct collaboration with the community. Moderators and regular users gave countless hours of their time and expertise to help define and build this community-wiki post as a canonical repository – but it is still incomplete.

That’s where you all come in.

This wiki belongs to the broader community that has not seen it – until today.

You can find the Question Close Reasons - Definitions and Guidance community-wiki post here.

It’s already 80-90% done, but we need your help to make it even better. While we have worked hard on these definitions and workflows, we recognize that our understanding might not be complete, so like all content on Stack Overflow, we welcome revisions. We hope that this wiki becomes a fixture within the community, but that will only happen if it is moldable to the needs of the users. As such, we hand it and its ownership over to you. This resource will need the community to keep it relevant and up to date so that it may continue to be valuable as definitions change and workflows evolve.

Lastly, while I know it is not customary to include thanks in posts, it feels wrong to not acknowledge the vast amount of support and goodwill that I received from everyone who helped bring this project to fruition. All the success of this project lies solely in their contributions.

What about changing existing close reasons?

The scope of this project is to formalize and clarify existing close reasons. If you have feedback or suggestions on improving or rethinking Stack Overflow community-specific close reasons, you might be interested in the follow-up discussion:

Overhauling our community's closure reasons and guidance

Any questions?

This was a new collaborative project, and I haven't gone into as much detail about the process behind it as I could have. If you have specific questions about the project or the process, please feel free to post them as an answer below, and I will be happy to answer them.

A few weeks after I joined Stack Overflow, I was given a project by my manager, Cesar, called “Question Close Reasons.” In short, the project was to create a community-wiki post on Meta Stack Overflow that can serve as a resource to help the community know when to use each close reason when closing questions and to help users who had their questions closed understand the reason behind it.

A new user story

To say I felt ill-equipped to tackle this project was an understatement. How could I, a new employee/user, come up with such an important and valuable resource for the community? I immediately went head-first into researching all of the definitions and guidance across Meta Stack Overflow.

I made a rough draft of the proposal, but I still felt lost. I had never had a question closed. I had never flagged, or voted to close a question. I had never reviewed questions in the queue. So how could I build this resource?

That was my answer: I couldn't – not alone, at least.

This resource belongs to you.

A tool is only useful if it fits the hands who are meant to wield it.

The same had to be true for this project. I am not a typical user of Stack Overflow, so while I had data, I could not truly envision what was needed for the project. So I asked for help – and the community answered.

The project you are about to see has come from months of working side-by-side in direct collaboration with the community. Moderators and regular users gave countless hours of their time and expertise to help define and build this community-wiki post as a canonical repository – but it is still incomplete.

That’s where you all come in.

This wiki belongs to the broader community that has not seen it – until today.

You can find the Question Close Reasons - Definitions and Guidance community-wiki post here.

It’s already 80-90% done, but we need your help to make it even better. While we have worked hard on these definitions and workflows, we recognize that our understanding might not be complete, so like all content on Stack Overflow, we welcome revisions. We hope that this wiki becomes a fixture within the community, but that will only happen if it is moldable to the needs of the users. As such, we hand it and its ownership over to you. This resource will need the community to keep it relevant and up to date so that it may continue to be valuable as definitions change and workflows evolve.

Lastly, while I know it is not customary to include thanks in posts, it feels wrong to not acknowledge the vast amount of support and goodwill that I received from everyone who helped bring this project to fruition. All the success of this project lies solely in their contributions.

What about changing existing close reasons?

The scope of this project is to formalize and clarify existing close reasons. If you have feedback or suggestions on improving or rethinking Stack Overflow community-specific close reasons, you might be interested in the follow-up discussion:

Overhauling our community's closure reasons and guidance

Any questions?

This was a new collaborative project, and I haven't gone into as much detail about the process behind it as I could have. If you have specific questions about the project or the process, please feel free to post them as an answer below, and I will be happy to answer them.

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A few weeks after I joined Stack Overflow, I was given a project by my manager, Cesar, called “Question Close Reasons.” In short, the project was to create a community-wiki post on Meta Stack Overflow that can serve as a resource to help the community know when to use each close reason when closing questions and to help users who had their questions closed understand the reason behind it.

A new user story

To say I felt ill-equipped to tackle this project was an understatement. How could I, a new employee/user, come up with such an important and valuable resource for the community? I immediately went head-first into researching all of the definitions and guidance across Meta Stack Overflow.

I made a rough draft of the proposal, but I still felt lost. I had never had a question closed. I had never flagged, or voted to close a question. I had never reviewed questions in the queue. So how could I build this resource?

That was my answer: I couldn't – not alone, at least.

This resource belongs to you.

A tool is only useful if it fits the hands who are meant to wield it.

The same had to be true for this project. I am not a typical user of Stack Overflow, so while I had data, I could not truly envision what was needed for the project. So I asked for help – and the community answered.

The project you are about to see has come from months of working side-by-side in direct collaboration with the community. Moderators and regular users gave countless hours of their time and expertise to help define and build this community-wiki post as a canonical repository – but it is still incomplete.

That’s where you all come in.

This wiki belongs to the broader community that has not seen it – until today.

You can find the Question Close Reasons - Definitions and Guidance community-wiki post here.

It’s already 80-90% done, but we need your help to make it even better. While we have worked hard on these definitions and workflows, we recognize that our understanding might not be complete, so like all content on Stack Overflow, we welcome revisions. We hope that this wiki becomes a fixture within the community, but that will only happen if it is moldable to the needs of the users. As such, we hand it and its ownership over to you. This resource will need the community to keep it relevant and up to date so that it may continue to be valuable as definitions change and workflows evolve.

Lastly, while I know it is not customary to include thanks in posts, it feels wrong to not acknowledge the vast amount of support and goodwill that I received from everyone who helped bring this project to fruition. All the success of this project lies solely in their contributions.

What about changing existing close reasons?

The scope of this project is to formalize and clarify existing close reasons. If you have feedback or suggestions on improving or rethinking Stack Overflow community-specific close reasons, you might be interested in the follow-up discussion:

Overhauling our community's closure reasons and guidanceOverhauling our community's closure reasons and guidance

Any questions?

This was a new collaborative project, and I haven't gone into as much detail about the process behind it as I could have. If you have specific questions about the project or the process, please feel free to post them as an answer below, and I will be happy to answer them.

A few weeks after I joined Stack Overflow, I was given a project by my manager, Cesar, called “Question Close Reasons.” In short, the project was to create a community-wiki post on Meta Stack Overflow that can serve as a resource to help the community know when to use each close reason when closing questions and to help users who had their questions closed understand the reason behind it.

A new user story

To say I felt ill-equipped to tackle this project was an understatement. How could I, a new employee/user, come up with such an important and valuable resource for the community? I immediately went head-first into researching all of the definitions and guidance across Meta Stack Overflow.

I made a rough draft of the proposal, but I still felt lost. I had never had a question closed. I had never flagged, or voted to close a question. I had never reviewed questions in the queue. So how could I build this resource?

That was my answer: I couldn't – not alone, at least.

This resource belongs to you.

A tool is only useful if it fits the hands who are meant to wield it.

The same had to be true for this project. I am not a typical user of Stack Overflow, so while I had data, I could not truly envision what was needed for the project. So I asked for help – and the community answered.

The project you are about to see has come from months of working side-by-side in direct collaboration with the community. Moderators and regular users gave countless hours of their time and expertise to help define and build this community-wiki post as a canonical repository – but it is still incomplete.

That’s where you all come in.

This wiki belongs to the broader community that has not seen it – until today.

You can find the Question Close Reasons - Definitions and Guidance community-wiki post here.

It’s already 80-90% done, but we need your help to make it even better. While we have worked hard on these definitions and workflows, we recognize that our understanding might not be complete, so like all content on Stack Overflow, we welcome revisions. We hope that this wiki becomes a fixture within the community, but that will only happen if it is moldable to the needs of the users. As such, we hand it and its ownership over to you. This resource will need the community to keep it relevant and up to date so that it may continue to be valuable as definitions change and workflows evolve.

Lastly, while I know it is not customary to include thanks in posts, it feels wrong to not acknowledge the vast amount of support and goodwill that I received from everyone who helped bring this project to fruition. All the success of this project lies solely in their contributions.

What about changing existing close reasons?

The scope of this project is to formalize and clarify existing close reasons. If you have feedback or suggestions on improving or rethinking Stack Overflow community-specific close reasons, you might be interested in the follow-up discussion:

Overhauling our community's closure reasons and guidance

Any questions?

This was a new collaborative project, and I haven't gone into as much detail about the process behind it as I could have. If you have specific questions about the project or the process, please feel free to post them as an answer below, and I will be happy to answer them.

A few weeks after I joined Stack Overflow, I was given a project by my manager, Cesar, called “Question Close Reasons.” In short, the project was to create a community-wiki post on Meta Stack Overflow that can serve as a resource to help the community know when to use each close reason when closing questions and to help users who had their questions closed understand the reason behind it.

A new user story

To say I felt ill-equipped to tackle this project was an understatement. How could I, a new employee/user, come up with such an important and valuable resource for the community? I immediately went head-first into researching all of the definitions and guidance across Meta Stack Overflow.

I made a rough draft of the proposal, but I still felt lost. I had never had a question closed. I had never flagged, or voted to close a question. I had never reviewed questions in the queue. So how could I build this resource?

That was my answer: I couldn't – not alone, at least.

This resource belongs to you.

A tool is only useful if it fits the hands who are meant to wield it.

The same had to be true for this project. I am not a typical user of Stack Overflow, so while I had data, I could not truly envision what was needed for the project. So I asked for help – and the community answered.

The project you are about to see has come from months of working side-by-side in direct collaboration with the community. Moderators and regular users gave countless hours of their time and expertise to help define and build this community-wiki post as a canonical repository – but it is still incomplete.

That’s where you all come in.

This wiki belongs to the broader community that has not seen it – until today.

You can find the Question Close Reasons - Definitions and Guidance community-wiki post here.

It’s already 80-90% done, but we need your help to make it even better. While we have worked hard on these definitions and workflows, we recognize that our understanding might not be complete, so like all content on Stack Overflow, we welcome revisions. We hope that this wiki becomes a fixture within the community, but that will only happen if it is moldable to the needs of the users. As such, we hand it and its ownership over to you. This resource will need the community to keep it relevant and up to date so that it may continue to be valuable as definitions change and workflows evolve.

Lastly, while I know it is not customary to include thanks in posts, it feels wrong to not acknowledge the vast amount of support and goodwill that I received from everyone who helped bring this project to fruition. All the success of this project lies solely in their contributions.

What about changing existing close reasons?

The scope of this project is to formalize and clarify existing close reasons. If you have feedback or suggestions on improving or rethinking Stack Overflow community-specific close reasons, you might be interested in the follow-up discussion:

Overhauling our community's closure reasons and guidance

Any questions?

This was a new collaborative project, and I haven't gone into as much detail about the process behind it as I could have. If you have specific questions about the project or the process, please feel free to post them as an answer below, and I will be happy to answer them.

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