How should I review questions in the Staging Ground and when should I use which option?
This question is supposed to provide clarifications for reviewers and help with writing reviews.
How should I review questions in the Staging Ground and when should I use which option?
This question is supposed to provide clarifications for reviewers and help with writing reviews.
The goal of the Staging Ground is to improve the overall quality of new questions on the main site, by providing a place to fix those questions before publishing them on the main site.
The Staging Ground is a place where you can, and should, try to work together with askers to improve their questions. It empowers you to triage questions, offer detailed feedback on issues with the question while not cluttering the main site; it avoids discouraging the OP with the stigma of a "closed" banner on a fixable question. (In principle, a closed question on the main site is supposed to be edited by the OP and nominated for reopening. But not all questions can be fixed, and in practice, users often perceive question closure as a rejection and don't edit the question.)
When you read a question in the Staging Ground, your first task is triage. New questions basically fall into the following categories:
Can't be fixed to accept new answers (either a duplicate or off-topic; would be closed on the main site without an expectation of being re-opened). Currently there is no special facility to publish duplicate questions and then close them as duplicates, even if they would be good signposts.
Can be fixed, requiring information or edits that only the OP can provide. This roughly corresponds to "Needs details or clarity", "Not written in English", "Needs more focus" and "Needs debugging details" closure reasons. (When a question is not written in English, of course, it's not necessarily known whether OP can translate it, nor whether the translated version would be on topic.)
Can be fixed by someone else - it just has the wrong tags, or should be edited to remove noise, or something else along those lines.
Meets all standards and can be published as-is.
Most important changes need to be done by the asker. If there is any improvement to be made to a question by the asker, write a comment saying what is missing or should be changed and use the "Requires Major Changes" option. This option should be used if there are any changes the author should make before their question can be published. You can use a comment template and possibly change it to fit your needs if that helps. Using the "Requires Major Changes" option tells the author that they need to edit their question and add these details in order for their question to be published and answered, makes sure it isn't published automatically, and marks it as reviewed (until the author submits it for Re-Evaluation).
If you are writing a comment asking the author to change something, consider using this option.
Only use the "Vote as off-topic" option if you think the question cannot be changed to be on-topic without fundamentally changing what the question is about. This includes questions that are not about programming (e.g. if the question should be asked on a different Stack Exchange site) or opinion-based questions. When using this option, make sure the asker understands why their question is off-topic. If the close-reason doesn't tell them in an obvious way, please write a comment explaining why the question is off-topic on Stack Overflow. For example, if the question is about general computing, hardware or software and not about programming, you can write a comment telling them about Super User.
Don't use this option for "bad questions". Instead, tell the asker what problems their question has/what they have to change and use "Requires Major Changes". For example, if a question "lacks focus", asks multiple questions in one post, or is missing an MRE (or proper specification for a how-to question), you should use "Requires Major Changes" instead.
If you might be able to identify a duplicate in the Staging Ground, please look for one and mark the question as such. A question being correctly marked as a duplicate and the author's problem being solved by that is an ideal outcome. If you think the author may need additional information to understand why their question is a duplicate (for example the question isn't exactly the same but the answers solve their problem or they should consider multiple answers of the linked question), you can write an additional comment explaining that. If a question is a duplicate of a combination of other questions, you can mark it as a duplicate of one of these questions and write a comment linking to the other questions.
If the author asked the same question multiple times, you can mark their question as a duplicate of their other question and tell them they shouldn't ask the same question multiple times if applicable.
The "Conditionally approve pending minor edits" option allows the author to publish the question as soon as they make an edit to their question (or it is automatically published if the author doesn't edit it within 24h), no matter how meaningless that edit is. Only use this option if you think the question is ok to be published as-is but there is something where the author could still improve it.
If the author needs to make a change (even if it is just a small change) before the question can be published, use the "Requires Major Changes" option instead.
If you can improve anything about the question by yourself (e.g. the title, tags, spelling, grammar/wording, clarity, etc) without changing the meaning of that question, just edit it. You can still submit your review or skip the question after submitting your edit. If you want to make an edit without submitting a review (or submitting a review after the edit), you can use the "Save without review" option.
Don't answer questions in the Staging Ground. If you can find a duplicate target, vote to mark the question as a duplicate (if you immediately know the answer by looking at the question, that's an indicator that it has probably been asked before). If you think you might know the answer but the question doesn't have sufficient information to be properly answerable (e.g. it would just be a guess), ask the author to provide the necessary clarifications. If the question properly provides all details necessary and has no other issues, you can approve it (you can make a polishing edit, e.g. improving the title and tags if applicable) and write an answer.
If a question satisfies all the following requirements, you can approve it:
If applicable, you might want to polish the question (e.g. improve the title/tags, remove clutter, etc) by editing before approving the question.
Questions don't need to be perfect to be approved and published to the main site. Just improve them as best as you can and if you think it's a good Stack Overflow question, you can approve it. Don't worry about some of the questions you approved being closed. If subject-matter experts knowing more than you about the topic decide the question is still off-topic, that's fine. You cannot prevent all closures but you can improve questions and increase the chance of questions staying open as good as you can.
If you want to discuss reviewing in the Staging Ground or need help with it, you can join the Staging Ground Discussion/Support chatroom or create a post on Meta Stack Overflow if applicable. Of course, if you don't know what to do with some question, you can always skip it.
i
with j
, that's a typo. Most of the time.
Commented
Oct 18 at 21:50
Please make sure to **select "Require Major changes" status** for questions where OP must change something in order to have a question that meets the site's standards. Questions marked "Conditionally approve with Minor edits", or not marked, may be published automatically even if the OP doesn't change anything. The goal here is to avoid questions being downvoted and closed after they're published. See the [practical guide to SG reviews on the Meta site](//meta.stackoverflow.com/q/431934) for details.
Commented
Nov 12 at 5:06