I'm interested in hearing from official moderators if there's an official stance/policy regarding what are appropriate actions to take on questions with bad grammar:
Is it OK to downvote a question with bad grammar, without even attempting to correct the problems through editing? Or should people not vote on questions at all if they're not going to bother to correct them?
Is this really just a matter of opinion?
If there is no official policy/stance, should we have one?
Other Responses from Around Stack Exchange
Just edit:
The best solution when you see poor grammar in a question or an answer, and you feel strongly that you understand the poster's intent, is to edit the question or answer to try to fix the grammatical issues without subverting the poster's intent. This will help all involved, including and especially future visitors to this site with similar questions.
Downvote...sometimes:
To add to what the others have said, there is a big difference between some grammar or spelling problems where the OP doesn't know the language (and cannot be reasonably expected to study a dictionary long enough to get it right), and where the OP just couldn't be bothered to capitalise "I" or include the apostrophe in "it's".
I downvote lazy questions on the spot and make no apology for that.'
Should others downvote my posts for “grammatical” reasons?.
Learn to use proper grammar:
Find your Shift key, learn how to use periods, commas, and semicolons, and practice using proper grammar.
Downvote for whatever reason you want:
People can downvote for whatever reason they want. Some people see this as a valid reason.
Should one downvote for capitalization and punctuation problems in questions?.
Edit to improve, "don't use downvotes as a grammar lesson":
I wouldn't downvote just for lack of capitalization. However, I will certainly downvote if the post is not clear.
As a general rule, I don't see a lot of posts where capitalization is the only issue. Most of the truly problem posts have capitalization problems, syntax problems, formatting problems, and conceptual problems all rolled together.
If you can clean it up, please do. Whether or not it deserves a downvote will depend on context, and is really a judgment call. Don't be afraid to downvote a post that seems lazily written--downvotes are an important feedback mechanism, after all--but don't use downvotes as a grammar lesson, either."
Just edit, no need to downvote:
I'd not downvote such questions; it's the content that matters, even if the packaging is a little shabby.
Besides, languages using pictographic, ideographic or logographic writing systems don't use capitalisation, so perhaps people posting without capital letters are not native English speakers but Japanese, Korean or Chinese.
Why not edit such (otherwise worthy) questions and help the OP with a comment?
Not everyone is a native English speaker, don't downvote:
Poor question grammar. Not all peoples native language is English. In case you see poor grammar just edit the question. No reason for downvote.
Use a grammar checker:
Poor question grammar - This one is easy to fix; run your question through an English grammar and spell checker before posting it.
Just edit and fix it:
To your points of "poor grammar" and "poorly explained question", this is where the community gets to step in and help improve the situation.
- Is the grammar of the question abysmal? Edit it! Give it a good once-over with a spell check, and see if it makes sense to you just by rewriting it in a few places. (Very important: don't edit code or you may lose a lot of context)
If you care about [Stack Overflow], just fix it, don't downvote:
Unfortunately, this probably does happen from time to time. However, most users who care about the site will not downvote these questions if this is the only problem. This is why we have edits. We typically edit questions into shape when we can if that is all that is wrong.