That close reason
Yes, I believe it was condescending and somewhat rude. However there is a mass of questions that fall under a crystal clear criteria:
- They're poorly written.
- They have formatting issues.
- They don't show any research attempts.
- They don't show any attempt at solving the problem.
- They might be salvageable through extensive editing.
Just as importantly:
- They're crystal clear. There is nothing ambiguous about them.
- They're not too broad, there is a clear, although often very (too) specific solution to them.
- They're not an exact duplicate, although combining two or three other questions could easily lead to their solution.
- They're not opinion based. They represent a specific problem.
- They're not a library request, though sometimes they're a library request in disguise.
- They're about programming.
- They're not about a typo.
Here are some example titles, these are all real questions but I did not want to link to them explicitly to not affect their course. I'm pretty confident we've all seen them:
- jQuery parallexUiSlider plugin problem, can't find the bug.
- Why if statement failing in Python?
- Regular expression for telephone not working.
- JS function in jquery bug.
- Button click not working.
- pop is not working properly.
- Java program in course not working.
- This list goes on, but you get the idea.
All these have uninformative titles, formatting problems, about 30 lines of code with no context in the question. They're all likely to never help anyone in the future, but all have crystal clear solutions experts in their respective tags would know.
In a lot of these (and countless more) the OP has no idea what they're doing, they've found code on the internet, mixed it around and got something. They don't understand why that something doesn't work.
Usually, in these questions, the original poster is rather clueless, helping them on the question is only spoon feeding them, and there is little to no chance the question will help anyone in the future.
None of the current close reasons fit these particular questions
So here's my suggestion: Let's have a close vote reason that makes closing these questions easier. I think it can help reduce the signal to noise ratio and make closing these questions easier.
However, like I started, I believe "Lacks Minimal Understanding" is a rather harsh title. Too specific fits a lot of these, but I don't think it nails it.
So:
Please suggest a close reason that fits these questions.
- It should not sound rude like "lacks minimal understanding". It should guide OP.
- It should be clear, that the question is closed because it is poorly written, has formatting issues and is too specific.
- Most of these questions are "debug my code", or "why does this very specific code not work" questions with no future potential, however they're rarely typos.
- These are not just "lacks research" questions. That's just one aspect of them. The other aspects are equally important.
I'd like to think we can come up with something better than "Lacks Minimal Understanding" that still conveys why these questions are problematic so that we can better close them.
bullet lists, bullet lists everywhere.
;
", "you forgot to include<string>
", "you are accessing an array out of bounds", "you are trying to access non-public data via a public interface" etc. On the other hand, "lacks minimal understanding" isn't a great alternative. I would favour re-phrasing and/or extending the "typo error" close reason to something closer in spirit to the old "too localised" one, i.e. something that emphasizes the uselessness of the question and its possible answer to other users of the site.