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This question was asked and, somewhat predictably, closed:

The question (reproduced at the bottom in case of deletion), to my mind, was horrible (though most of that was due to the terrible spelling, but that's salvageable, and had I considered the question sufficiently worth asking, I would have corrected the spelling and grammar happily enough) and was closed put on hold as 'too broad.'

In the comments, though, I had a discussion with another user (it's public information, and visible by following the link, but I'll not name that user since it serves no purpose to do so):

other-user-1: These broad questions can often end up being very usefull for beginners that are new to web development.

other-user-2: Exactly - how are people supposed to learn about modern web design if they have no idea what to even Google or how things work? The only place to start is with a broad question. Instead of making StackOverflow a welcoming place for a new user, they got 5 down votes and their question locked.

me: "how are people supposed to learn about <subject>" - elsewhere, via any means they like. This isn't a beginners, or basics, site: it's a site for 'professional and enthusiasts.

other-user-2: you have seen the front page right? People get help for all kinds of basic questions. Looking at your history, half of the questions you asked when you were starting out could be classified as beginners questions. If you had gotten all of those closed and down voted instead of answered - would you have stuck around?

me: there's that, certainly; and I was lucky enough to get here when the criteria was different, and those answering were perhaps more tolerant. But this question remains, I think, too open-ended (rather than simply 'basic' or 'beginner') to be objectively answered.

other-user-2: but it was objectively answered. There are tool chains that modern front end developers use and this was the answer that was provided and it was helpful to the person that asked. This is a prime example why so many people have stopped answering questions - we try and help and then get told that the question wasn't good enough to deserve an answer. It's just gotten ridiculous and your first comment is everything that is wrong with the StackOverflow mod squad, you don't even know what this site is for anymore.

I haven't flagged the comments of that other user because I don't feel they're offensive or problematic (though the 'StackOverflow mod squad' part sort of skirts that a little closely, but I'm perhaps being too sensitive; and obviously they're 'noisy' and, now, probably 'obsolete').

He certainly raises a valid point, though, in that my early questions were genuinely basic and, had they been downvoted to oblivion and closed by others, I probably wouldn't have stuck around.

My question, I suppose, is: is this user right? Are we becoming too stringent, too abrasive, too intolerant? Or, less of the 'we': am I being too harsh? Is there any way this question could have been salvaged?

Influences on my current behaviour would include:


Reproduced question, for posterity:

How do web designers do complicated CSS coding?

I am new to web designing.I am in a habbit of viewing the source code of web pages by clicking right click>view page source and what i see is CSS files flooded with vast and complicated CSS code.I have learnt CSS and CSS 3. But i often think that How could designers code such vast CSS files? How much time it takes? Do they do all the coding by typing themselves or generate the code with the help of some program. Plz do reply me.

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    Haven't this discussion happened a dozen times over? About hostility, being friendlier to noobs, etc.? Commented Jun 30, 2014 at 18:59
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    It's possibly happened before, but this time there seems to be a valid point: my behaviour now is, potentially, hypocritical to the reception I would have hoped for when I first became a member. And, honestly, while it might be irritating if the answers don't change, it feels that reflection on our conduct is something that should be ongoing. Though, if you feel it's a discussion that's not worth having voting to close would be appropriate. Commented Jun 30, 2014 at 19:02
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    Subjective: I won´t say if the current rules are good or bad, but I´m getting the impression that (for some people) rules are the main reason why this site exists. So yes, somehow he´s right... (and somehow I´m becoming that way too, don´t know why. Just thinking if a close reason applies first before thinking about answers. That´s not positive.)
    – deviantfan
    Commented Jun 30, 2014 at 19:02
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    Whether you consider it hypocritical or not, I think the downvotes on the question would agree that this type of question is not welcome on SO. Plus I really don't even see how that's a "beginner's question" when there really isn't even a definitive question being asked. Commented Jun 30, 2014 at 19:05
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    The answer seems the same and is what you already know -- things that worked for SO in 2008 and 2009 do not work for SO in 2014. Without going into repetitive conversation, I feel like if there's a demand for a different type of response, maybe that energy should go to a different type of website. Commented Jun 30, 2014 at 19:06
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    In response to other-user-two's last comment: it didn't get objectively answered. It got answered with a bunch of tool recommendations, which we don't do because they'll be obsolete in eight months, and then the new ones will be obsolete a month and a half after that. Even if the question were edited to be less broad, the "toolchain recommendation" is the only direction it's likely to be able to go.
    – jscs
    Commented Jun 30, 2014 at 19:18
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    A good move, @DavidThomas.
    – jscs
    Commented Jun 30, 2014 at 19:25
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    Not sure I'd be critical of the misspellings and grammar. The OP seems like they're learning English as a second language to me.. Commented Jul 1, 2014 at 3:35
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    I think this question could have been answered with a useful answer. Sadly this is not true of any of the answers given.
    – Hogan
    Commented Jul 1, 2014 at 3:59
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    @Hogan what do you mean by an "useful" answer? The question is way too open-ended. David, don't be taken by commenters' opinions -- read the question again and ask yourself "Does this fit in the current Stack Overflow scope?" The answer is clearly no. Commented Jul 1, 2014 at 4:02
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    @FabrícioMatté - A short essay could be written describing the design and development process. How programmers create complexity with simplicity. Modular design, step wise development, code-test-iterate, etc. Tie it all up with some practical examples of how this can be applied to front-end development and CSS in particular. Probably better if the question was on the programmers site.
    – Hogan
    Commented Jul 1, 2014 at 4:13
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    @Hogan seems like that would be the epitome of the Too Broad close reason, letting alone that gets outdated fast -- task runners, preprocessors and methodologies like BEM, SMACSS, atomic design are born and forked on a daily basis. Commented Jul 1, 2014 at 4:18
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    Your question is a great summary of how the site has become unfriendly to new programmers. The answers illustrate perfectly why this is the case: people here don't seem to want the site to be friendly to new programmers any more.
    – Warren Dew
    Commented Jul 2, 2014 at 5:00
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    @Trilarion We could call it SemicolonExpected.SE or CompileError.SE...
    – dav_i
    Commented Jul 2, 2014 at 11:41
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    @WarrenDew: Friendliness is entirely orthogonal to the issue at hand. You seem to be suggesting that we should be "friendly" and that being "friendly" means we should accept any question regardless of how well or poorly it fits the site's formatting. That is, of course, nonsensical! Commented Jul 2, 2014 at 17:17

10 Answers 10

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There are plenty of places on the internet where people can go to ask programming questions without being held to a standard. SO is one of the few places that's not like that. It was built like that from the start, very intentionally. It's the prime reason for so much of its success, that it has narrowed the scope of what types of questions it allows to just those to which are likely to generate quality content.

Some people don't like that. That's fine. SO isn't the entire internet.

Removing the site's standards and allowing these types of questions which have been shown over the site's history to generate low quality content might encourage some people to come/stay that wouldn't otherwise be members here. Of course, it would also drive away a huge portion of the expert answerers that have generated the site's success. Do you think that that's worth it?

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    @DavidThomas Low quality questions need to be not answered, and the people that post them should be made aware of the fact that the questions are not currently acceptable, and have some idea of why (so they can fix the problem). You can do that without being hostile, and generally the site is actually pretty good about discouraging hostile behavior. Of course, some people assume that any action other than answering their question is hostile, regardless of the manner with which you go about not answering their question. You seem to have run into such a user.
    – Servy
    Commented Jun 30, 2014 at 19:24
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    "Low quality questions need to be not answered" This needs to go in a banner somewhere for everyone to see. Commented Jun 30, 2014 at 19:48
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    "Low quality questions need to be not answered" - who deems a question to be of low quality though? To a hardened coder with years of experience I am sure many questions seem low quality. To those of us that are still earning our stripes, the question(s) don't seem of lesser quality.
    – Homer_J
    Commented Jul 1, 2014 at 18:31
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    @Homer_J It's not about how advanced a question is, it's about how the question is being asked. Questions with a small snippet of code that can be run and shows a specific problem, along with an explanation of the problem, are higher-quality than "I want to do X. Give me the code."
    – Eric Finn
    Commented Jul 1, 2014 at 18:48
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    @Homer_J Question quality and question difficulty are orthogonal concepts. Whether or not a question is of low quality has nothing to do with how hard it is for a programmer to solve, or how much programming experience the reader has. It has everything to do with how clear the question is, the magnitude of its scope, whether its on topic, and so on. New programmers are just as capable of asking quality questions as anyone, just as experienced programmers may fail to ask quality questions.
    – Servy
    Commented Jul 1, 2014 at 19:29
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    "Low quality questions need to be not answered" - For all the talk about what made the site popular, this is the genesis of what will make the site unpopular. The answer to David Thomas' dilemma i simple: you either care about the rules/the site or you care about people. Are you here to enforce rules or build a website? or are you here because you want to help people? Do you emphasize with them; do you feel their confusion&frustration; do you want to make their day better? Any time you find yourself thinking about something other than helping people first, you're becoming part of the problem
    – alcalde
    Commented Jul 2, 2014 at 5:01
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    @alcalde The reason this site has become as successful as it has is a combination of people and rules. Get rid of the rules and the right kind of people (the ones who know something) will leave. After that you can 'help' gimme-da-codez type askers to your heart's content, but the site will be dead for all practical purposes and intents.
    – dandan78
    Commented Jul 2, 2014 at 8:14
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    Optimizing for pearls...: "We feel that the world is awash in questions, but not answers. Answers are the real unit of work in any Q&A system. Therefore, the only logical thing to do is to maximize the happiness and enjoyment of answerers. If this means aggressively downvoting or closing unworthy and uninteresting questions, so be it. Without a community of people willing to answer questions, it really doesn’t matter if there are questions at all, does it?"
    – gnat
    Commented Jul 2, 2014 at 10:54
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    "It was built like that from the start, very intentionally." Seems not true to me. Judging by all the highly popular very broad and extremely upvoted but nowadays absolutely closable questions from 2009-2012 I would say SO started much more relaxed than it is nowadays. With the rest I agree. Commented Jul 2, 2014 at 10:55
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    @r3wt You're incorrectly equating low quality questions with beginner questions. Beginner questions are fine if they are high quality questions. Low quality questions are not acceptable regardless of how technically easy or hard they are to solve.
    – Servy
    Commented Jul 2, 2014 at 13:36
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    @alcalde So the only people that matter are the people that come here, spent no time or effort researching their problem, don't bother to take the time to craft a well written question, have no consideration for the rules, and have no respect for the community or the other people in it? The people that take considerable time out of their lives to enrich the programming community with quality content aren't people? They don't matter? Sorry, but no. It's impossible to please everyone. Sites have a target audience. SO makes an effort to care about the latter group, not the former.
    – Servy
    Commented Jul 2, 2014 at 13:38
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    @trlkly But to answer your last question of why people will come to SO, they'll come here because here is where they can come to get a quality answer to their question. If they go to other sites odds are their question will be welcomed regardless of how awful it is. It's unlikely to get an answer, and even less likely to get a quality answer, but they won't tell you your question has problems. Given a choice between a site that forces you to improve your question to their standard to get an answer, and a site that isn't capable of answering it at all, which do you think people will choose?
    – Servy
    Commented Jul 2, 2014 at 13:45
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    @trlkly The other user asked how he could do [thing] where [thing] is not something in the site's scope, namely how to learn about a topic from scratch. He was told, quite correctly, that that is not what SO if for, and that [thing] is something that should be done using other means. When you have specific questions while in the process of learning [thing] it could be entirely appropriate to come to SO and ask that specific question. Politely telling someone that what they want is outside of the site's scope is being helpful, not hostile. SO can't do everything for everyone.
    – Servy
    Commented Jul 2, 2014 at 14:25
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    Downvoting a question on SO isn't like giving negative feedback on other sites. It doesn't damage your reputation (unless you do it to extinction). Nobody sees the negative vote on your profile except you. Take it as a teachable moment and move on. Commented Jul 2, 2014 at 20:41
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    Answering valid questions for a newbie doesn't mean it's a low quality answer.
    – OneOfOne
    Commented Jul 3, 2014 at 11:15
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Exactly - how are people supposed to learn about modern web design if they have no idea what to even Google or how things work? The only place to start is with a broad question. Instead of making StackOverflow a welcoming place for a new user, they got 5 down votes and their question locked.

This presupposition that Stack Overflow must be that place where newbies can go, at the expense of any other concern, is prevalent and nonsensical.

Other websites do exist, with different goals and different paradigms. That question did not belong on this one.

Closing the question was absolutely the right thing to do!

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    disagree completely.
    – r3wt
    Commented Jul 2, 2014 at 21:51
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    @r3wt: How's that? You think this website should serve the purpose of any possible newcomer to the industry, no matter what? How could that position be defensible even by the simplest tenets of logic? Commented Jul 3, 2014 at 2:58
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    No i don't think it should be for every new comer, only those willing to dedicate themselves. My argument is for the allowance of reputable members( 10k +) to write "tutorial" questions to curtail the most basic of questions which get asked here.I absolutely think questions similar, but not identical could be acceptable in specific cases. You may have went to college, and i respect that. I didn't even graduate highschool i was expelled, and i taught myself every single thing i know, with small things being picked up here and there. It would have been so much easier if i had some reliable(cont)
    – r3wt
    Commented Jul 3, 2014 at 3:56
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    @r3wt: Why don't you think that this can be achieved elsewhere? This is a Q&A. Why should it also be something else? The things you talk about can be achieved with a separate system, without ruining this one. Are you in fact suggesting that beginner programmers are only capable of visiting Stack Overflow, and not other websites? They're not going to get very far at all if that is so. Commented Jul 3, 2014 at 4:03
  • (cont) tutorials on a great site like stackoverflow to teach me the ropes of web development. Instead, i learned about 500+ bad habits in php and other caveats and gotchas in multiple languages because the code in the wild out there sucks or is out of date. look at the pathetic quality of php and javascript questions we see as a result of every self learner following the same 10 year old tutorials
    – r3wt
    Commented Jul 3, 2014 at 4:05
  • well yes, they need to familiarize theirselves with the manual obviously. Problem is who's going to tell them that? a site like this or some random blog with malicious code continuing the problem of ill equipped people in the workforce. People are learnin to copy and paste code together and many never bother with anything other than that.
    – r3wt
    Commented Jul 3, 2014 at 4:13
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    @r3wt: It seems like you've missed my point entirely, I'm afraid. Commented Jul 3, 2014 at 9:09
  • @LightnessRacesinOrbit: Some people, like myself, are never going to be in "the industry". They may use programming only tangentially or even just for fun and are not served by elitism (who is?). To this day, StackOverflow also caters to these enthusiast programmers.
    – sigma
    Commented Jul 3, 2014 at 14:08
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    @sigma: I never claimed otherwise. I wish you people would stop bandying around the word "elitism" willy-nilly. At least learn what it means. I've stated several times now that expertise level has absolutely nothing to do with this problem, so I simply can't fathom why you keep bringing it up. Commented Jul 3, 2014 at 15:10
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    @r3wt: There are very reputable sites that do end-to-end tutorials on many programming topics (especially in web dev). There are bloggers you can subscribe to that debate whether you should solve contentious issue X by doing A, B, or C. There's excellent books on nearly any programming topic you can think of, many of them freely available in digital form (see Why's guide to Ruby). I simply don't understand this selfish stance of "if StackOverflow was a tutorial site, I would have picked up programming much more easily: therefore StackOverflow should be a tutorial site". Commented Jul 12, 2014 at 8:35
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I think the policy is well discussed on meta, but you seem concerned about the hypocrisy in particular.

The reason for kicking the ladder away, is that when SO first started it was primarily trying to gather a community around an idea. It tolerated some things not to the point of its idea, such as over-broad questions and outright tomfoolery.

Now SO is trying to maintain a community around its idea (and advance the idea itself, of course). It is not desperate for new users, neither is it short of experts who hang around (and answer questions) just because they like it.

So, while there have been various attempts to prevent people being unpleasant to new users, downvoting and closing questions that fail the current standards isn't considered a kind of unpleasantness worth avoiding. Some people think even the existing attempts go too far.

I think the expected outcome is that if you're not a programmer (yet), then you will be driven off Stack Overflow. However, it's now so strongly embedded in Google results that you're not going to go away and forget about it. It is hoped that you'll return once you are a programmer and your questions are suitable for the site.

People have questioned whether this is strategically sound (all over meta), or whether sticking to mission will backfire by driving away both new and existing users. But the source of the inconsistency is a change of tactics in response to changed circumstances. I don't think it's reasonable to accuse you of hypocrisy just because you started hanging out here at a time when SO was, in effect, on a recruitment drive. You got a special offer that's no longer available, it doesn't follow that you must advocate for the same special offer to be continued forever. The special offer was, you're allowed to ask questions now considered bad, in the hope that you'll provide good answers and ask other questions that are good.

If you feel that your old questions are weak, and would be closed and deleted if asked today, you could consider deleting them. This would be in line with SO's current policy on what questions are desirable, and would (rightly or wrongly) have the side-effect of leaving your site history in a state where you won't be criticised for contributing rubbish ;-) I've never deleted a question of my own though, I'm not sure of the practical details. If it would take mod intervention to achieve then it might not be worth the effort.

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    I wish SO would just be kind of a marketplace for questions and answers with perfect match-making. Then there would never be any reason for any unpleasantness against whomorever. One would just ignore what one doesn't want to see. Of course there isn't perfect filtering and I guess this is the reason why all these debates occur. Commented Jul 2, 2014 at 14:33
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    @Trilarion: right, and if we had that then we wouldn't need different SE sites for different subjects. Commented Jul 2, 2014 at 15:12
  • I don't understand why they haven't already been closed. I've seen many questions closed as having historical significance but not a fit for the site as it is. The only reason I assume they are still there is that they were eventually edited into good questions. If they are bad questions, vote to close 'em.
    – trlkly
    Commented Jul 2, 2014 at 16:07
  • @SteveJessop Yes, that is the heart of Stackexchange: Q&A and nothing else. Not rules about who can do what or gets which badge or is closed or whatever. This is just to make it all work somehow. That's why all this trying to base the decisions and directions on first principles will never work completely. It's always a bit arbitrary what SO is and what it isn't. Commented Jul 2, 2014 at 20:28
  • @trlkly: I had a very brief look at the questioner's oldest questions. They seem basic, of the form "how do I do this extremely commonplace thing that's obvious to anyone who knows the language?". They don't have the same problem as the newbie question under discussion here, which was of the form "wow, I'm impressed by programming, how does anyone manage that?". Actually I think this questioner's early questions are acceptable (if not priceless), since "too easy, rtfm" isn't a close reason, but some might have argued for "lacks basic understanding" when that still existed. Commented Jul 3, 2014 at 7:48
  • Practical details are: you can't delete a question yourself if it got (upvoted?) answers and you can't delete an answer yourself if it was the accepted one. So it does indeed involve mod intervention - don't bug the mods for such things. Unless your post is extremely poor, then you could flag it for closing.
    – Lundin
    Commented Jul 3, 2014 at 9:49
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    So, when is one considered to be "a programmer"? Surely this cannot be circularly defined as "whenever your questions are suitable for the site"? Stack Overflow is a question and answer site for professional and enthusiast programmers, aiming to provide detailed answers to every question about programming as it currently reads.
    – sigma
    Commented Jul 3, 2014 at 13:53
  • @sigma: yeah, "every question about programming" is a simplification. Other material elsewhere restricts that, for example stackoverflow.com/help/dont-ask doesn't say "you can ask anything provided it's about programming". And I agree that "a programmer" is not circularly defined. I think it's a meaningful English word, albeit somewhat subjective with a fuzzy edge. I think "for programmers" could be clarified: questions should seek solutions to problems with programming that you face in your capacity as a programmer. Simply being a programmer is necessary but not sufficient. Commented Jul 3, 2014 at 14:32
  • ... so the closest I come to a straight answer to your question "when is one considered to be a programmer?" is to say, "when one is programming" ;-) Personally I'm happy for questioners to be very new to programming, just as long as they're far enough along to ask a specific question about what they're doing. The question under debate, "how to write a lot of CSS" would work better as, "I need to write a lot of CSS, are there better ways to manage it than just to type a lot?", but still faces the "takes a book to answer" barrier, which applies to new and old programmers equally. Commented Jul 3, 2014 at 14:35
  • By contrast, consider for example that on the aviation SO there are a reasonable number of questions about aviation, but that are asked by curious non-aviators who don't face a problem within aviation. "Ask an airline pilot". Physics has a lot of "Ask a physicist" questions, mostly answered by John Rennie, their Skeet-equivalent. I don't know if this will continue forever, but SO is explicitly not for that purpose (might be OK on programmers, I don't hang out there). The question came across to me as curiosity, not a request needed to solve a problem faced by the questioner. Commented Jul 3, 2014 at 14:41
  • @SteveJessop: I suspected they wouldn't actually be bad questions. Thanks for confirming. I didn't realize I could check myself.
    – trlkly
    Commented Jul 3, 2014 at 16:09
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TL;DR version:
Rather than give flippant responses, let's create a meta question that deals with this common complaint about broad beginner questions and link to it when people complain. We don't need to constantly be redoubling effort, yet we also don't want to leave complaints completely unanswered. Either can lead to a sub-community of dissatisfied users, which can break even the best sites.

Longer version:
I don't think the top answer is sufficient, because I don't think things should be the same as they are. David Thomas did make a mistake, I think. Not so much in closing the question, which I agree is the best we can do under the current system, but in how he first responded to the complaints. The response was not exactly hostile, but it wasn't friendly either. The best way I can describe it is "flippant." And I know it's hard to be friendly when someone else is being provocative and when space is at a premium (see some of my comments in this very thread), but I think it's crucial to the well being of the site.

Complaints about how beginners can learn about broad subjects well enough to actually ask a "good question" are something that need to be addressed. The way that would fit well on this site, I think, is to have a meta question that addresses this oft-heard complaint. It can be well crafted to be as inoffensive as possible, and possibly include links that will give people another place to go to ask such broad questions, leaving them feeling helped rather than turned away.

Then, rather than risk offending people by trying to shoehorn a good response in the short amount of space as a comment, you can just redirect people there, with maybe something like "We hear your complaints, and we've addressed that topic here. If you think the question hasn't been adequately answered, feel free to leave a comment there. Comments on questions aren't really for complaints about the site as a whole."

I've seen so many sites fail at dealing with legitimate complaints. They wind up getting frustrated, evolving from helpful, to annoyed, to flippant, and, finally, to hostile. At some point they anger a large enough group of people that, eventually, the wrong person gets angry, one who chooses to fight back. One site I know of was hacked twice and had its source of revenue cut off twice and wound up with it community severely fractured into two spinoff sites because of it.

I realize you can't make absolutely everyone happy, but that's not an excuse not to try and improve relations with the disgruntled. I'm starting to see the basic warning signs of a fractured community here (as all these complainers clearly have been around long enough to have comment privileges, and I've even seem some with pretty high reps), and that needs to be nipped in the bud. To not do so because you can't please everyone is just allowing the perfect to be the enemy of the good.

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Part 1: The "too broad" close reason says it all:

There are either too many possible answers, or good answers would be too long for this format. Please add details to narrow the answer set or to isolate an issue that can be answered in a few paragraphs.

Too many answers, too long answers. You would have to write a whole tutorial. Most people here do not want to do that.

The concentration on detailed, narrowed questions which can be answered in a reasonable format implies that you must have a certain level of knowledge about the subject before. That's just a consequence of us not wanting to write tutorials.

In the beginning of SO (2009-2012) this was different and the broad questions from this time are still (partly) helpful. Just have a look at the high number of views and upvotes and you see that there is a market for this.

There are plenty of other places on the internet where people can get basic information. The only reasonable thing we can do is occasionally giving some advice how to find them when closing a question. I do it sometimes in a comment - nothing bad about a friendly word if you have the time for it.

But the only other alternative would be for us to start writing tutorials and I don't think we want that nor that we are necessarily good at that.

Part 2: How could this question have been salvaged (by the questioner)?

It's actually not that difficult:

How to efficiently code feature XXX in CSS?

Simply ask for a specific thing and (and define what you mean by efficient) and you should get good answers. Even the simple fact that asking a non too broad question is not that difficult should be seen as a sure sign that the original question can stay closed.

0

A good tag description, like the java one should include the answer to this kind of basic how-do-I-get-started question, or links to tutorials that would give the information, and educate the questioner.

I absolutely agree with those who would like to see this question answered on SO - but the appropriate place already exists, and it is the tag description, not a question.

Actually, I think the tag descriptions are a much underrated feature of SO - where else on the internet can you go, and get summaries of such a wide range of technical topics, with links to tutorials? I have learned a lot by reading SO tag descriptions, and following their links.

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  • Unfortunately, I don't think people actually read those.
    – cimmanon
    Commented Jul 2, 2014 at 12:54
  • Upvoting because the reasoning is good, even if you disagree with it. It's not a "bad answer" that deserves to be downvoted into oblivion.
    – trlkly
    Commented Jul 2, 2014 at 16:04
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    @trlkly Speaking of questions that get answered repeatedly on meta, voting on meta is different than voting on SO. Here a downvote doesn't imply poor quality, it just means the person disagrees with you. Commented Jul 2, 2014 at 17:16
  • @LeonNewswanger It also doesn't hurt your rep in any way, something I figured out having written an answer myself. Still, I don't like that it goes gray when it gets low enough, as it makes it hard to read. There are replies to me on RoyHB's comment that are nearly impossible to read. So I have an interest in keeping questions above whatever threshold makes them go gray.
    – trlkly
    Commented Jul 2, 2014 at 19:00
  • @cimmanon - yes, I agree. But that is only because nothing on SO question help points you to tag descriptions as a help source. Nobody has really explained why they disagree with this comment - do people not like the tag descriptions? would they like to see the very helpful content of the java one deleted? Commented Jul 3, 2014 at 7:09
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It isn't a good question as it is actually stated, and I don't see the way to change it without dramatically changing it, which means writing it from scratch.

There are 2 separate issues, which are interesting and deserve interesting questions:

  1. How to setup the environment in which many separate CSS files will be merged into single one, and in the same time being able to do development. The answer would be, naturally, using @import directive, but also configuring the CSS integrator/compressor into build process.

  2. It's in danger to be opinion-based, depending how it is written, but it's about working with multiple CSS files and organizing them into modules. Some frameworks provide some modularization patterns and some standards about it, but not always they are very strict.

As for that question, I'd close it with suggestions to the OP, how could that question be formed to provide potentially valuable answers.

-1

The "too broad" close reason reads:

There are either too many possible answers, or good answers would be too long for this format. Please add details to narrow the answer set or to isolate an issue that can be answered in a few paragraphs.

So in what way does this question fall under that? Are there too many possible answers, or would good answers be too long?

If there are too many good answers, along what lines would some of them be? Bill's and nicholaschris's answers seem to just about cover everything that could be usefully said to answer this question.

If good answers would be too long, then for what reason are Bill and nicholaschris's answers not "good"?

Very often when people talk about StackOverflow being "strict", it really seems like the exact opposite. Mentally expanding close reasons to cover more than they actually should is the opposite of strictness, it's a form of laxity in applying the rules.

-2

I haven't (and won't) look at your early questions so you have to decide for yourself if you would have closed them today. If so, delete them or fix them.

I do the same every once in a while. Recently I worked through my regex answers to improve the ones that could be improved and deleted some that could not.

So, when other people claim that you did ask bad questions in the past and you think they are right, then the right thing to do is not allow more bad questions, but improve your part of the problem by fixing what you did wrong but did survive anyway.

It was correct closing that question and if I had a question like this in my history, I'd delete it instantly.

-10

If the following hasn't already been suggested by others I'd be surprised, but...

In my opinion, the thing to do is to set up another Stack Exchange forum that is specifically dedicated to these kinds of too-general, often newbish questions. And maybe even a way to close a topic on SO and automatically create a link to a new topic on Stack Whatever.

  • There are undoubtedly people who enjoy helping others with these kinds of issues who would support the new forum.

  • One of the best ways to learn is to teach others - the people who asked a question on the Stack Whatever forum (or who's question had been closed here and referred to there) might tend hang around and to help others as their own knowledge grew.

  • The worst thing that could happen to Stack Exchange would be for it to grow a reputation as a place where people risk low-level humiliation or embarrassment if their question doesn't fit or if their English language skills are 'developing' rather than 'fluent'.

  • Closing topics is perfectly legitimate when people fail to do any meaningful research, or exhibit simple laziness or really poor preparation. But I tend to agree that closing topics just because a person isn't sure quite what to ask can be quite harsh.

There may be such a Stack Exchange forum already but if so I don't know about it.

Thanks to David for raising the issue and being concerned about it.

16
  • 6
    Mo, the solution is not to create another SE site that tolerates poor quality questions. There are dozens (if not hundreds) of other sites on the internet that do that already. SE has been specifically designed and implemented to not be one of those other sites.
    – Ken White
    Commented Jul 2, 2014 at 0:12
  • 8
    Two things. 1st, Stack Overflow is not a forum, it's a Q&A site. 2nd, people have suggested creating a new Stack Overflow for beginners... multiple times...and each request has been rejected by the community.
    – user456814
    Commented Jul 2, 2014 at 3:53
  • 2
    @KenWhite This is part of the problem. Stop thinking about the questions/the site. Think about people. This is like doctors and health insurance companies who become obsessed with policies or paperwork or billing or symptoms. These are real live people with confusion, concern and frustration. You shouldn't be here to create a certain type of website; you should be here to help people. You should want to be putting smiles on people's faces, not building a gated community where undesirables are kicked out.
    – alcalde
    Commented Jul 2, 2014 at 5:04
  • 6
    ok, enough with the downvotes. I wasn't aware of the history and I didn't know that the word forum is taboo. I now understand the views expressed. This was my first ever post to meta. I now understand how someone who is a Stack Overflow newb feels when they post a less than adequate question or answer that is deemed 'inappropriate'.
    – RoyHB
    Commented Jul 2, 2014 at 5:17
  • @RoyHB Just a note: downvotes on Meta are very different from downvotes on the SO main site. Downvoting on Meta simply means "I don't agree with you", whereas on SO main, it means something else entirely :-) Commented Jul 2, 2014 at 10:16
  • @alcalde: Stop thinking about the people. You can not achieve world peace by creating SE sites. We have a site, a goal, and we work to achieve that. Other people having other goals can go and achieve that too, just elsewhere.
    – PlasmaHH
    Commented Jul 2, 2014 at 10:26
  • 2
    \o/ yay for crapexchange.com
    – PeeHaa
    Commented Jul 2, 2014 at 10:31
  • 2
    You should never take downvotes personally, they are not an attack on your intelligence or character.
    – Amicable
    Commented Jul 2, 2014 at 10:38
  • 3
    @alcalde That does not work. Letting people not knowing basic math into a university to learn advanced physics, or letting anyone work as a doctor is not a good idea. This is not elitism. This site has a goal. It aims to be a quality Q&A site. People crying all the time don't understand this simple statement. There are other sites where you can ask any kind of question. If SO is not the place for you, why not go there, instead of trying to change SO?
    – kapa
    Commented Jul 2, 2014 at 10:41
  • 1
    @alcalde: SO (and the rest of SE) are not about people. They're about knowledge. This is not a personal "let's teach everyone to program" or "let's all be friends and get along" site. If you don't understand that, that's part of the problem. You need to go to the tour page and the Coding Horror pages and the SE blog posts that detail the overall goals and intent of these sites, which is to create a certain type of website - sites that contain collections of knowledge. It isn't (and has never been) about solving the problems of a single individual.
    – Ken White
    Commented Jul 2, 2014 at 12:30
  • 4
    @KenWhite But it is about people, since people are answering questions, and people are the ones who need answers. The purpose of SO is to create a resource that people can use. Stack Exchange needs a community to function--that's why we have chat, an aspect that otherwise doesn't help the site with its stated goals. Fortunately, I've discovered what jerkiness I've encountered in the past is atypical. People did actually answer the guy's question, after all, showing compassion. But the number of bad questions is still high, and we need to deal with it without becoming jerks--aka unfriendly.
    – trlkly
    Commented Jul 2, 2014 at 13:15
  • 1
    @trlkly So you can imagine how telling the people answering questions that they absolutely must take the time to answer really crappy questions, that they have no way of ever getting rid of them, and that those users are more important, would be harmful to the well being of the site. That is the attitude that most of this site's competitors took, in which people asking questions were the most important users. Then SO came around and the people answering were the most important, and the askers had to go out of their way to treat them. Unsurprisingly, those experts flocked to SO in droves.
    – Servy
    Commented Jul 2, 2014 at 13:58
  • 1
    @Servy I have made no such claim. Stop putting words into my mouth. You keep addressing things I haven't said, and it's getting rather annoying. I specifically commented on someone saying that this site is not "about people." I said nothing about the idea of opening another site (which would only work if it wasn't a Q&A site) nor about people being required to give answers. I did point out that some people do give answers as evidence of them being nice, but that doesn't mean that's the only way to be nice.
    – trlkly
    Commented Jul 2, 2014 at 15:47
  • 1
    @Servy I know all about the history of this site. But I also know it's been mythologized into something it isn't. I've been finding answers online since the late 1990s. It wasn't nearly as bad as all that. The main problem was that there was a lot of cruft, but you usually could find an answer or find a place to ask it and get an answer. The same "experts" were still out there and still wanted to help. What Stack Exchange did was consolidate them and help remove the cruft. It still is not a great place to actually look for answers--You still use a search engine first.
    – trlkly
    Commented Jul 2, 2014 at 15:57
  • 1
    @Servy. re:experts. None came in droves, because this site does not have subject matter experts. The system specifically encourages quick answers to the most common questions as the way to get the most reputation. It encourages users to stay on all day, responding to as much as possible, something a true expert doesn't have time for. The system actually continues to give points to people who have quit the site entirely and rewards people who dog other people about not picking their answers (the reason I left originally.) It's a good site, but it's not the magic place some people seem to think.
    – trlkly
    Commented Jul 2, 2014 at 16:02

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