From time to time I see a question that is so close to being a good question. It has all the pieces, except things like:
- A clear language barrier (the user is unlikely to be a native English speaker) leading to grammar / spelling problems
- They write a legitimate MCVE, but it has poor indentation
- Missing tags
- The automatic language detector doesn't work (for example, a question with both Java code and XML code), and it needs a
<!-- language: lang-xyz -->
tag
I am conflicted in these scenarios. I have a few options
- Don't upvote the question
- This makes me sad, because there's so much garbage on Stack Overflow these days that these near-winners should be rewarded
- Upvote anyway
- I do want the user to learn about the problems and not just think "oh what a great post!"
- Edit, then upvote
- This is what I most often do, but there still remains the problem of the user not really learning anything from this
- Comment
- It's probably more work for me to explain how to change the post than to just change it
I don't like any of my options, honestly. What do others think?
<!-- language: lang-xyz -->
problem I get from time to time too and to be fair: I didn't know that solution. Maybe it would be good to add this as another field or as hint under the post for new users.