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When a question with a problem caused entirely by an obvious typo appears, the proper course of action is to close it. Unfortunately, it takes several minutes or longer to gather the five votes required to put the question on hold. This is more than enough for users who have no access to close/reopen votes to type up their answers, especially because these answers tend to be rather short. Even worse, some of these answers quickly gather an upvote or two, preventing OP from deleting the question.

I think it would be beneficial to expedite closing of questions with typos in some way. For example, we could let users with gold badges in a tag close questions with typos the "dupe-hammer style".

Enabling typo-hammer has several prerequisites:

  • We need to work out a better definition of what we collectively consider a typo
  • We need to move "cannot reproduce" into a separate category
  • Closing comment on the typo category needs to become mandatory

In order to mitigate the risk of closing as typos by mistake, gold badge holders should get the power to reopen questions closed as typos with a single vote in the same way that they can reopen duplicates.

I think that an additional benefit of having typo-hammer in place is making participants more reluctant to answer questions caused by typos.

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  • 35
    We'd have to be very careful here...there's a world of difference between a typo error and a "cannot reproduce" issue...at the moment the two are conjoined - "This question was caused by a problem that can no longer be reproduced or a simple typographical error."
    – Paulie_D
    Mar 20, 2016 at 12:23
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    What if the problem wasn't caused by the typo after all, though? That tends to happen.
    – Pekka
    Mar 20, 2016 at 12:24
  • 88
    Typo hammer? You mean Moljrin? Mar 20, 2016 at 12:26
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    @Pekka웃 The problem with questions that have typos is that they pollute the site, making legitimate answers harder to find. There are many questions caused by missing semicolons or semicolons inserted in wrong places, often with multiple answers saying the same exact thing. As far as solving OP's problem goes, a single comment would be just as helpful. Mar 20, 2016 at 12:49
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    I would like to see a whole Home Depot-full of hammers available. The 'Elitist, Hostile Hammer from Hell' would be a good start, rapidly followed by the 'Bone-Idle Ball-Peen' and 'Homework Dump Hide Hammer'. Mar 20, 2016 at 13:21
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    Martin demonstrates pretty well why SE doesn't trust users with such a weapon. Mar 20, 2016 at 13:30
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    What if the typo.. is a typo? ^_^
    – Maroun
    Mar 20, 2016 at 14:07
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    This is more than enough for users who have no access to close/reopen votes to type up their answers I don't believe answering questions that should be closed is something limited to users with <3k rep.
    – TZHX
    Mar 20, 2016 at 14:08
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    There's the case where the actual problem is resulting from a typo, and then there's the case where the OP was sloppy when writing their question and made a typo this isn't in their actual code, and the problem still exists when the question has been edited.
    – j08691
    Mar 20, 2016 at 14:19
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    @j08691 well that's OK, that can be down and close-voted for not posting the real code that they tested. Mar 20, 2016 at 14:29
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    @DeerHunter If there's a typo, and they haven't posted an MCVE, then I'd say tough luck. Mar 20, 2016 at 16:23
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    In my view, "typo" is not a sufficient reason to close a question without at least some consensus. Question pollution can be dealt with efficiently by downvotes. As others have pointed out, we have "This question is caused by a problem that can't be reproduced...." for the purpose of dealing with code typos. And, the line between a simple syntax error and a semantic error isn't often clear enough to make a question worthless. I believe SO's mechanisms, if they must be imperfect, should err on the side of being supportive of n00bz.
    – O. Jones
    Mar 20, 2016 at 18:04
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    Usually there are gazillions of questions with the same typo. Find one and use the dupehammer.
    – Oriol
    Mar 20, 2016 at 18:21
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    @OllieJones "Question pollution can be dealt with efficiently by downvotes." Not really. That isn't working very well. There are too many people willing to answer these questions and up-vote answers. Mar 20, 2016 at 19:41
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    @CharlieMartin Why should we treat noobs who forgot a semicolon any differently than experienced programmer? Vote to close a typo and leave a comment pointing out the typo. We don't need garbage questions like this cluttering the site. Answering the question just makes it extremely likely that the question will not get deleted automatically by the Roomba.
    – cimmanon
    Mar 21, 2016 at 18:40

5 Answers 5

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I would like to propose that questions that were closed under the "solved in a way that will not help future visitors (typos, cannot reproduce, etc.)" reason are eligible to be removed by the Roomba regardless of their status (upvoted, has a selected answer, etc.). As long as the question is closed in a timely fashion, users who answer such questions will have their reputation gains automatically revoked.

The Roomba already has special rules in place for other closure types (duplicates are not automatically deleted), I can't imagine it would be difficult to add another rule. I expect this would be easier to implement than a lot of other suggestions like "make gold/silver badge holder votes worth more."

In addition, I would like to see hints added for users who need some training not to answer questions caused by a typo. If there are votes to close as a typo, add a small warning above the answer form:

Some users think this question was caused by a typo, do you agree [link to vote box]? Note that you'll lose any reputation gained by answering this question if it gets closed as a typo.

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  • Dupes are a built-in top-level close reason; typo is a custom off-topic reason. Special-casing is therefore rather less handy. Mar 23, 2016 at 8:23
  • @NathanTuggy That's purely a UI artifact not reflected in the underlying system. Jun 16, 2016 at 21:08
  • @Deduplicator Custom reasons can and do vary per site. It's therefore impossible to hard-code proper semantics for them (with the possible exception of the built-in migration sub-sub-menu). Hard-coding semantics for any top-level reason, on the other hand, is much easier, since those are by definition the same on all sites. Jun 16, 2016 at 21:39
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The issue is not closing the questions. The problem is that these questions and their answers get so many up votes that they:

  • Show up on the site too much
  • Don’t get auto deleted as they have a score of over 0
  • Don’t get deleted as few people vote to delete questions and it needs a lot of delete votes when the question has been up voted.

It seems that most users of Stackoverflow these days don’t have comp sci degrees and consider typos to be of more interest than the type of problem that the “old school” Stackoverflow members care about.

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    I don't think that the "modern" SO user values typos more than other types of questions, it's that they're easy to evaluate. "That dude correctly identified the typo in the question, he deserves an upvote!" That's not the case with harder questions.
    – cimmanon
    Mar 22, 2016 at 12:01
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    Considering the demographics of developers as provided by the most recent survey, the whole "old school" argument is a bit harsh and misplaced. It's not that I don't disagree, it's just that I don't think that whether or not one graduated from college has anything to do with whether or not they like typo-centric questions.
    – Makoto
    Mar 22, 2016 at 15:22
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    @Makoto, the survey is misleading, as most people that ask a question only ever ask 1 or 2 question. The more engaged users are the people that answer the surveys. Also given the rate of grown at any point in time most users are new users. (When the site first started it was mostly expert programmers that know about it, due to the blogs it was promoted on.) Mar 22, 2016 at 16:04
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(Posted as an answer, as I am expecting a comment thread to result from this. Depending on the comments I may post this as a question in its own right.)

Giving gold badge holders the power to close a “typo” with a single closed vote seems far too much of a risk. But that does not mean we can give badge holder’s close votes more power.

What if a badge holder’s close vote (in their tag) counted the same a 3 normal close votes, so it just needed two other people to confirm it?

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    We already trust gold badge holders to recognize duplicates, which, I think, carries more risk. Currently, this risk is mitigated by the power of gold badge holders to reopen questions closed as duplicates with a single binding vote, i.e. dupe-hammer works both ways. I think this would works the same way with typos. Mar 22, 2016 at 12:00
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    @dasblinkenlight, there is a lot more agreement on what we mean by "duplicates". Mar 22, 2016 at 12:02
  • I think that working out a better agreement on typos is a great goal (I updated the question to mention that as a prerequisite of enacting typo-hammer). Mar 22, 2016 at 12:27
  • Except for the fact that some are trying to bend the meaning of the typo close reason to include questions that just aren't going to be useful to future visitors, regardless of whether or not it actually has a typo (which is a subjective reason that should instead be handled by downvoting).
    – Kevin B
    Mar 22, 2016 at 14:44
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    @KevinB No one is twisting the meaning of anything here. A few years ago I was having trouble debugging a trigger constraint, so I asked in IRC to verify an assumption I had made. A lot of time was wasted checking to make sure there wasn't a bug in PostgreSQL when the problem was that I forgot to add rules to make the trigger to fire. The trigger still didn't do what I was expecting (because I hadn't finished debugging it), but that's an example of a problem unlikely to help future visitors.
    – cimmanon
    Mar 22, 2016 at 16:05
  • @cimmanon, "trigger constraint" is a good google target, and someone else may have forgotten to enable triggers. Mar 22, 2016 at 16:08
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    @IanRingrose But my question wasn't about trigger constraints. I was trying to verify the behavior of transactions. That's besides the point. We shouldn't expect to ask "have you tried turning it off and on again?" to any given question. We expect questions to be asked in good faith that they actually did check to make sure that they dotted their Is and crossed their Ts. When a question comes up like "none of the edits to my stylesheet do anything", we shouldn't have to ask "did you make sure you imported it?"
    – cimmanon
    Mar 22, 2016 at 16:19
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    Giving gold badge holders the power to close a “typo” with a single closed vote seems far too much of a risk. A risk of what, exactly? Be specific. In your description of the risk, please describe the type of behavior, on the part of what kinds of people, that constitute what % of the universe, motivated by what factors, that would have what negative impact on what percentage of what other kind of people, and also why you believe the existing mechanisms to mitigate such risks or reverse their impact would not function properly.
    – user663031
    Jun 17, 2016 at 3:33
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    In addition, you cannot assert the existence of a risk as a reason for not doing something without also considering the risk of not doing it. For instance, introducing a carbon tax might carry the risk of harming the economy, whereas not introducing it might carry the risk of all of us being underwater in 2050. Which points to the fact that risk analysis must also weight short-term risks vs. long-term risks.
    – user663031
    Jun 17, 2016 at 3:35
  • @torazaburo, A think one issue is that closing duplicates quickly stops lots of answers, but by the time it is clear the issue is a “typo”, there is little risk of lots of new answers. Jun 17, 2016 at 11:59
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    @IanRingrose If I understand you correctly, this is wrong from my personal experience. Typo questions get answers within a few minutes if not a few dozen seconds.
    – user663031
    Jun 17, 2016 at 12:31
  • @torazaburo, but most of the time, we don't know it is just a Typo until the "asker" comments on one of the answers to say it worked. Jun 17, 2016 at 13:15
  • I'm sort of curious what kind of experience you have with typo questions. I would say we know 99% of the time. To take just one example, consider this question.
    – user663031
    Jun 17, 2016 at 13:44
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There are a few cases of "interesting" typos (Are typos always off-topic as Q&A?), but most of them of course have an existing answer somewhere on the site.

You could workaround some cases with some well-crafted canonical or existing duplicates, then use your hammer, noone will accuse you of abusing it.

For other ones (call them "useless" / "no replay value") where OP calls variable a then b and expects it to be the same, yes, gold badge owner is wise enough to assess the technical subject (user got 1000+ votes on 200+ questions), so he/she could decide to close the question single-handedly to avoid useless answers to pour in (like we see a lot at SOCVR in the tag, but there are a lot in the tag as well, like most of popular/widely used languages)

It's completely different than "too broad" or "unclear", which is subject to interpretation. Even moderators rarely use they all-purpose hammer for those cases.

The only restriction I'd set is the obligation to comment when closing (since there's no actual target like with the duplicates, but OP has already that all worked out, so I'm paraphrasing), a bit like when issuing a custom close reason. So everyone can see why the question was closed as a typo, and if they don't agree, they can comment/ping the user who closed, and other gold badge owners can reopen.

The dupehammer feature isn't abused 99% of the time. Why would that feature be?

That would partially solve a lot of "not enough power" (justified) complaints on that site. 2 at random:

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    I would be happy to leave a comment in exchange for a hammer-style closure. Mar 25, 2018 at 20:55
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    I always do that, even when I close for duplicates (well, unless it's exactly the same) I wanted to post the same exact question, but I found yours first, and it's extremely well documented. Let's hope it's implemented one day (in 6 or 8 weeks, generally speaking) Mar 25, 2018 at 20:57
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We need to work out a better definition of what we collectively consider a typo

Indeed. But the question should be restated without using the word "typo". The real issue is that there are classes of questions, normally of the "it doesn't work" variety, where the problem is simple, and unless we think SO is a helpdesk, then these are the ones we want to close. We first need to delineate what "simple" means. A reasonable definition might be

A simple problem is one that can be solved simply, by reading and understanding basic documentation, searching for answers using readily-available tools such as Google, or using well-known approaches such as re-reading code, viewing error logs, using checking tools, or basic debugging tools.

Leaving aside non-reproducibility for the moment, the phrasing in the current close reason is "simple typographical error". With all due respect to those who have labored mightily over such wording, this is not very clear. Wikipedia says, for example, that typographical errors do not even include misspellings, which it calls an "error of ignorance" (hmm, that seems like a useful term). So in some highly technical sense the current close reason does not even cover a misspelled variable name.

But still, what is the actual criteria based on which we deem a question "simple"? The current wording of the close reason provides a eminently reasonable guideline:

resolved in a manner unlikely to help future readers.

However, as the reason is currently formulated, this is not a condition for the close reason to apply; it's an explanation of why "typos" is a close reason. We should reverse this: it is not typos that can be closed, because they won't help future readers; rather, it's problems that won't help future readers that can be closed, and typos is one example of that.

Therefore, the close reason, assuming we want to keep just one, might read something like:

This question was caused by a simple problem the resolution of which is unlikely to help future readers. Examples of such simple problems are typos, misspellings, simple syntax errors which could be detected by viewing error output, and simple logical problems that could be detected by using basic debugging techniques.

This reason could include a link to a page talking in more details about such "simple" problems, just as the debugging reason links to a page about MCVE.

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  • Exactly how is this different from "too localized"? And thus, how will it not cause the exact same problems that "too localized" did? Jun 16, 2016 at 18:43
  • I like this better than the current typo, although I would not include simple logical problems that could be detected by using basic debugging techniques, because this arguably includes all logical problems in the world. Since different programmers tend to make identical logical errors, answers to questions that solve such problems may become very helpful, especially when they have a nice description. Jun 16, 2016 at 18:43
  • I think you're misreading Wikipedia's exclusion of spelling errors: it's talking about an error where someone writes "acshun" instead of "action" because they actually think that's how it's spelled. Accidental transpositions of letters are covered: "errors due to [...] slips of the hand or finger", so "it won't compile because you wrote whilee/num_cutsomers/Dictoinary on line 10" counts.
    – jscs
    Jun 16, 2016 at 18:48
  • @NicolBolas I don't claim to know the history of too-localized. Am I oversimplifying to say it was a good reason (perhaps with a strange name) that was eliminated because it applied to too many questions--which is what we (or at least I) want?
    – user663031
    Jun 16, 2016 at 18:52
  • @torazaburo: A more accurate description would be that it was being used on questions that were not in fact "too localized". It was being used as a catch-all "I don't want this on the site" reason. If you want to read the history of it, just do some searching on Meta. Jun 16, 2016 at 18:57
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    (Note, the removal of "Too Localized" was before the MSE/MSO split, so the posts about the change are largely over there.)
    – jscs
    Jun 16, 2016 at 19:08
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    @Nicol Bolas: Also, some people were taking "too localized" to mean "no one uses this tech anymore" or "only applicable to certain geographical regions".
    – BoltClock
    Jun 17, 2016 at 4:33

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