In this post, I want to share something I created and started using a few days ago because so far it seems to have had a fairly good reception. So, I thought, I'd share it here because I think that in some cases it can be more useful and more effective than the standard MCVE links and standard boilerplate comments for posts with those issues.
For background: I joined SO just a few months ago and I still remember how extremely dumb I was when I posted my first questions (only posted 7 questions so far).
I still vividly remember how I felt when trying to post my first questions as a clueless newbie and the desperation when my second, third and fourth question started getting hammered by downvotes and I started seeing the warnings that soon (because of the downvotes) "I won't be able to post questions anymore".
And now, after having posted answers for 4 full weeks on SO (176 answers so far and probably somewhere around 300-400 comments) I am in a rare situation where I currently still have an insight into both worlds. On the one hand, I still vividly remember my actions and feelings as a clueless newbie, on the other hand, I'm currently ranking as one of the top answerers of a certain tag I'm focusing on.
Based on that, here's the boilerplate comment I designed specifically for questions of newbies that don't post the necessary code or don't post a complete snippet that's required for answering their question:
If you expect any sensible answers, you need to post a **complete** code snippet (HTML, CSS & JavaScript including CDN links) that allows *replicating your issue exactly*. Otherwise, any answers would be based on guesswork and you want to avoid that. [Edit] your question and post your **complete** current code snippet there at the bottom by clicking the *"JavaScript/HTML/CSS snippet"* icon.
I'm posting that as a snippet there so you guys can easily copy the formatting if you want.
Note: This is tailored specifically to the types of questions I'm handling. So, if you are dealing with something like C++ or Java questions, then you obviously don't need HTML code.
Anyway, feel free to copy and adjust that boilerplate as needed.
Here's why I think it's a good alternative to the standard MCVE links and standard boilerplate comments for those cases:
It starts with an immediate and clear benefit to the asker: "If you expect any sensible answers..." -- "Oh, yes, of course, I expect and WANT sensible answers! Let me read further!..." So, that's designed to get the user to read and follow instructions. As opposed to that, the standard MCVE links and standard boilerplate comments feel like an annoying chore that someone forces you to do. It's more effective to make the users WANT to do what they need to do.
The next part tells the users exactly WHAT they need to do (and it tells them that right there in the comment, no need to click a link!) and it tells them HOW they need to do it i.e. "your code must enable us to replicate your issue exactly".
The next part gives them another reason WHY and makes crystal clear (without being offensive) that the current state of their question is useless.
The final part gives them an instant and VERY PRECISE step-by-step instruction: "[Edit] your question and post your complete current code snippet there at the bottom by clicking the "JavaScript/HTML/CSS snippet" icon."
That step-by-step instruction is so clear and precise that even intellectually challenged users should be able to complete those steps:
Edit your question (there is a link that literally says "edit"), helps preventing them from posting the code as a comment
Post your code at the bottom of the question (not at the top)
Make sure it's complete so we can replicate your issue
Click that icon that says "JavaScript/HTML/CSS snippet" -- "Aha! That's the right way for me to do that!"
All that helpful information and precise instructions are conveyed in one fairly short comment without the need to click any links. Plus, it instantly makes them WANT to follow those instructions because it immediately gives them good, selfish reasons for that!
As opposed that (and this is based on my personal, still fresh experience as a newbie question poster) the standard MCVE links or other standard boilerplate comments that contain even more than one link (!) make me (as a question poster) feel like I'm being forced to "read a manual" which is the last thing I want to do when I'm trying to get answers to a burning question.
Long story short:
Feel free to copy, modify and use my comment template in any way you like.
If you are dealing with questions where you need that kind of code formatting (instead of HTML code), you might want to point out that you first have to highlight all lines of code and then click the code formatting button (or use the corresponding shortcut). (That little trick for formatting multi-line code was a big mystery to me until now)
I want to be clear that the comment template I shared here is not supposed to some kind of a "be all, end all" comment template. I personally have about 2-3 of appropriate cases per day, and the comment template is quite handy for those particular cases. For other cases, I use other templates.
I don't use any template when I have a case where none of my comment templates fits 100%. And that's what I recommend doing.
Feel free to create a few different templates that fit different recurring cases. But ONLY use those templates when they actually fit 100% and DON'T use templates in any other cases.
CTRL + K
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