In Stack Overflow Isn’t Very Welcoming. It’s Time for That to Change., Jay says this:
Let’s make it easier for new users to succeed. No, I’m not shifting the blame. We set them up for failure, and our power users have been asking us to help them for ages. We’re planning to test a new “beginner” ask page that breaks the question box into multiple fields – one for each of the key things answerers need to help:
- “What did you want to happen?”
- “What actually happened? (Include any error details)”
- “Paste the shortest block of code that reproduces the problem. (We’ll format it!)”
- “Describe what you’ve tried so far (including searches, etc.)”
What's described here is like the previously tested question template (see: What can we put in a question template to help people ask better questions? and Have we started trying question templates?) only, presumably, with less ability to opt out: you could at least hit CTRL+A and delete the inline question template, but by the sounds of it, this new beginners' /ask page will actually break up the form into multiple text fields so that new askers will have no choice but to contort their questions into the format provided.
As I, and others, have been arguing since a debugging template first got floated in October (e.g. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6), pushing a debugging-specific template as the question template is a bad idea, since:
- Not all (or even most) valid questions can be reasonably contorted into a debugging question (let alone benefit from the contortion).
- There is little reason to think that debugging questions, as a category, tend to be better quality than other kinds of questions. And there's significant reason to think the opposite: not a single one of our top 50 questions by score is a debugging question. As such, presenting a debugging template, even as a default from which the user can opt out, sends a message about what kind of questions are well-received here that seems to be the opposite of reality.
Imposing such a template as a default, implemented through initial text in the Ask box, is bad enough; I'm opposed even to doing that, and from the number of votes I've seen cast on the previous comments I've linked to here, I think the community is on my side on that. But what's proposed now - replacing the single textbox with a multipart form that a user can only sensibly complete if they're asking a debugging question - is drastically worse, and signals to me that nobody at Stack Exchange has listened to any of the objections we've raised since October or made any effort to address them.
Much of the discussion since Jay's blog post has focused on the ways in which the company's values and the community's are not aligned. So be it. But this proposal serves neither group's objectives; if you do this, the first thing confronting new users who arrive with non-debugging questions will be a form that does not permit them to ask the question they want to ask. That is a clear signal that they have come to wrong place, and is the opposite of making the site more welcoming. Please don't do it.