May I suggest:
There are some conventions on Stack Overflow that you need to know about when posting a question. Here is a brief summary of some of them, followed by short explanations of the reasons behind them:
- Avoid using the question's tags in the title if you can.
- Don't add "Hello" or "Thanks!"
- Stick around for a while after you've asked the question to answer comments.
- Wait a little while after an answer appears before accepting it.
There's no need to have the tags in the title because they appear next to the question already.
We like questions on Stack Overflow to contain only the information needed, so we forego greetings and such. Please don't worry if your question gets edited and someone removes things like that - it's normal here.
Sometimes a question doesn't have all the information we need to answer it, in which case people will add comments asking for more details or clarification. A newly-asked question gets featured on the home page, so if those comments aren't answered quickly then your question might get down-voted and closed before you even see it again. Responding to those comments quickly can save your question.
The first answer to appear may solve your problem, in which case it deserves an up-vote. But remember that Stack Overflow is used by programmers all around the world, so it could be that a better answer comes along later and you would prefer to accept that instead.
Is there anything else they need to know at first, bearing in mind I'm hoping it will be a minimal list of short items?
etiquette
tag which has a number of these, including the favorite Should 'Hi', 'thanks', taglines, and salutations be removed from posts?