As a user, I need consistent standards
I have asked 24 questions. While the majority of my questions seem to meet the community standard, questions in one fairly niche community CUDA have mostly received one downvote, sat idle, and then been deleted by the community bot.
| Tag | Deleted | Asked |
|----------|-----------------|
| CUDA | 5 | 7 |
| non-CUDA | 2 | 17 |
I want to get better
You can view all of my deleted questions. If they are really worth deleting please tell me. I want to benefit Stack Overflow with good questions. But if my questions in other communities are fine, and the ones in CUDA need to be deleted, I have no way of knowing how to write better questions without some feedback.
I should also note that my CUDA questions came earlier and I have learned to write better questions since then. I continue to try and improve my question writing ability. However, there also seems to be a different standard built into the CUDA community by virtue of it being a smaller community. Because all CUDA questions attract less attention, one downvote carries significantly more weight than it would in a larger community.
-- I have received some feedback as people have looked at my deleted questions. Thank you.
Encouraging new questions
In my two years on Stack Overflow, I have found it to be a mostly welcoming community. I very much understand the need to remove low quality questions and answers. There are obvious questions that do not benefit the community. There are aspects of my own questions that are not helpful. As I've written more questions, I believe I have gotten better at writing. I want to keep improving. I would also like to see Stack Overflow be a place where asking questions in a niche community is encouraged rather than discouraged. I have been saved in my programming many times because someone one S.O. asked a random, hyper specific question addressing a weird obscure problem I was also having. There is almost nowhere else for these questions to live. I would like to see a slightly gentler standard for deletion in communities where there is little traffic.
Asking a python question that gets no attention and asking a CUDA question that gets no attention are very different things. A question ban is a high toll to pay for asking questions in a less popular topic.
I understand that as a new programmer, some of my questions will seem obvious to the experienced programmers. In one of my first questions, I was floundering for days looking for a solution to a problem. When you're new, sometimes you don't even know the right question to ask. Eventually I wrote a question on Stack Overflow. It was solved with a single comment from a user telling me of a function I had been unaware of which did exactly what I needed. Yes, users should RTFM before asking a question. But as a new user, there was no way for me to comprehend all the available functions inside the Thrust and CUDA libraries to know that function was there. I had searched for it, but what was obvious to an experienced user was completely lost on me until I was led to that particular function. That question was downvoted and deleted. But I believe it had valuable information in the question and answer. The next new programmer who is stuck like I was might have found that. Now, instead, he will be stuck searching.
I believe Stack Overflow should be a place where if a community has little traffic, we should be more encouraging of questions, not more harsh.
Gratitude
I want to make it abundantly clear. I have found invaluable answers in the CUDA community of Stack Overflow. I cannot count the number of times I have tried to read something in the manual, been uterly confused, and instead found a clear explanation on S.O. CUDA. There are two users on there in particular who have provided the lions share of useful answers. I am in their debt for sharing their expertise.
However, they in particular are now mostly concerned with answering only the more intricate, interesting questions. That is fine. They are under no obligation to help entry level CUDA programmers find their way. I would however like to see questions allowed to stay for a little bit longer so that the users who might be able and interested in answering will have a chance. With less traffic in that community, it will take longer than in more popular communities.
Proposal
If a tag has significantly less traffic than other tags, allow a question to stay on there for longer than 30 days before being deleted.
If a question is deleted because of a lack of interest, but its in a tag that is not heavily trafficed, don't count that towards a question ban for the user.
Maybe question bans could be tag specific. If my questions aren't good enough for CUDA, ban my questions there rather than across all of Stack Overflow.
CUDA Questions
-- Not Deleted --
Price Floors
Cuda Memory
-- Deleted --
Sequential Duplicates
Device Vector Index
Asyncronicity
Copy multiple vectors
Track spliced 2D array
-- Deleted Linux Question --
RescueTime as service
Edit:
- Adding links to deleted questions
- In my first draft, I let my personal frustration seep into the question which was not beneficial to the discussion. I have re-written the bulk of the question to try and be more constructive. My genuine goal is to improve the community. I am sorry I involved personal frustration and assumptions. Thank you to everyone who provided constructive feedback anyway.
moderator
? I bet if you would focus the title on how to improve your posts instead of protecting you from downvotes, this post would be much better received and some of the 20 downvotes might be reverted