Background: Asking the right question on the right place on SO is not an easy task. On a recently deleted question I tried to find a solution that would help all parties (questioner, viewer, operator) to reduce frustration caused getting down vote on asking question. However, this is a more extensive topic that I would like to explore later.
One of the topics in the above-mentioned question, which was not debated in any way, was that we often have to work iteratively:
I think asking the right question on the right place is often an iterative process. All of us learn step by step and the right support is essential.
Many of the question, we all face on daily basis, are pretty complex. Many of as working in a mixed environment (for me right now: Windows, WSL, docker, ubuntu, R, python, angular, TFS, bitbucket, dotnet)
It would be important to allow to start with work in progress question and get feedback to incorporate them. For that reason I would like to ask:
How to work on more complex question where multiple iteration may necessary to clean it up and refine the complexity to acceptable level, especially if an early feedback would be appreciated?
Is it acceptable solution to add "WIP:" flag to the question at the title to signalize "work in progress"?
What ?rules? would be acceptable to keep a question as "work in progress"?
Note: Please note that I consider this topic to be "work in progress", please support it in clarifying.
Edit: I completely agree with the sentence mentioned by @Makoto:
The only way to get some assistance with environmental complexity is to reduce its complexity, and this is a principle that applies both internal to your project and code (with those "in the know") and externally, with complete and utter strangers.
To achieve the same acceptable level of complexity, it is often important to get feedback from viewers and review earlier posts (we need to be careful about previous posts as many bad examples are still highly valued).
Edit: Iterative: Also the answer mentioned by @rene: here tells even for a bad question:
A bad question should be edited to make it better, or closed. The sooner one of these things happen, the better, as less time will be wasted on bad questions.
Edit: @rene's response suggests that a special session should be organized to deal with such topics, but in this case we may face other issues, such as:
How to decide if a topic is important or interesting enough to start a session?
How to involve others in preparing such a topic?
On comments:
Are you asking a question about the site, or proposing a new feature here?
I'm not sure, possible, not necessarily. I think, I would like to get an answer/ solution that is easy for every one.
I fear that downvotes aren't going to be the only irritating facet of this post. It's not that we don't like you, we may simply disagree with your new feature proposal.
Open for suggestion on how to change that we agree.
What's the difference? Do we as professionals tolerate someone who comes up to us, interrupts our workflow and asks incomplete questions? We might tolerate it of someone who is younger (e.g. 5 years old) and can't fully form questions all that well, but of professionals?
We all have different threshold on how extensive explanation we require on questions. Your trainees will as good as you tutor them.
in theory, a "WIP" question is a bad one that hasn't been made good yet...
IMO: WIP question is an incomplete question where the author shows willingness to work on it based on research by reading post suggested in comments by viewers. BAD question are abandoned ones with no singes of refinement effort on any comments.
The way I look on this is in this way: on this site, the asker is requesting help to solve a problem, and the answer(s), volunteer their free time to give this help, and the site benefits by having a high-quality Q and A available for review by future visitors. The asker pays nothing for this service, while anyone who puts in the time to answer a question does in fact pay with "opportunity cost", the value of their time that could have been used to pursue remunerative tasks. In this situation, the onus is on the asker and the asker alone to ask as high quality a question as possible.
IMO: Both the questioner and the respondent work in their spare time, in case both parties are willing to refine their works. Even the questioner in order to reduce the complexity of the original topic to the required level needs to put significant effort.
Did any of your school teachers let you turn in partial assignments and fill the rest in later? What about your bosses , do they not expect completed work? Why should people who review questions here not expect them to be complete enough to fully understand the specific problem and attempts made to solve that problem? You are trying to sell a concept that just won't work. You are only thinking from perspective of someone asking...try to think about it as a reviewer of an incomplete question also. Few want to or will spend the time to ask enough questions to extract incomplete detail.
There is a fine line here. There is final submission and there are consultation sessions. There is task deadline and there are work meetings. etc. Please don't mix them.
The task deadline is when you hit send to post the question. "Consultation sessions"??? , SO isn't a mentoring service it is a practical programming problem solving site with purpose of building a public knowledge base
Based on community support, provided by volunteers. Why are we so harsh on them?