Recently I ran across a particular question on Stack Overflow. Despite its being quite easy to answer, it has got no answer yet (and most likely won't, as questions older than a hour hardly receive any attention anymore). Besides that, the OP told me that he wants an answer from a professional developer. Although I've answered that there are no professionals around, but only enthusiasts available, it struck me right in the head: indeed we have quite a few professionals on the tag, but none of them came around in time. Why?
And it seems I have found the reason: it's the number of [awful quality] questions that prevents a professional from coming across the question in question.
Isn't that simple? There are literally thousands of questions like this ("I wrote only one column in SQL field list, why doesn't it return all other fields?!") or this (A silliest typo) one, which gets happily answered and accepted. This makes Stack Overflow different from other StackExchange network sites. This makes questions fall so fast that the OP doesn't have a chance to meet a professional.
Moreover, the overall quality of answers is pro rata to the number of questions as well. There are hundreds of weird answers nobody cares about, and for the very same reason, no professional comes across them to verify.
Even more: having their time spent on silly questions, the professionals don't have time to write a good answer.
(The overall answer quality is another matter. I won't stop on it but it's indeed weird: if you spot a grammar mistake, you get +2 points. If you spot a logical nonsense, you get -1).
Okay, the usual meta-answer is "vote to close". I tried several times, all in vain. Yet I'll try it again:
The system doesn't work.
The current closure system doesn't work. And it is not the limited number of votes. It is the reputation system that encourages people to answer instead of vote. Of course, flagging also works in your imagination, but in reality it doesn't.
Besides that, every time you mention silly questions, you get the usual meta-nursing: "these poor babies in the woods deserve an answer too! Don't you have a heart?", which makes every proposal just sink in a quicksand of coddling.
After all, even closed, the question still hangs around, polluting the site. This is the problem.
Okay, I have been accused many times of not proposing a solution, although I am already strongly convinced that none will be ever considered, because
- before starting towards the solution, one has to comprehend the problem first (which is the problem for this honest meta site where there are fifteen hundred questions tagged with badges compared to just one hundred tagged with question-quality which clearly indicates the trends and interests of the community)
- no change will be ever considered anyway. Traffic is the king, and while it flows, nobody cares about such trifle matters like answer quality.
- the site authorities, who are dead afraid of the community and never trust it: there is always a fear that any given tool can be abused. So the obvious conclusion for any meaningful feature is: "better not to implement it at all. Or at least limit it enough to render it totally useless."
Here is how I see it:
The goal: to limit the number of [visible] questions to a sane amount.
The solution: There ought to be some sort of ghetto for all the too-localized questions. IF they generate so much precious traffic, if all these poor unsuspecting fellows require your nursing - all right, let them in. But - for the sake of all that's good - somewhere else!
It can be a different site where questions have to be moved after they get answered. Or some on-site mechanism that marks stupid questions and gets them out of the way. It doesn't have to be a closevote: a closed question still takes up space. It doesn't have to be deletion either (or, at least, it has to keep rep points for the answering enthusiasts) - that's the point.
"If you can't beat em, join em". Do not fight silly questions! It makes only frustration for both sides. Have them answered, all right, but just take them out of the way, in favor of real questions. As simple as that.
Imagine Stack Overflow having the [visible] traffic of, say, the English Language & Usage site. Just imagine this:
- every [sane] question gets enough attention(!)
- a long-sought professional, having his five spare minutes off an hour, will make himself a picture of all the questions that might interest him, at glance.
Yet there should be a mechanism that keeps the possibility for all the enthusiastic rep-hunters, who have nothing to do but hang around all day waiting for silly questions, to have their precious reputation points, and badges as well.
Why mark a silly question with the offensive "closed as an [implied] stupid question"? Why not answer it outright, making ALL the sides satisfied? Why not to make it this way:
- have a poor noob get his silly answer
- have all the rep hunters get their beloved reputation points
- [to be implemented] have real questions get their professionals to answer
All you need is some special mark which will take all the [answered] too-localized questions out of the way. There could be a reputation cap for this kind of answer, too. We can make it not as desirable as a real question to answer. Well, make it the usual kindergarten way - make a special badge, something like "Marksman" for spotting 400 silly typos.
Exactly the same goes for the duplicated questions as well. It's not a secret for anyone that 99% of the questions asked are indeed duplicates. Yet the current system makes it easier and preferable to answer than to close. Again - why fight it? Get it answered all right and then cleared out of the way. The current system makes even closed questions hang in place, polluting the site.
Exactly the same goes for all the other not-a-real-questions like "I've got a bunch of code but have no idea why it doesn't work!". Mind you, even those have their devoted audience too. Some people eager to dig into other people's petty code. You'd say it belongs to code review. Theoretically - yes. In reality it doesn't work. These questions either get answered or closed but still hang in place.
In a more generalized way, there's two kinds of questions:
- questions Stack Overflow was initially intended for. There cannot be more than a hundred per day, even under the most polluted tag.
- urgent "run-time" kind of questions, which help only the OP and only at the moment.
Although the second kind theoretically is not welcome on the site, it dominates all the way. Something has to be done with it. But not via dumb oppression; via smart handling.
I am not quite sure of the implementation details. This is why this question is tagged with discussion. However, the immediate solution is not the the point of this post. The problem has to be stated and understood by people first.
The closure system worked when
trees were green and traffic low.
But times, they are change-in'
a-changin', you know.
/review
smarter when it comes to what you're shown to review. The Colonel made a few good points in this rant, and I'm glad he finally got it into words.