Suppose a new user asks a question that deserves close votes (for a reason such as "unclear"), downvotes, or possibly both. After doing either I sometimes leave a comment explaining why I did so. For new users I've grown a habit of ending my comment with:
... Note that you can edit your question at any time to improve it (and if substantial it may bump the question, as well as improving chances of getting a great answer).
Or something of the sort.
It might be useful to have the system take over this task, if possible? Something like this:
I mention this because I think it took me about a year before I learned editing is a part of SO (in any case my first edit was over a year after asking my first question, I see now).
off topic
, includes this sentence:If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question or leave a comment.
The substringedit the question
is a link that lets one... edit the question. So, if someone is new here, his question is closed, and he doesn't bother to read the whole close reason - why should we bother keeping him here? Most other people probably learn about the edit feature by themselves or by looking at theprivileges
list...how to ask
page either. Many new users don't seem to bother to check what is and isn't an on-topic question for SO either. Most don't even know how to format the post with a live preview below it! These are in my opinion way bigger issues - and if it's not even enough to have a post preview and a list of duplicates and a ton of help text for new users, I doubt that a more visible edit feature solves anything.