11

This question got me thinking...

Question is now deleted but here is a screenshot for reference

enter image description here

Seeing the caps in the title I immediately went into the edit mode and started editing the question by removing caps. Then I started actually reading it as I was editing and realized the question makes no sense at all... it's poor, bad formatted, using caps, requesting things etc. A complete mess.

I am not able to rescue it from getting downvoted and closed therefore;

Is there even a point in editing it even though this questions is going to be downvoted and closed? Do we really have to be that generous when it comes to VLQ questions?

Are there any general guidelines when to improve a question and when not to bother?

2
  • when I have time, I often edit questions like this, to help close and delete voters see it more clearly that it deserves closure and deletion
    – gnat
    May 15, 2014 at 8:52
  • I edit questions not to save them from being closed, but to attempt to improve them and help the new users learn how to use the site.
    – Unihedron
    Sep 9, 2014 at 7:22

2 Answers 2

7

The question you use as an example is hard to understand and it seems clear that even once "fixed" it will remain a poor question that will be closed anyway (at least 3 closing reasons would apply: too broad, unclear, lacks sufficient information).

There are only that many hours in a day - so instead of spending 10 minutes fixing a question that is essentially beyond repair, you should probably fix 10 questions/answers that have more value.

I'd just downvote and close as "unclear...".

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0

It depends on how much effort is required to improve an VLQ question. Prior to its deletion, this post would have been slightly improved by changing the all-caps shouting to ordinary paragraph text. That would not have been nearly enough to save it, but importantly this sends a notification message to the poster as to how the community likes questions to be presented.

It would be interesting to see if edit alerts have an effect, statistically speaking, on users who write poor quality posts. In the absence of data, one would presume that is their purpose, so if you can make a speedy edit and explain it using the edit reason, the OP in each case may modify their behaviour.

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