No, I don't think this is a good idea.
If we use post length:
There are plenty of posts I just skip because they're too long.
Sometimes I downvote and/or vote to close, but not all that often (at least not purely based on post length, although code length is a different story) (not having read it at all / in much detail doesn't put me in a good position to judge the usefulness).
I already chose not to answer them, so I wouldn't really want them floating around the front page.
It's actually very rarely that I find a long question particularly useful - there may be some, but they are extremely difficult to get just right, and it's extremely rare that that much detail is actually required (as opposed to just having a lot of unnecessary details).
If we use time taken to write:
This seems like a fairly trivial constraint.
I suspect you intend for steps like this:
- Start writing a question.
- Do a ton of research.
- Finish writing the question.
But I imagine the steps are more along the lines of:
- Do any / most research you will do.
- Start writing a question.
- Perhaps do a teensy bit more research.
- Finish writing the question.
Thus, by the time you've started writing your question, you may already have done all / most research required to make this is really useful question.
The fact that you took a bathroom break or went to the mall in the middle of writing your question, that there are a lot of details required, or just that you write slow, doesn't seem particularly relevant to question quality.
Is the quality of the question relevant to the amount of effort put into it?
Even if we manage to judge the amount of effort put into a question accurately, is this a useful metric?
I don't really think so.
You could have a quick question and a brief Google search can tell you that finding an answer online isn't going to be easy, and it could turn out to be an immensely useful question.
On the other hand, you could spend hours writing a post and it could end up only being useful to you.
Question quality - is that all that's important?
Pretty much (well, answer quality as well).
While we don't really want to have users who could potentially ask good questions to get discouraged (because that's bad for question quality in the long term), if we favour the questions of users who might have potential, the actual good questions will disappear into the void instead.
So what should we do?
Reduce the low quality content so we could get a decent answer rate and more attention to give to users with potential.
- Let users jump through a few hoops before being allowed to ask a question
- Change the post-then-review model to a review-then-post one
I mentioned these before (somewhere...), so I won't go into more detail here.
X
time to write the post (and if the post isn't like a few sentences long)?>5000~
was just an example. I didn't intend for it to be taken literally.