If reviewers are unfamiliar with a subject, they would do best to skip reviewing. It is unfortunate that the review badges encourage people to make judgements even if they aren't the ones best suited to do so, and sometimes the easiest thing to do is to follow the crowd and pile on close votes.
Perhaps we could allow people to get credit for the Close Votes review even if they skip it. Perhaps we could justify that by asking them why they're skipping it (the Question is borderline good/bad, they don't feel qualified to decide, etc...) and provide another hoop to jump through, like a request to make a comment asking for improvement if apropos. Maybe they can have a bank of creditable skips, but they won't get the credit twice in a row, and they only get 3 credits a day.
Things that could have improved the situation, at least in this case, would have been to edit out the superfluous material (the thanks and preface) and at least capitalize the first word of the first sentence. There were also no comments on the question. When I see a deserving question in the close-votes queue, I try to comment contradicting the proposed reason for closing if I think it is wrong, and specifically state why. There were no comments on it.
For all of these reasons and the reasons stated in the comments on this meta question, I can see why the original question was closed. However, the system did work: the question was reopened.
I'm quite confident, however, that if the asker asked with best practices (instead of: disclaiming ability, offering thanks in advance, and not giving a sample code of what they were trying) this question would not have been so borderline.
Perhaps we could come up with a minor linter of some sort to provide feedback as the question is being composed. It could say things like:
- It looks like you're disclaiming your ability. Please don't. Everyone starts somewhere, but the most important part of getting a good answer for
your question is to demonstrate where you are on the path to finding
an answer by showing what you've already tried.
- You don't have any code blocks, showing what you've tried is likely to get you more help faster - what have you tried so far?
- You're using a code block, but you don't seem to have any code, be sure to show what you've tried so far.
- It looks like you're signing off or thanking in advance, while that may seem polite, answerers actually would prefer you to not clutter up
your question with those kinds of statements. Keeping it to just the facts is the best way to be polite on StackOverflow.
I think if StackExchange did this, then the overall quality of the questions, at least at the low end, would improve.
r
knowledge, other than the fact that ther
community has a greater tolerance forsendmetehcodez
questions than the rest of the community does.