As a tangent to the active question regarding whether it's worth improving closed questions, I began wondering what percentage of closed questions are ever reopened. I have a feeling that it's not as uncommon as the poster in that question feels it is, but is there a way to pull hard numbers on exactly how often people are successful in turning around their closed questions? I searched to see if this had been measured in the past but didn't find anything on this topic historically.
1 Answer
We have to be cautious about what data we seek and how we interpret the data. The issue at stake seems to be this proposition:
It is pointless to edit a question that has been closed because the question will remain closed irrespective of whether it has been improved to the point of no longer being close-worthy.
What if we find that the vast majority of questions remain closed? Would this prove the claim? I don't think so.
We'd have to take a sample of questions and look at questions individually and decide whether the question should have been reopened after it was edited and yet remained closed. If the vast majority of closed questions are not edited in a way that makes them worthy of being reopened then we would expect that most questions would not be reopened. The problem then would not be that closure is a death sentence but that the authors of the questions are not fixing their questions in such a way that warrants reopening. Many a time I've seen a question that was originally unclear become too broad, or opinion-based.
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What is the strategy or approach of the website? How often do you consider closed questions? or in the other words how much do you (by you I mean those who are responsible for that) try to save some closed questions?– AhmadJan 30, 2015 at 15:12