Update: Honestly, I don't understand all the downvotes. It must mean that people on Meta here don't want to talk about this issue anymore. Do people think the problem is solved? Yes there are many bad questions that need to be flushed out. But many answerers have gotten so hasteful that they assume everything is wrong at the first hint of imperfection.
I can see my help isn't wanted here, so I'm not going to spend my time fighting the system here. Do what you want guys, I don't feel like this is an environment where I can contribute.
Original:
While I understand it's necessary to upkeep question-quality so that its easier for answerers to find good questions to answer, undeniably the process of having your question closed without any comments to guide you is incredibly frustrating, especially for newbies.
I'm no newbie, but I've certainly had my fair share of frustrating interactions. And I'll be the first to admit that I'm not always the most calm-headed person. But we should all be aware that people have emotions and not everyone can be calm all the time.
For anyone that isn't aware of this frustration, it's pretty common:
- Closing questions just makes people feel really bad - can we make it harder in general?
- Hostility level of communities within SO are varied. Can we make it better?
- Ideas for proposals to help Stack Overflow create a more positive community?
- Why is my question downvoted despite the effort I put on learning about the topic?
- Undeserved down-votes
- Are beginners' questions welcome?
- Narrowing ourselves into irrelevance
- Stop mob-downvoting users on the main site for their actions there and their opinions on Meta
It seems that the frustrations of answerers seems to also play into this. Askers want to find questions to answer and so have an incentive to get rid of unpleasant questions so fewer will be unpleasant. I certainly understand that it can be frustrating to have to sift through bad questions, and how that can lead to less than stellar commentary (or most often, no commentary). It can also lead to assumption of bad faith - I've noticed that some users see one or two mistakes and then assume you didn't do any research or that you didn't even try to write a good question.
Why reducing frustration would help SO and other Stack Exchanges
- New answerers probably start off as new askers. While retention of answerers is important, so is attracting new ones, and if they are frustrated by the site, fewer will translate into answerers.
- When a user feels like they have been treated unfairly (whether or not its actually true), a nice user can often be turned into a hostile one: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/30905631/is-adobe-air-still-actively-supported . Hostile users can take up more of everyone's time because instead of a constructive discussion, ad hominem attacks and poorly focused arguments happen.
- The hostility may also reduce the number of bad questions that are turned into good questions, because of the aforementioned arguments that result out of frustration.
In Summary
Are there things we could do to make the process of improving sub-par questions less frustrating for both askers and answerers?
it would be interesting to see numbers on how many bad questions get turned into good questions
It would be more interesting to see how those numbers have changed over time as SO has gotten more strict.