My previous Stack Overflow Meta question was deleted. Why was this question deleted? If my question was unclear, why wasn't I given an opportunity to clarify it?
2 Answers
Honestly, that question shouldn't have been deleted. It was closed for being "unclear", which is very much applicable to the post. I have no idea what it's actually asking. That said, there's no reason to delete it, at least not within half an hour of it being closed. You should have been given the opportunity to edit the question to try to clarify what you meant; there were even several comments posted trying to help figure out what was being asked, implying that they think that the post is at least potentially salvageable.
If the post was deleted after 30 days by the automatic script, after you not having actually edited it to address any of the problems, then I certainly wouldn't have a problem with that or vote to undelete it, but as is, you simply didn't have an opportunity to address the criticisms via an edit, and the question doesn't seem "unsalvageable".
But while I do think that it shouldn't be deleted, it's certainly nowhere near in a state where it should be reopened.
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I thought we couldn't vote to delete until some time expired. Is that just a fleeting memory of mine, or do you know if reputation of delete voters and downvotes on the question play into that timer? Feb 24, 2016 at 18:54
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7@BilltheLizard 20k'ers can vote to delete questions scoring -3 or below immediately after they're closed. Feb 24, 2016 at 18:56
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And two days after closure for questions with score >= -2: meta.stackexchange.com/a/177675/159251– jscsFeb 24, 2016 at 18:58
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@ThisSuitIsBlackNot Thanks! They snuck those privileges in when I wasn't paying attention. Feb 24, 2016 at 18:58
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3Since I'm one of the delete voters, I will say that I first saw the question got closed and OP got useful comments to improve his post. And when I came back I saw now reaction from OP so I saw no value in having the post around. at least not within half an hour OP had over 30 minutes, but I still think a bit more time wouldn't have hurt; If I would have saw a reaction from OP I definitely wouldn't have voted. Feb 24, 2016 at 18:59
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@Rizier123, so 30 - 60 mins are the timeframe to respond back otherwise the post will get deleted? Feb 24, 2016 at 19:03
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@SathikKhan There is no rule when a post gets deleted, but for me I can say that if I would have saw just a comment from you like: "Okay, I will try to clarify my question" I wouldn't have voted on it at least for a few hours. Feb 24, 2016 at 19:06
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@Rizier123 Even several hours is entirely too soon to vote to delete a salvageable question. You should only be voting to delete a question that soon if it's not possible for it to be salvaged, rather than because the author hasn't gotten to it yet.– ServyFeb 24, 2016 at 19:12
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@Servy I will take your advice and do that it the future, even though I don't like bad questions laying around. (I also noticed in the meanwhile, that if a question on meta gets closed e.g. meta.stackoverflow.com/q/317462 the help center links are for questions on SO, so there might be some improvements to make here. Since tips about asking programming questions and close reasons on the main site aren't really useful to an asker on meta) Feb 24, 2016 at 19:23
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Thanks @Servy, you made the discussion more meaningful. Thanks keep it up. Feb 24, 2016 at 19:44
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@Rizier123 That's... well... horrible. Do you expect someone to be surfing every minute of the day? There's many times when I ask a question, and leave - and come within a few hours to see how things have probably played out. IMO, a question should only be eligible for deletion after 24 hours. Feb 24, 2016 at 22:01
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@Zizouz212 No they don't have to be online all the time. But mostly you already get a response in a few minutes, so you see directly if you missed something or got an answer right away. Feb 24, 2016 at 22:05
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@Rizier123 Well, I sometimes post a question, or an answer - then go find a snack to eat, or get going to my classes at school (I'm 16 btw), or even just go to sleep if it's fairly late at night. If I were to find my question closed, well fine. But deleted would probably be a little overkill for such a short period of time. Feb 24, 2016 at 22:08
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For what it's worth, when I post something I'm chained to my computer for at least an hour to monitor it, whether I need an answer right away or not, lest my post be voted beyond recovery. (Seriously, how many of your downvotes have you reversed after seeing an edit? I think my count is in the single digits.) This has discouraged me from asking some questions regarding problems I worked around myself but would like to know the "true" answer for, because it doesn't seem worth the time cost. But I think this topic is worth its own meta question, if there isn't one already. Feb 24, 2016 at 23:41
SO is famous for its fast response time on questions. You got that, several users posted comments to indicate that they had no idea what you were asking. And the question was put on hold 5 minutes after you asked it.
If you don't respond at all then users will just assume that you've lost interest. And votes to delete the question get to be pretty likely since nobody knows what else to do with the question.
Q+A requires both the Questioner and the Answers to participate. Given the fast response, what you never want to do is walk away. Not until at least 10 minutes have passed. If it takes you more time to edit then just post a comment to that effect.
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1Questions are to be deleted when it's either impossible for the question to be salvaged, or when it's very clear that the author has no interest in salvaging it. Them not editing it in 10 minutes is not an indication that they have no interest whatsoever in improving the question. A question should only be deleted that quickly if it is unredeemable, otherwise it should be given at least a few days to be edited. Closing the question ASAP is of course entirely warranted, and preferable.– ServyFeb 24, 2016 at 21:22
Ask the developers what HardCoding mean
? Are you asking us what "hardcoding" means? Are you telling me to ask someone else what that means? Your writing is very unclear. It seems that English may not be your primary language. That's fine, but this is an English-only site, so you may have a hard time finding and giving help here if there is a significant language barrier.How we are accepting the hardcode values (inside the code) as an answer?
means.