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I'm used to post questions on Stack Overflow, so when I come here on meta I build my questions on the same format; but I often see high rated meta questions that aren't really questions (e.g. this one). Shall meta follow the same question and answer pattern?

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  • 2
    That's a burninate request. The question "Can we get rid of this tag" is implied.
    – BSMP
    Commented Apr 25, 2016 at 15:16
  • Meta is a good example of why SO isn't a forum. The Q&A format doesn't really work well for it.
    – user1228
    Commented Apr 25, 2016 at 15:54
  • Why so many downvotes without an explanation? Commented May 10, 2017 at 15:27

3 Answers 3

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No, Meta works differently:

Meta is for...

  • ...Stack Overflow users to communicate with each other about Stack Overflow (asking questions about how the websites work, or about policies and community decisions)

  • ...Stack Overflow users to communicate with Stack Overflow the company (posting bugs, suggesting improvements, or proposing new features), and

  • ...Stack Overflow the company to communicate with the community (soliciting feedback on new ideas or features, or discussing policies that affect the whole network)

The last two points are likely not to be questions in the grammatical sense of the word.

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This blog post states that they considered changing the wording:

Kyle had some ideas about changes to the SO engine to help it [meta] adapt from the Q&A; format discussion:

  • wording needs to be tweaked (i.e. questions->topics, answers->replies)

The wording did not change, but the idea's still the same. Meta works differently than normal sites.

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No, there really isn't a compelling need to have a grammatical question. A post making a request is fine; you could make a grammatical question out of such a request, but there's no real need to do so; you wouldn't gain anything out of such an edit.

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