You are assuming that "shows research effort" means that the question needs to contain verbiage describing how much research effort was put into it. That is not the case. Such verbiage is not useful, and I actively remove it. I agree with you that it doesn't do any good to insert phrases like "I've spent a long time searching" because that simply doesn't mean anything. What is a long time? Where did you look? What keywords did you use? Did you literally find nothing, or did you not understand what you read, or did it not work for you? If not, why not? In other words, such claims prompt more questions than answers.
Rather than telling about how much research has been put into the question, we want questions to show (or demonstrate, if you prefer) that research effort has been invested. That means avoiding asking questions that could be solved by reading the error message, looking in the manual/FAQ, conducting a simple Internet search, and so forth. It simply doesn't matter if you are incompetent, unable to use Google, don't have a manual, or otherwise have an excuse. Questions that do not show research effort are subject to being downvoted as "not useful", and I'm not eager to do anything that appears to discourage this practice.
In other words, we want to encourage questions that, by the nature of what is being asked, indicate that a reasonable research effort has been undertaken. You should show, rather than tell.
You are also adding an "exhaustive" qualifier in there that does not actually exist. We don't expect an exhaustive effort, because if there had truly been an exhaustive effort, then it could plausibly be concluded that there is no answer and therefore the question is unsuitable for an entirely different reason.
These words are intentionally subjective, since votes are intentionally subjective. It is my assessment of the question's demonstration of research effort that is going to cause me to downvote. If I think the answer could have been found easily, and consequently I don't think it is a question that will be useful to others, I will downvote it. In that sense, the tooltip is an apt reflection of how people actually use downvotes, and thus does not need to be changed.
It isn't perfectly quantifiable, but that's okay, because we're not having a computer make the determination. The determination is made by users, ideally those who are knowledgeable about the problem domain. If it's a complex question that a few minutes of research would not be sufficient, then I am going to know that, and I'm not going to downvote on that basis. Nor should anyone else—and, more importantly, nor do they in my experience (and I hang out on the C++ tag, where we have very high quality standards).
What we really mean by "showing research effort" is that:
- the question's scope is reasonably narrow and not too broad
- the problem statement is reasonably clear, something which research helps improve
I agree with the first interpretation, but not with the second. That one is already covered by "clear"; it doesn't need to get shoved into "research effort".
I already said above what I take "research effort" to mean. If you ask "What is int
in C?", then I'm going to downvote that because it doesn't show research effort. I believe that a few moments of research would have revealed the answer to you, and since the answer is already readily available, I don't believe that duplicating it on Stack Overflow is useful or a good way for experts to spend their time. The problem here is not with a lack of clarity, nor with a broad scope. It is that you failed to RTFM and thus are wasting our time.
If you do want to ask a "RTFM" question, then you need to explain why what you read in the manual didn't help, didn't make sense, or didn't apply to your case. In other words, quote the standard or some other authoritative text, and ask what it means. Show the research you've done, don't just claim to have done it.
- is not answerable in its current state
Already covered by "unclear" and "not useful"
- problem isn't defined well enough
Same as above
I don't know what this means
Frankly, I don't see "research effort" as being "contentious" at all. When someone actually does copy and paste homework into the question box, I think that's a totally valid reason to downvote, so I'm not really sure where you are going with that. And if they do assume that is the interpretation of "research effort", then it would seem they would be less likely to downvote on that basis, not more likely. Aside from the needlessly harsh phrasing, I don't quite understand why that reading is problematic.
We just end up with useless noise like "I've searched"
- That, IMO, does not qualify as showing "research effort"; as you say it's just useless noise. In the rare occassion I ask a question, I tend to describe what I found and why exactly it is not applicable for my current problem. In my experience it's extremely rare to have a problem where google returns nothing and "I've searched but didn't find anything at all" is actually true. And while I like "isn't defined well enough", I'm not sure we should de-emphasize doing resarch given the lack of it in most questions.