There's been much discussion on how to reduce low quality posts on the site. Both as questions and answers.
I was having a discussion with someone about how we can improve the instructions to new users of how to post a question or an answer and it dawned on me, that in many cases, such instructions will just fall on deaf ears. For whatever reasons, language barriers, poor programming skills, unrealistic expectations and of course spammers and trolls - let's call this the "unfixable posters".
Improving the Ask a Question page will help some groups with language barriers and to some degree new (and old) programmers with the ability to follow instructions:
Let's improve Stack Overflow's "Ask a Question" page! (<-- we need to do this btw).
However, the remainder of the unfixable posters will just bypass any instructions and post rubbish.
Using minimum rep to post is unlikely to assist:
Low-rep users should not be able to ask questions
Restricting registration is unlikely to assist:
Should Stack Overflow be more restrictive about new user registrations?
What can we do to filter out these types of users without excluding potential newcomers to our community?
I propose a questionnaire pop up, when asking or answering a question for the first time. If it's done carefully it may assist in slowing down spammers and trollers. Although it would not be difficult to Google the answers, at least that would require an effort.
Much like a captcha, but to determine a minimal understanding before participating on the site.
The questionnaire would have to be carefully formulated and I wouldn't attempt to do that alone, but to give an idea of what I have in mind it could test that the user has a minimum level of knowledge of programming and basic mathematical skills. It would also serve as a basic English skills test.
These questions are a basic example:
Name three programming languages.
Name a programming IDE.
What is 67 + (6*3 + 9)/2 - 1000?
and so on.
The questions could be asked as a series, so the user cannot proceed until that question is successfully answered.
This system, may also be helpful in reducing spam, maybe not trolls so much, although it could become tedious for them to have to continually jump through questions.
Some examples of low quality questions:
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/45884241/android-java-whats-program
Shell programming - matrix multiplication
Why this question isn't a duplicate?
This question is similar, but a lot broader and discusses many other features of the site- also it was asked over 5 years ago and the site stats have changed.
Should SO have a prequalification process for membership to weed out the 'noise'?
This question is similar, but different - it asks to do this across the board for all low rep users.
Programming Quiz to be able to ask questions