Introduction
I've been thinking recently about a broad category of question edits that I often make. I'm interested in how some kinds of chatty (and excisable) material inadvertently create a psychological power imbalance between the question author and readers, and how that impacts on people's willingness to help.
I have a theory that new users are cautious askers at the best of times, when asking a question on Reddit and the like. On Stack Overflow, our reputation precedes us: they've heard we're a grumpy bunch of elitists, or that our writing and formatting requirements have gotten too onerous, or that they're going to be tarred and feathered for whatever terrible question they wish to ask.
As a result, the question author tries to head this off at the pass, and ends up adding so much nervous boilerplate that their question gets an even worse reception. It is added to placate the audience, and ends up annoying the audience instead.
Consider these phrases, which are generally conversational, and added (unnecessarily) for the sake of politeness:
Good day
Any help would be greatly appreciated
Please help me
Thanks in advance
We sometimes get statements of suffering and woe that might be (subconsciously) employed to encourage readers to take pity on them:
I am stuck for days
I am tearing my hair out
I am new to this
I have googled and read every single post on stackoverflow
This will be easy for you
Please be patient with me
Please do not downvote!
Sorry for a stupid question / my poor English
It doesn't work :_o(
Some of this material, at least for native English speakers, veers into quite obsequious and irritating territory:
Dear experts
Friends, I need your kind and generous help to fix a problem
Awaiting your valuable replies dears
You're my only hope
Please help me please. Please, I really need this. I am desperate.
If my question was merely "what do we do about this", then the answer ought to be that editors can trim out the fluff. However, I'd like to consider rather broader themes here.
Theory
I am pondering whether this sort of fluff is counterproductive not just because it is chatty (it is) and not just because it is not technical writing (also true), but because it has the effect of elevating readers to exalted "expert" status, while the question author insists on grovelling around in the dust, seeking pity and condescension. This power imbalance is liable not only to create a poor reception for individual questions of this type, but makes answering questions tedious in general. It is exhausting to be placed on a pedestal, and then to interact with forelock-tuggers all day: as humans, we crave conversations with people we see as equals.
For askers, is there a way we can educate them about the counterproductive effect of this material?
I observe that our efforts to educate authors about chat and waffle is a Sisyphean battle, but perhaps question authors do not care much about it because they don't think their chatty material disadvantages them. I think it does hurt them, and perhaps to a degree that we've not previously considered, for the reasons I am outlining here.
Oddly, I think this phenomenon happens day in and day out, but it has become normalised to old-timers. Perhaps we've liked the limelight we have been awarded - there are some nice aspects to being regarded as an expert, after all. We might also have regarded question writer's politenesses and pleadings as a property of nature, and essentially unchangeable.
Cultural influences
To complicate this picture, some of the interpretations of these phraseologies may be flawed because there is a cultural gap between the asker and the reader. One geography that attracts a large number of new Stack Overflow posters seems to me to normalise exceedingly earnest and flowery civilities. Some posters from that region inherit a hierarchical view of society and their lowly place within it, and they are happy to see themselves as "juniors" and "just beginners", way below the "experts", "superiors" and "sirs" they are addressing.
My point here is not to correct regional variations of English, but to note that a meaning understood is not necessarily the same as a meaning intended. Thus, if there are cultures for whom flowery language appears to be irritating fawning, then that is the interpretation that will probably hold, even if it was normal for the speaker.
Interestingly, I had just such a user the other day, who I had helped by removing swathes of really egregious pleading. They were so attached to their "politeness" they edited it all back in, and they struck me as a perfect example of a writer who has no idea of the perception they are creating for themselves. Not only are they likely to be perceived by readers as a "beggar", but they seemed to me to be insisting on their own helplessness, which is hardly a trait we should be encouraging in engineers.
Questions
Since we like discussions to have some focus, I am interested in these thoughts:
I think it is absolutely possible for total beginners to express themselves confidently. Indeed, experts in Java generally have no problem asking a succinct beginner question about, say, a functional language. How can we encourage this "asking confidence"?
Cultural influences aside, is my desire for confident questions hampered by the limited command of English of some question authors? Or, is it merely an attitude that can be encouraged and changed?
Would an addition to the Help Centre be useful? I think this collection of guidelines is actually very good, but it suffers from being quite large, and it is doubtful that the members I most want to reach would read any of it anyway.
The psychology of asking (or begging) for favours on the internet seems to be so intrinsic to the volunteer model we rely upon, I wonder if any academic research has been done on this? Has Stack Exchange done any? Some input from suitably qualified people would be useful.
I have in the past supported more instances of automatic question scanning, to help writers avoid phrases that cause these problems (most recently here). I don't think this needs to be particularly complicated, a few regexs might do the trick. Again, I wave a small flag for this (and I hope that the successor project to "question templates" might contain something of this kind).
The original motivation for writing this question was to facilitate a change in questions and their authors. However, having received some excellent comments below, it should be noted that if a reader loses patience with a question they deem to be excessively deferential or irritating, perhaps they should be the one to adjust their interpretation or approach?
For example, we could try to educate readers about different cultural writing styles, and that a person appearing to be begging is in fact just being polite (even though the chatty material will be trimmed anyway). If Meta readers are interested in tackling the phenomenon at this end, then suggestions about how to do that are very much in scope.
If indeed the reader's experience of ingratiation is culturally dependent, I would be most interested in any guesstimations as to what proportion of question readings might be affected by it (nearly none? half? most questions from new users?)
Related reading
Add 'this is my first post' (and several other phrases) to the question content filter