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Today I came across the following question in (not linking to avoid meta effect):

in Python, How I represent like this?

I make this:

print('number id {0:1.3}.{0:1.3}.{0:1.3}-{0:1.3}'.format("12345678910"))

result : number id 123.123.123-123

how I make correct? like this:

number id 123.456.789-10

It was posted by a new user (11 days) and was originally unformatted. This question received 7 downvotes (no upvotes) within ~10 minutes of posting. There were also two basically RTFM comments.

just read basic string formatting first


You told the thing to print the first three characters several times. What do you expect to happen?

I read a lot of python questions, and in my opinion this is not a terrible question. It's not great (I didn't upvote it), but OP described the problem clearly and showed their attempt.

I am wondering what the community thinks:

Is this an unsalvageable, bad question? Does it epitomize the gist of Stack Overflow isn't very welcoming?


EDIT

I realize now that I wasn't clear enough on my intent on this post. It turned into a referendum on one specific post, but my goal was to spark a discussion about the reaction to the post (not the post itself). I also attempted to give my opinion of the post, without passing judgement on the reaction- though I believe it was interpreted as criticizing the down-voters and commenters (not my intention).

I'm leaving the original content untouched so that the existing comments/answers don't lose context, but if I had to rewrite this question I would have said something like:

It was posted by a new user who is almost surely not a native English speaker. The question received 7 downvotes (no upvotes) within ~10 minutes of its posting. There were two comments, which can be interpreted as basically saying RTFM. The OP responded to the first saying that they had in fact read the manual, but still didn't understand how to achieve their desired result.

I read a lot of python questions and this didn't seem like a 7 downvote question. For example, compare it to this question which only has 8 DVs- among the worst questions I've seen asked here. Furthermore, this question had only 1 CV.

I would have normally considered skipping this question but decided to answer after seeing the strong negative reaction combined with having recently read Jay Hanlon's blog post. Also, the OP showed their attempt and it was clear (to me) that it was an easy problem to solve.

I think that the language barrier was a major reason for the poor reception here. If the poster was a native English speaker, it's possible (not definite) that they would have posed it in a more acceptable manner. My experience (anecdotal) is that most similar difficulty (subjective) questions with cut-and-pastable code are well received if they are well written (without typos, good grammar, etc).1

I am interested in hearing the community's thoughts on this situation? Is this type of question unsalvageable, worthy of being downvoted into oblivion? Is there a consensus on the appropriate action? I understand that there is a concern that answering LQQ can lead to more LQQ but everyone has to find the right balance for themselves. I have found that you can try to show people the right way. Many people take the direction and improve. Those that do not typically do not persist for long as people can see their histories and choose to move on/DV.2

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  • 5
    Doesn't really answer your question, but a better edit would have been a great first step to helping this individual out. I know you didn't make the original edit, but fixing the code formatting was not enough. The grammar is not good. And the title does nothing to actually describe the problem. Fixing both could have helped make the question more presentable. Apr 27, 2018 at 18:09
  • 49
    Why does everyone think "being welcoming" has to equate to "upvoting low quality questions instead of downvoting them"? Someone downvoting a question that they don't think is a good question is not acting inappropriately. Being welcoming means that the people that commented were all polite and professional in telling the OP what they needed to be researching before asking their question instead of saying "RTFM".
    – Servy
    Apr 27, 2018 at 18:14
  • 27
    It is a bad question because it does not explain why the correct output is correct. What's to stop you from doing print('123.456.789-10'). What if it has more digits? What if it has less? When you answer these questions you almost always get a comment saying "but I have this extra requirement". Is this unsalvageable? Yes, unless the OP makes it clearer. That doesn't make SO welcoming though. It's certainly not but I agree that it is more of a structural issue than a community issue.
    – ayhan
    Apr 27, 2018 at 18:14
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    @ayhan: "It is a bad question because it does not explain why the correct output is correct." I disagree. They don't need to say why that is the correct output. They want a certain output; they expected the program to provide that output, but it doesn't. There's no need to investigate further. Clearly, the OP doesn't understand how Python formatting works. Apr 27, 2018 at 18:15
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    @Servy I didn't say being welcoming means upvoting LQQ. I am wondering if, rather than downvoting a new user, it would be more productive to the community in general by trying to guide them to ask better questions. (Not that I am claiming that I did this). I think the downvotes and comments can be demoralizing. Without an explanation, you may very well drive this person away.
    – pault
    Apr 27, 2018 at 18:23
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    @pault: More productive for whom? For us as users of the platform? No. More productive for people who aren't willing to invest time in asking a good question? Sure. But which of these groups matter more? Apr 27, 2018 at 18:24
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    "rather than downvoting a new user" so any questions by new users should be immune to downvote, or... require commenting on downvote (this again?)?
    – Andrew T.
    Apr 27, 2018 at 18:24
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    To almost any answerer in [python], this will take ~30 seconds to edit into shape. The requirement is clear because there's a desired output -> gold dust as far as I'm concerned when it comes to these questions. My qualm is 7 people downvoted without editting it into shape.
    – jpp
    Apr 27, 2018 at 18:25
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    @pault: "certainly not, but maybe they should get a little more leeway?" Why? Why couldn't they show us some leeway by asking a good question the first time around? Apr 27, 2018 at 18:26
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    @pault: I don't see how editing someone's question helps them to ask better questions. It trains them to expect us to fix their questions for them. Apr 27, 2018 at 18:28
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    @NicolBolas Or maybe it shows them how they should have asked their question? Or how they should have used markdown to format it? These seem quite possible to me. Apr 27, 2018 at 18:29
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    @pault There aren't enough people on SO willing and able to personally tutor every single person asking a bad question in how to ask a good question. Additionally, a huge percentage of the people asking bad questions have no interest in being tutored in how to ask a good question. You're more than welcome to spend as much of your time as you want trying to help people ask better questions. That's great. What's not good is demanding that everyone else do so for every bad question that they see, because that's just not a possibility.
    – Servy
    Apr 27, 2018 at 18:30
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    Also worth noting that you did none of said things to help the OP improve their question in that example. You just posted your best guess of an answer to an unclear and poorly researched question, instead of helping the OP clarify their question and learn how to do their research properly, the way the other commentors of the question did. In other words the people your criticizing are the ones who are doing the things that you claim you want to see, while you aren't doing any of the things you claim you want to see.
    – Servy
    Apr 27, 2018 at 18:43
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    @pault You maybe misread others' comments. The point is that your editing and answering to a poor question is harmful to the site. Only when those poor-question-askers find their question never gets response/answer, will they leave the site or start learning how to use the site, both of which are the result we want. Editing and answering those question is encouraging them to come back again with more poor questions.
    – llllllllll
    Apr 27, 2018 at 19:38
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    I would counter-argue that Python has been a bit more "special" in the past in that it kind of sees these kinds of questions come through all the time and a lot of denizens think that these kinds of questions are okay to be on the site. In my mind it makes no sense to think about being welcoming if we can't determine if this kind of question even belongs here in the first place.
    – Makoto
    Apr 27, 2018 at 19:38

3 Answers 3

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You asked one question, but bound to it is a number of other questions.

  1. Is this a question deserving of downvotes?

    I'm not a Python programmer, but I would say "sure". The question as it originally stood was poorly formatted. Even after the formatting issues were fixed, there were many other problems with it, from the bad title to the !English.

    Calling this question "clear" does a disservice to people who take the time to ask well-formed questions.

  2. Is this question unsalvageable?

    No. It can be made into a decent question. Its simplicity (I assume; I'm not a Python programmer) means that it's unlikely to become a good question, but it can be made into something not-terrible.

  3. Is it OK to downvote salvageable questions?

    Absolutely. You vote based on the content as it currently stands, not as it might be. If content could be made better, it's OK for you to make it better. It's also OK for you to downvote and move on.

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    Would you care to opine on the comments to that question? Or are they condoned because the question is downvotable?
    – jpp
    Apr 27, 2018 at 18:37
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    @AndrewT.: OK, my opinion on the comments is what it has always been: garbage in, garbage out. Ask a bad question, it's not unreasonable to expect less-than-stellar responses from people who've had to sift through 50 bad questions just today. Apr 27, 2018 at 18:43
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    A piece of garbage for a piece of garbage makes the whole network a little more garbage. Apr 27, 2018 at 18:55
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    A bad question should never be an excuse for snarky comments. I agree with the content, but not with the tone of the comments on this question. It would have taken the same amount of time to write them more positive.
    – BDL
    Apr 27, 2018 at 19:19
  • @AlexanderO'Mara: I'm not saying it's a good thing; I'm saying it's the expected thing. If you allow lots of garbage into your system, you're going to create more garbage. If you work to stop bad questions from showing up at all, you'll get a lot fewer of these comments, even on other bad questions that slip through. Apr 27, 2018 at 19:32
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    I think that the language barrier was a major reason for the poor reception here. If the poster was a native English speaker, it's possible (not definite) that they would have posed it in a more acceptable manner. My experience (anecdotal) is that most similar difficulty (subjective) questions with cut-and-pastable code are well received if they are well written (without typos, good grammar, etc).
    – pault
    Apr 27, 2018 at 20:14
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One of the greatest issues with the internet is the implied tone of phrases, where the reader decides if a phrase is rude/unwelcoming or not.

The comment that most called my attention was:

You told the thing to print the first three characters several times. What do you expect to happen?

I read this and re-read the question, because I didn't get why this was being quoted. I didn't see it as rude. So I decided to try something. I re-read the comment twice, once in the voice of a jerk in a tech class in high school who was always putting people down, and once in the voice of my current team lead at work who was also my trainer originally. Both people who might make this comment. Here are the results of what the implied tone said instead of the actual words.

Jerk's voice: You don't have any idea what you're doing, do you? You wrote code to print out the first three characters several times. Why do you think the computer will do something you don't understand in the first place?

Team Lead's voice: See here? Those lines will make it print out the first three characters several times. What do you expect the code to do instead?


The difference between these is that one is reading the original comment as someone trying to be condescending, the other is someone trying to understand the circumstance so that they have enough information to help you (understand what you expect to help you get there).

I do not believe that the commenter is on Stack Overflow because they get their kicks making fun of bad code. In my experience, the people here really do want to help, and they desire to help people construct good productive questions and answers. But this is the internet, and you can't hear anyone's voice or tone as they speak. So if a person reads a comment expecting the writer to be condescending, then that's how they will hear it, thus leading to a feeling of the site being unwelcoming. But if the person reads a comment and imagines the voice and tone of someone they trust, someone who gives constructive feedback, then they will be able to receive the comment in a welcoming way.

Of course there will always be a few bad apples, people who are explicitly rude. But in my experience, they don't stay around the site that long. The people I see commenting and answering and flagging are good people wanting to help the site and help the users. Though if someone tries to be offended by whatever they read, or are looking at SO community members as elitists who look down on the new users, or anything else that creates a rude, condescending or otherwise unwelcoming tone, then they will be offended and find what they expect to see regardless of how welcoming the Stack Overflow users they come into contact with try to be.

So bad question or example of Stack Overflow not being welcoming? To my eyes, I'd say Stack Overflow was plenty welcoming, so it was the question that needed some work.

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    I think this is a huge stretch. There are thousands of brusque comments like that on the site; in my opinion they are a sign of frustration on the part of the reviewer. What did you expect to happen is literally included in the question (how I make correct? like this). If the commentor's intentions were true, they could have answered to with an explanation on why the observed behavior occurred. As it stands it is the 'jerk' answer, not the 'team lead'. May 1, 2018 at 15:16
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    @KirkBroadhurst This is exactly my point. You expect the reviewers to be frustrated, and so you hear it that way. And it feels clear as day to you because that is how you are reading it, and it's difficult for you to see it any other way. And maybe there are some frustrated reviewers (though I find it hard to understand why a person would spend their free time doing something they don't enjoy like reviewing posts if it irritates them so much) who do comment rudely, like the bad apples I mentioned. But this comment in particular is only offensive if you decide it to be offensive.
    – Davy M
    May 1, 2018 at 16:09
  • We can say that about any comment - it's only offensive if you let it be offensive. As I noted, for this to be true the commentor has to misread the question (which explicitly states the expected behavior) and also respond in a completely unhelpful manner. If this commentor is genuinely trying to explore the problem and help, they are awful at doing so. May 1, 2018 at 16:39
  • If your goal is to say "You told the thing to print the first three characters several times." as a way to explain what the wrong piece of code does, then how in the world "What do you expect to happen?" is not condescending? You can't ask me why did I think otherwise if I could not see what my code was doing in the first place. And yes, I used "how in the world" and not just "how" as a way to raise awareness of the harfmful effect words can have.
    – famargar
    Jul 4, 2018 at 12:46
  • To clarify: with the comment "You told the thing to print the first three characters several times." you may be explaining me why I was wrong. In this case "What do you expect to happen?" is condescending nonsense as my expectations were wrong and you could not pretend I had the right expectations. Or you are telling me what I already know as why the code did not work, and then "What do you expect to happen?" is condescendence added to condescendence.
    – famargar
    Jul 4, 2018 at 13:01
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    So the full statement IS condescending. Your actors are either a malevolent condescending jerk, or a benevolent condescending line manager. I do not see any role model in this story.
    – famargar
    Jul 4, 2018 at 13:03
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    @Famargar I have already clearly explained that it is completely reasonable that a person reads the phrase and all they hear is the condescending version like you are doing. That does not mean that the completely reasonable request to know what the OP was expecting the code to do sounds condescending to everyone, and it definitely does not mean that the OP was trying to be condescending. How in the world you ask? Someone has a different viewpoint than you, that's how. Someone reads it with a light friendly tone instead of that of a malevolent condescending jerk, and it becomes welcoming.
    – Davy M
    Jul 4, 2018 at 13:34
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    Perhaps the original author of the comment is a condescending jerk. That could be true. Just like I and others read it read it in a positive voice, perhaps a negative voice was the intention all along. That is possible. But I don't see it. And people on the internet will be a lot happier if they don't intentionally try to see or hear things with unwritten sarcasm, condescension, or otherwise offensive material that isn't there in the first place.
    – Davy M
    Jul 4, 2018 at 13:37
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    @DavyM I appreciate your comment that people should not expect offense - that is absolutely true. However, I tried to exhaustively explain in my second comment, why the comment "You told the thing to print the first three characters several times. What do you expect to happen?" is at best benevolently condescending. Where do you disagree with that explanation?
    – famargar
    Jul 4, 2018 at 13:54
  • @DavyM Also, please note again that I used "why in the world" to raise awareness that a mild variation to a comment can turn a generic comment into a condescending one. That seems to have had the (un)intended effect of prompting you to explain me that people can have different viewpoint - i.e. condescendence. This is exactly how we blast each other on internet. I am proposing to be kinder to each other.
    – famargar
    Jul 4, 2018 at 14:02
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    @Famargar I don't disagree that you read it as condescending, I disagree with your claim that it is absolutely at least 50% condescending. My evidence is the fact that when I read it, it doesn't sound condescending to me at all, it sounds like a genuine explanation and request. And I believe at least several of the people who upvoted my answer also don't automatically see the condescension that you are certain is there. That's why I invite people to try to read the comment in the voice of someone you know and trust not to be rude to you. But if you don't see it, don't worry. You could be -c-
    – Davy M
    Jul 4, 2018 at 14:02
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    right after all. Maybe the person meant to be rude and I am just being naïve. Though for me, reading everything in a positive tone makes everything feel more welcoming and keeps me happier, so I guess being naïve could just be what works for me.
    – Davy M
    Jul 4, 2018 at 14:02
  • Let us continue this discussion in chat.
    – famargar
    Jul 4, 2018 at 14:02
1

The advice in the review queue, as I understand it, is to downvote salvageable questions.

So the downvoters indicated that the sample question isn't ready to appear on the front page yet, and the commenters advised the OP how to finish the question.

I think many new users don't see the downvote as encouragement to improve their question. Perhaps we need another way to convey that message.

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  • Re "downvote salvageable questions": Do you mean "downvote unsalvageable questions" (the opposite)? Nov 4, 2022 at 15:29
  • No @PeterMortensen . This answer is 5 years old, and I'm not sure where I saw the advice. However the process I tried to describe is to downvote salvageable questions, but if a question is the opposite, unsalvageable , flag it or vote to close. I don't think voting either way on salvageable questions helps anyone, but a down vote was the official guidance I had seen.
    – dcorking
    May 17, 2023 at 20:29

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