I think you already did a good job. It's fantastic you want to do even better. The only things that come to mind are:
It's a delicate balance with "noise," but I try to open with "Welcome to Stack Overflow!" (if appropriate) or "Hi!" (if not) in an effort to be overtly welcoming up front.
"You should read the help section on creating a minimal, complete, verifiable example" can be read fairly negatively, even if meant neutrally. People don't like being told what they should do. :-) My stock comment (recently revised to try to make it friendlier), shown here with salutation removed since it would have been your second comment, is:
The way SO works, your whole question (including any necessary code) has to be in your question above, not just linked. Two reasons: People shouldn't have to go off-site to help you; and links rot, making the question and its answers useless to people in the future. Please put a Minimal, Complete, and Verifiable example in the question. More: How do I ask a good question?
(I use a bookmarklet for it. The JavaScript version of that includes a link to how to use Stack Snippets.)
Basically, I shoot for (even if I sometimes fall short of) being even more welcoming and generous than I may feel, because A) Written communication can be soulless, and B) Any given OP is not necessarily one of the 18,752 help-vampires I've dealt with before, and it's not fair to take out my frustration with those 18,752 help-vampires on the OP. Particularly when so many people posting questions are not help-vampires, but people with genuine problems they're willing to work to solve (and work with us to help them solve).
But this is nit-picking at best. Again, FWIW, I think you already did a good job leading the horse to water; the horse refusing to drink it wasn't your fault. Without wanting to be (or seem to be) a jerk, it seems to me the interaction was already at least as positive as the OP deserved it to be. If they walked away thinking "That wasn't much of a positive experience," good. They clearly weren't willing to make their question a positive interaction for the people offering to help, or a useful question for others in future. If they are reluctant to repeat the experience, that's a good result for the community. It's unfortunate for the OP, but that's self-generated.
Here's why I think it was at least as positive as it needed to be:
- Unless comments have been removed, no one denigrated or insulted the user
- People (you) did put forward positive suggestions for how the question could be improved to the point where people could reasonably help
- No one assumed the OP was male (or at least, didn't address him/her with a male pronoun)
I'm of the camp that is vehemently opposed to any form of bias or negativity on the basis of gender/gender identification, race, national origin, sexual orientation, language ability¹, body shape, or other similar personal properties. But I'm fine with being neutral to borderline negative when people expect help without putting in any effort, without being willing to work within the site's rules and purpose; and who clearly refuse to take on-board useful suggestions for improving their post. (My only real issue with the recent controversial SE blog post was the conflation of those two things, which to me are completely distinct issues with different causes, effects, moral dimensions, urgency, and potential solutions.)
So I try to open with welcoming-ness, and to continue with friendliness, but if the other side isn't doing their part, eventually I'm happy to be neutral to slightly-negative if necessary — on the basis of the post, not the person.
¹ Language ability - I'm opposed to bias or negativity, but naturally we do have to be able to understand the question, and the OP has to be able to understand comments and answers. Sometimes that means suggesting a different site (where one exists in the OP's apparent native language) or suggesting getting help with their English from a friend or coworker. But positively. :-)
viewAll()
calls inside code supposed to be doing the sorting). And yes the OP should have been told to edit the question itself until it was concise and clear, instead of replying in comments. Sometimes we need to go ahead and make the damn edit and show the OP how to be more clear. That often helps. If they're still unclear or unresponsive after that...C++
. By reading meta, I was expecting a snark-fest, but he got an answer to his question and an answer to his follow up question, with little to no snarkiness involved. What else would you want?