Yesterday I was searching through some questions on Stack Overflow and I was thinking: could it be useful to standardize the way we write long questions?
I try, in my own questions, to set a standard body with the goal to provide a clearer question (I generally have a positive response to that).
I don't want to impose a specific formatting to others, it would be impossible and very bad, I am simply wondering if it's good having a sort of template ( obviously not decided by me ) when you set a question and if not why it could be so dangerous for us. Here's an example:
Problem
Here I write about the problem and what's the issue
Documentation\research about this topic
This voice saves me a lot of downvote because of the "no research effort". It also has another purpose: in the future, the people will know why and how you arrived at this point, and what could help you.
Expected Behaviour
This field in my opinion is really important not only for the reader, but for the writer too. It makes clearer my task and what I want, sometimes it's hard describe in a few words exactly what you need.
Codepen
Here you will find the pen of your project.
Code
Interesting Code of the project here
Consideration\Update
In this field you will have all of your consideration or update about what you wrote
I don't want to impose this standard to everyone, obviously, but the positive effects that I have when doing it gives to me a lot of advantages when I post a question:
- I'm forced to find documentation - and to read it -
- I'm forced to understand what's my task
- I'm forced to make a clear question and avoid the downvote syndrome
- I prevent comments like "post your codepen" or similar
I believe something like that could really help the writer and the reader.