110

Dumb questions. We have all seen them. Like the one I just saw that with this Java code sample,

while (!name.equals("out")) {
    System.out.println(name);
    break;
}

that asked why it was not "looping". (Answer: the break statement!)

OK. That's a dumb question ... but we don't want to dump on the person who asked it, because that's unfriendly. (He or she is a beginner at Java and at Stack Overflow.) And the question does warrant a light-weight answer. (It did satisfy the basic requirement of intelligibility, and there is a limit on the amount of meaningful research that a beginner programmer can do.)

But, we don't really want questions like that in the long term. They help nobody but the OP. Once someone has answered, they are (frankly) a waste of time to even read. Not to mention a bit depressing.

Here are a couple of ideas:

  1. We used to have a closure reason which was basically that the question was only of relevance to the OP. That was removed. How about we bring it back?

  2. Variation on 1: there is a closure reason, "This question was caused by a problem that can no longer be reproduced or a simple typographical error." How about tweaking that to include "beginners mistakes" ... appropriately worded?

  3. Variation on 1: a closure reason for "beginners mistakes" ... appropriately worded.

  4. How about, a new class of closure reasons that can only be used for questions that have an answer (or an answer with a non-negative score)? These would result in different messaging to the user that doesn't suggest they have done anything wrong or that they should edit their question to improve it.

    In a sense, this is how dupe closure is handled.

Discuss :-)

43
  • 100
    I think we forget the most important part: the number of users that will jump on those dumb questions to answer them to get easy reputation. Even worst, they will also upvote them to attract more attention so they also get more upvotes. How can we also avoid this? Dec 2, 2018 at 1:52
  • 60
    There is nothing inherently wrong (IMO) in people getting reputation from answering dumb questions.
    – Stephen C
    Dec 2, 2018 at 2:02
  • 23
    we don't really want Questions like that in the long term. Spitballing... I agree that we don't want these questions long term, maybe instead of closure, these can be a direct deletion type reason? A banner could be put up on the question for the question asker to see that says "Question Archived" with a little blurb about how such questions are not useful to other users, and the post is archived to maintain the high quality question and answers visible, then the question gets deleted when the banner is put on. Similar to closure, but without the bad connotation, and it gets it off the site.
    – Davy M
    Dec 2, 2018 at 3:08
  • 5
    The [new-nav] project failure was very, very painful. That SO management did not insist on an instant v2 version was criminal. But hard to guess what they were thinking, there might be more to it. All you can do now is wait for an hour. Dec 2, 2018 at 8:48
  • 8
    @StephenC of course there is nothing wrong answering those questions but such thing will increase the number of dump questions and encourage them and it will make the cleaning job more difficult. Even if at the end the question will get closed, we will still get more and more because the logic is "I don't mind if my question will get closed if at the end I have the answer". So we should somehow educate users to better consider closing than answering, especially high reputation users (Yes I see a lot of High rep answering dump questions ...) Dec 2, 2018 at 8:57
  • 4
    @NickA downvoting isn't enough, I try my best until it get deleted ;) Dec 2, 2018 at 8:58
  • 16
    While I feel a lot of sympathy for your concern, I'm afraid that adding more/better closure reasons won't have any effect. As indicated by @TemaniAfif, the vast majority of people sees a "dumb" question as an "easy" question. Voting to close is the last thing people do. Sometimes I doubt whether they even know they can. That's my greatest concern: seeing questions that clearly should be closed immediately taking too much time for five users to realize it. If we want to discourage "dumb" questions we need users that deal with them, using the tools that are available already. Dec 2, 2018 at 9:51
  • 29
    Who decides a question is dumb?
    – Jongware
    Dec 2, 2018 at 11:21
  • 11
    @DavyM Nice try but doesn't discourage more of that ilk from being posted in the future because it does not punish the person who posted it. You're going to end up with two "streams" of questions - good ones, and crap ones that people keep posting to "get their help" regardless of the inevitable archival. Then you have two sites. Who's going to moderate the latter? It might sound harsh to "punish" people who post rubbish but at the end of the day incentives matter otherwise what is the point. Being nice to everybody at all costs does not work and I can't stress this enough. Dec 2, 2018 at 16:53
  • 22
    @YvetteColomb Yikes. So the author's theses are that Stack Overflow is "toxic and hostile" towards beginners, that the site's curators can be safely ignored because they're "neckbeard"s who live in "their mom’s basement", but also that if you're a beginner you should toughen up and "don’t let that shit get to you" and it's your own fault anyway because your questions are "terrible", and also April Wensel in particular is too hypersensitive for it to ever be possible to avoid offending her? The total lack of charity towards anyone being written about makes it kind of distasteful, to me.
    – Mark Amery
    Dec 2, 2018 at 19:09
  • 10
    @MarkAmery oh yeh, there's a lot of vitriol. It's still interesting. It goes "There’s nothing worse than a question like this:" and then gives some really good suggestions about how to ask.
    – user3956566
    Dec 2, 2018 at 22:50
  • 4
    @PSyLoCKe The problem isn't it being about programming logic. Stack Overflow is meant to be a library of questions and answers with long term value -- things to discover, share, and refer to. The fundamental problem with the example question is that it has very little long-term value.
    – duplode
    Dec 3, 2018 at 1:15
  • 6
    There are no stupid questions. Only stupid people. Does that help? OK, that was wrong, but I couldnt resist. So, seriously: nothing we say, or not say here, or do, or not do, or "suggest" will have any meaningful effect. "Quality matters" only matters to a very specific subset of this community. And from what you could read here over the past months, the people running the show and paying the servers, aren't exactly in the midst of that subset. New users matter, question count matters, growth matters ... quality ... not so much.
    – GhostCat
    Dec 3, 2018 at 10:37
  • 4
    I like this proposal by Shog. Rapid deletion can be kinder than closure, since users spend less time exposed to down-votes, hence can be harder to get q-banned.
    – yivi
    Dec 3, 2018 at 12:17
  • 3
    @Christine It might not be a bad question in some general sense, but it is not a good fit for this specific site, as questions here are meant to be useful to others who find it and read it.
    – duplode
    Dec 4, 2018 at 12:56

11 Answers 11

72

Mark basic questions as duplicates

The break example has many potential duplicates:

  1. What does break statement do in java?
  2. Difference between break and continue statement
  3. Breaking out of a for loop in Java

These took around 30 seconds to find. If the original poster read and understood all these Q&A, their question would be answered. If not, they should specify precisely what they don't understand. I often leave a comment as such:

Read the marked duplicates. If the use of break is still unclear, edit your question to specify exactly what is unclear.

For @YvetteColomb's example regarding parameters, you have (among others):

  1. What's the difference between an argument and a parameter?
  2. "Parameter" vs "Argument"

There are benefits to this approach:

  1. The duplicates have a wealth of information / detail which is likely not going to materialise on the basic question asked today. It's also "vetted" via SO's voting mechanism.
  2. You are encouraging the poster to learn and come back to edit their question appropriately if their problem is not solved.
  3. Especially if you're a gold-badge holder in the relevant tag, you prevent others from wasting their time on a basic question.

In my view, you are serving all 3 main groups alike: the questioner, users reaching the Q&A via Google, and answerers looking for good questions.

14
  • 12
    One clear drawback of this approach: the question won't be auto-deleted if it's marked as duplicate. It will continue be on the internet to pollute SO search results. I'd rather close it for other reason and delete it eventually.
    – llllllllll
    Dec 2, 2018 at 11:33
  • 13
    @liliscent, Can voting not take care of this? Does this still stand.. I can confirm that duplicate questions without answers that are downvoted DO get deleted after 30 days.
    – jpp
    Dec 2, 2018 at 11:35
  • 6
    Interesting. I'm not aware of that. Then this approach is good. +1
    – llllllllll
    Dec 2, 2018 at 11:39
  • 3
    @liliscent and jpp: It is worth noting that the Roomba deletes dupes as RemoveDeadQuestions and RemoveAbandonedQuestions, but not as RemoveAbandonedClosed (see this for an exposition of the criteria). Dupes can be automatically deleted, but it is harder for that to happen than with other close reasons. Two examples, arbitrarily taken from things I cast close votes on: this question was not automatically deleted, while this one was caught by the Roomba.
    – duplode
    Dec 2, 2018 at 11:49
  • 2
    Do these example duplicates appear in the list of possibly-asked-before if you try to ask that question? If not, fixing that should have TOP priority. If they do but the question must still be closed manually as a duplicate of one of them, punish the questioner for not reading that list and thus wasting answerers' time. (Not physically; a pop-up reminder "your previous question(s) already had answers so please check before asking" ought to be enough.)
    – Jongware
    Dec 2, 2018 at 12:08
  • 1
    @duplode, Isn't the reason this one wasn't deleted because it didn't have a score -1 or less. In which case, possibly that's a reasonable result? In other words, users should have been more trigger-happy with the downvote and/or the question should have been closed as a duplicate sooner (which often encourages downvoters).
    – jpp
    Dec 2, 2018 at 12:12
  • 1
    @jpp It is reasonable indeed; I just mentioned it because it is worth it to be aware of the difference. (I remember I used to find the Roomba rules extremely confusing before I found the Meta.SE post I have linked to here.)
    – duplode
    Dec 2, 2018 at 12:18
  • 2
    @usr2564301 Nice idea, but unfortunately, the "possibly similar or related" search is apparently hostage to the same unsophisticated search engine as the rest of Stack Exchange.
    – tripleee
    Dec 3, 2018 at 11:04
  • 6
    I disagree, because we shouldn't need to write duplicates for every utterly fundamental thing in a programming language. "How do I write hello world?", "What does the if statement do?" etc. The answer to their question is to read the first chapters in a beginner-level programming book. SO is not some interactive beginner tutorial that should be used in place of traditional studies. By marking such basic questions as duplicate, we signal that asking such poorly-researched questions are fine. While the question is not fine and should be deleted.
    – Lundin
    Dec 3, 2018 at 12:25
  • 1
    @Lundin, Fair point. I'm not pretending there are no downsides. But after a while on SO, you learn that nobody can make beginners read books, and nobody can stop them from asking basic questions. Moreover, the powers that be don't care about improving the community's ability to moderate. 1 vote-to-close (by a gold badge holder) can save hours of wasted man-hours. With no structural changes in sight, dupehammer reduces friction and saves time.
    – jpp
    Dec 3, 2018 at 13:12
  • 3
    Duphammer works for short questions, but not for a chunk of code with multiple separate errors. I sometimes go for "too broad" in cases where the only really sufficient answer would be a large tutorial custom written for that user to correct all of their misunderstandings / lack of basic knowledge about programming in general. Dec 4, 2018 at 1:55
  • 1
    @PeterCordes, The problem is where do you draw the line? Often the OP doesn't know they have 2 errors in their code. They are focusing perhaps on the obvious one. The real problem, alas, is they don't have sufficient debugging skills. So while "Too broad" is technically correct it often causes friction as OP isn't going to learn how to debug overnight. BUT if you notice a couple of errors and mark some duplicate targets, they have a chance and might (if they care) learn how to spot the errors.
    – jpp
    Dec 4, 2018 at 9:45
  • 1
    @jpp: yes exactly. I usually already do exactly what you said, and find one or 2 duplicates that cover the first couple errors I notice. Too broad I mostly only use on conceptual questions, not questions that are clearly only debugging question. My previous comment wasn't very accurate. Unfortunately in the [assembly] tag, we get so many questions chock full of multiple errors, like simple loop-logic debugging errors plus basic conceptual errors (understanding the difference between an integer and an ASCII decimal string representation of a number is one of the most common.) Dec 4, 2018 at 9:54
  • 4
    @PeterCordes Sometimes you're able to write excellent answer to low quality question, it's very rare indeed. Perhaps the tag matters, you're so knowledgable in x86 which is useful and interesting to many C++ programmers. In C++ tag, however, I believe 70% of the questions should be deleted immediately after posting, good-answer-to-bad-question phenomena isn't possible. Actually I vote to close many of them as "asking-us-to-recommand-tutorial". Not particularly accurate, but it's the closest reason I could give.
    – llllllllll
    Dec 4, 2018 at 13:00
62

Throwing in some more ideas for discussion and what I believe is a root cause.

Change perspective towards dumb questions

Changing the attitude here is key.

Replacing "dumb" with "beginner".

For instance, one of my earliest questions:

enter image description here

I did not know what a parameter was.

And then proceeded to edit the question in an attempt to improve it, to a point that was equally fundamental/dumb/beginner and unrecognisable from the first edition.

enter image description here

I clearly had no concept of program flow.

Now I know my intentions were to write a good question. I had no clue how to go about that and didn't know enough about programming to know how to ask a decent question. That is why I am patient with many newcomers. It's not easy learning programming.

Site scope - Do beginners belong on Stack Overflow

The real issue for Stack Overflow is not filtering dumb/beginner/fundamental questions. It's really drawing a clear line. Should we accept beginner questions? There's real confusion over this. (at least for me)

What topics can I ask about here?
Stack Overflow is for professional and enthusiast programmers, people who write code because they love it. We feel the best Stack Overflow questions have a bit of source code in them, but if your question generally covers…

"professional and enthusiast programmers", not beginners.

Again people learning programming often don't know how to ask a question due to lack of domain knowledge and are usually the worst at searching for duplicates, because of this.

In the past I've advocated for a beginner sister site. It would solve some issues (create others - it could possibly end up a total cesspool).

The other thing is, I believe we need is some place we can send absolute beginners that's may even be affiliated with our site. Without offending people. There's plenty of places to get tutorials, yet these types of comments tend to be flagged.

38
  • 14
    I might be navel-gazing here, but I wonder if we need a new concept to point out which "fundamental" questions we don't want. To me, the feeling is "I know it when I see it", but I lack the vocabulary to put my finger on the difference. Can we identify something that your example and the break example in the question have in common that sets it apart from basic questions that clearly belong here?
    – duplode
    Dec 2, 2018 at 4:54
  • 13
    Yup, it sounds rather like "minimal understanding", but sharper and narrower somehow. Apparently, "unclear" is supposed to cover most cases "minimal understanding" was meant for, but "unclear" isn't a good fit here -- such a question may well be perfectly clear to visitors; if anything, it is more likely to be unclear to the asker themselves.
    – duplode
    Dec 2, 2018 at 5:36
  • 5
    The question is dumb, the person asking it might be a beginner. I've seen some pretty dumb questions asked by people that are not beginners. That's what happens when you can't scare anybody to take the time to think for a while before asking for help. Dec 2, 2018 at 8:38
  • 5
    @HansPassant what's "dumb" about it?
    – user3956566
    Dec 2, 2018 at 8:42
  • 14
    @YvetteColomb To be honest, question like this one is really dumb. We don't say it out only for politeness. It's not a beginner question. I would call someone who just finished their first year Java course a Java beginner, but such a beginner might be an expert for this question's asker, who doesn't know what break is. Beginner != Absolute clueless
    – llllllllll
    Dec 2, 2018 at 9:15
  • 20
    Do beginners belong on Stack Overflow? I wholeheartedly say YES to that. In the end, also beginners should find their answers through Google => StackOverflow. The discussion now focuses on "dumb" vs. "beginner". I think a more appropriate term is "lazy questions". Lazy questions can be asked by any user, beginner or advanced, and that's the type of questions we should filter early, if possible. Your own example shows that at least you were not a lazy questioner. Clumsy, maybe (as we all started). But I think we should be very forgiving toward clumsiness. Dec 2, 2018 at 10:25
  • 15
    @GertArnold Sure we can't blame people for being an absolute beginner, but we do blame them for coming to a wrong site for personal tutorial help. There are so many forums on the internet that are dedicated for beginners to learn the very basics, why do they come to a site that is not for that purpose? Imagine someday when you search for some problem, many SO links are polluted by these dumb questions, will you still use this site?
    – llllllllll
    Dec 2, 2018 at 11:24
  • 7
    About "a beginner sister site" - I've been wondering for some time now if this could be a solution - we could sift through the questions there and select the good ones for "copying" them to Stack Overflow. We also could close questions here with the reason that they should be migrated to the "help desk format" Dec 2, 2018 at 17:21
  • 8
    -1 just because beginners do belong on StackOverflow. Arguing that beginners don't belong here would require defining which questions were "beginner enough." Like @Mukke said, even the most expert programmers occasionally make beginner mistakes. In addition, I'd lean against just assuming that everyone has taken a beginner programming class. I know I taught myself C# before I had taken any programming classes. I also regularly teach myself new programming languages as I grow. I think jpp has a good solution in just marking duplicate easy questions as duplicates.
    – Cullub
    Dec 2, 2018 at 23:07
  • 8
    Maybe I got the policy wrong, but I thought we always judge the question, not its author. A beginner can ask a good question, I’ve seen that before, and an experienced developer may ask a dump question, I’ve also seen that before. And normally, bad questions are treated the same, regardless of the author.
    – Holger
    Dec 3, 2018 at 8:01
  • 18
    It is undeniable that over years, the site has gone from a site mainly for professionals to a site mainly for beginners. It was never meant to be that - SO is not a replacement for traditional studies. Most beginners have the problem that they ask on SO way too early. If someone can't even be bothered to read chapter 1 in a beginner-level programming book, then their problem isn't even related to programming. How did people learn things before the internet? Read a book. Take classes. Ask your teacher. RTFM. If SO seeks to replace that, then SO is harmful for beginners.
    – Lundin
    Dec 3, 2018 at 8:49
  • 8
    As for the beginner sister-site, it will never work, they would come to SO no matter. What would probably work is to let SO be the beginner-site and then create a sister-site for advanced topics. Where beginner questions and homework are explicitly banned. I'm surprised this has not happened many years ago. SO seems to sit and passively wait for someone else to come and take their veteran users away.
    – Lundin
    Dec 3, 2018 at 8:52
  • 4
    @DarkMukke If they can afford a PC and internet connection, but not afford books or studies, then maybe they should get their priorities straight... Also, it is not some human right to become a programmer...
    – Lundin
    Dec 3, 2018 at 11:40
  • 8
    I think some of the objections here, like @GertArnold's, miss a valid and important point. Yes, beginner-level questions are not inherently unwelcome here, and can be very valuable. But I think what Yvette is saying - and I think it's true, and ironically illustrated well by some of the comments here - is that we often act as though bad beginner-level questions are the fault of the asker's innate personal failings - their stupidity, their laziness, or their selfishness - when really they're just impaired by being beginners, and might become useful contributors when they have more experience.
    – Mark Amery
    Dec 3, 2018 at 12:22
  • 6
    I think when Yvette talks about changing attitudes here, she's gesturing at a dysfunctional attitude that really does exist in the community - one where we don't just acknowledge that beginner-level questions are permissible and sometimes good, but where we act like beginners are not impaired at all by being beginners, that they are just as capable of asking good questions as the rest of us, and that we're therefore justified in reacting with anger and condemnation when they fail. Whatever the solution is, I do think it's fair to call that perspective out for not being rooted in reality.
    – Mark Amery
    Dec 3, 2018 at 12:29
18

I often vote to close such questions as off-topic:

This question was caused by a problem that can no longer be reproduced or a simple typographical error. While similar questions may be on-topic here, this one was resolved in a manner unlikely to help future readers. This can often be avoided by identifying and closely inspecting the shortest program necessary to reproduce the problem before posting.

This may or may not be stretching the intended meaning of "can no longer be reproduced".

I use this closing reason only in cases where OP clearly "mistyped" the code. That is, when people answer the question (often in comments), OP writes something like "OMG such an obvious bug, I feel dumb for not seeing it".

An easy way to deal with these questions would be by giving OP the chance to "agree" with the closing reason. Something that helps OP say "Yes, this question is about a typo in my code - this question cannot help anyone else - reduce discoverability of this question".

I know that something like this already exists for "duplicate" closing reason - I (as OP) can "vote to close" my own question as duplicate after someone votes for it, and my "vote" is final.

So, my suggestion is:

  1. Move the "typo" closing reason from the "off-topic" bunch into a separate choice
  2. If someone voted "typo" on the question, present some UI for OP, which says "Yes, it's a dumb question, and I got my answer"
  3. If OP presses on the UI, close the question immediately, and mark it somehow "irrelevant" in the database to make it less likely to come up in searches
3
  • 1
    The suggestion in this answer is an abuse of the suggested close reason. For those that are doing this already, please stop. For those who read this answer and think that abusing this close reason is a good idea, please don't.
    – user4639281
    Dec 4, 2018 at 14:18
  • Which "suggestion" are you referring to? My post has several of them, better clarify which one you are talking about to prevent confusion.
    – anatolyg
    Dec 4, 2018 at 15:08
  • 1
    I think it's safe to assume that I'm referring to the suggestion to abuse an existing close reason for things it was explicitly never meant to be used for, and to the fact that you said you're already abusing such close reason for said purpose.
    – user4639281
    Dec 4, 2018 at 21:00
9

I would have closed this with the "simple typo" option. Because I don't think it is a beginner mistake.

It seems likely that the break is just some slip that happened while rewriting the code. If the OP knows what break does, then they will recognize the problem as a silly mistake as soon as they spot it.

Why would a beginner type a random keyword in the middle of their loop if they don't know what that keyword does? Sure, beginners do strange things, but if they have no clue about what it does, the name of the keyword is rather dramatic and should be off-putting. If I add this, will something break? Uh-oh, better use this with caution.

That being said, the "too localized" close reason was good to have. SO is a significantly worse site now than it was when it had "too localized" and "must demonstrate minimal knowledge" close reasons. But that was back in the days when it was still a site for professional and enthusiast programmers.

2
  • 1
    Sometimes reading some questions I feel that the code provided in the question was written by a teacher, and the assignment was "make the code work" or similar
    – ZenJ
    Dec 4, 2018 at 1:43
  • Agree with @Zenj here. Sometimes I feel the code has been lifted from / merged from another source and the user is simply unable to adapt it for their use case. (That practice, without understanding, is of course bad, but SO isn't a good platform for teaching good learning practices.)
    – jpp
    Dec 4, 2018 at 9:03
6

A few spur-of-the-moment thoughts:

  • #1 is a tough sell, as the reasons that led "too localized" to be dropped (high potential for misuse, mostly) presumably still apply.

  • As for #2 and #3, the devil lies in what counts as "appropriately worded". I suspect beginner mistakes isn't quite what we would want to aim at, but rather unenlightening problems. Not all beginner mistakes are created equal. Some are completely uninteresting, like the one you have shown here; others, however, are rooted in something worth explaining here. In particular, a common mistake of general interest deserves a proper duplicate target.

  • #4 is an interesting idea. It reminds me a bit of this suggestion of creative use of wiki answers to handle typo questions. I suspect the main hurdle would be differentiating such a feature from the establishment of a parallel system of second-class disposable questions, which is broadly considered a bad idea as it would encourage, and arguably endorse, posting questions with no long-term value. (I'm fairly sure there was another feature request about temporary questions that had more extensive discussion, but I couldn't find it yet.)

6
  • 1
    Your bullet 1). Yes. But if the "too localized" could be used only for Questions with Answers? Your bullet 2) Yes agreed! Your bullet 3) But counter to your counter is the fact that the current settings are is encouraging these questions anyway ... because of welcoming-ness.
    – Stephen C
    Dec 2, 2018 at 2:09
  • @StephenC Here is an attempt to look in another way at what it would mean to have a close reason that only applies to answered questions. The curation mechanisms we have here can have several goals, including (a) Stopping poor questions from becoming part of the library in the long run; (b) Stopping poor questions from diverting the attention of contributors by taking up space in question feeds and review queues; and (c) Stopping users that consistently post poor questions from doing so. As far as I can see, this new mechanism would mostly aim at (a). Would that be enough?
    – duplode
    Dec 2, 2018 at 2:26
  • Agreed: probably not enough. But there is not enough space in a meta Question to propose solutions for all of the problems that need addressing :-)
    – Stephen C
    Dec 2, 2018 at 2:56
  • The main issue I have is any closure reason that doesn't give OP the answer they need/want is likely to cause friction. Marking as a duplicate, which most basic questions are, is less likely to cause friction because they might find an answer which helps them.
    – jpp
    Dec 2, 2018 at 20:22
  • @jpp Duplicate closure is a good tool indeed, and your answer makes that case well. Some questions, though, are so uninteresting that even the modest effort of maintaining a duplicate target and retrieving it whenever necessary feels like being too much.
    – duplode
    Dec 3, 2018 at 1:36
  • 1
    @duplode, Yep, I do appreciate the problem. I am biased. I now almost exclusively use review queues to review duplicates in my gold-badge tags. It's more rewarding for me (I learn more from canonicals), probably save hours of contributors' time (by unilateral closing), and contribute more in my areas of expertise (editing / adding to canonicals).
    – jpp
    Dec 3, 2018 at 10:15
4

A quick, totally not at all thought-through suggestion: some sort of new flag/close reason which marks the question for deletion/auto-roomba after n days or once it has been [marked as] answered. This allows newbies to get their question answered, but doesn’t clutter up the search results in all perpetuity; in effect giving both sides what they want.

Perhaps the answerer could tick a box along the lines of “this topic is too specific and this answer has no general value” for this to take effect.

The difference to the existing close/delete workflow would be that a question can be “preemptively deleted”, as opposed to 5 CVs followed by 3 DVs, while still allowing it some grace period to be answered.

3
  • But there might be useful information in there. Perhaps a flag option for those questions, "Retain. This question has lasting value and deserves to stay (not auto-deleted)."? Dec 2, 2018 at 13:38
  • 6
    Well, we’re explicitly talking about questions with no lasting value here, which nonetheless don’t really fit existing close reasons.
    – deceze Mod
    Dec 2, 2018 at 14:02
  • This fits in what I was thinking but I was aiming my solution more at altering the current interface while this may be easier to not drastically change the current process for review.
    – DarkMukke
    Dec 3, 2018 at 13:26
0

Basically the question quoted asks "Why does my program break out of the loop?".

The simplest answer is: "You have a break statement within the loop.".

It could be answered with a comment and self-deleted, but not if answers are given. We could keep the question so duplicates would be attached to it, but it's only a FAQ if it's a common mistake and not something unlikely to be asked again.

What constitutes preserving versus deleting is an opinion, like a vote most people have one; it's a flag category that is missing.

This category of question could be resolved politely with a flag called: "The question or product documentation contains the answer".

Such questions invite an explanation of what can plainly be seen by many people, but for some reason was missed by the one asking. It is true that something that is obvious to many people might escape notice by both expert and novice.

Flagging the question as self-evident allows both expert and beginner to re-read their question and determine for themselves if there is something they might have missed.

Let's look at another slightly more complicated example: Terminating a Java Program

public class Testing {

public static void main(String... str) {
    System.out.println(1);
    System.exit(0);
    System.out.println(2);
    return;
 }
}

It has 50 upvotes and 275,253 views in almost 5 years.

The OP's question is:

"I am sure that 2 will not appear. [What] I would like to know is why return; or other codes can write below the statement of System.exit(0); and what was real definition for return; (because it is strange thing for me return without any variables or values) ?"

IF the OP had read the documentation for the commands they were using or performed a search they might have found: "Returning a Value from a Method" which clearly explains:

"Any method declared void doesn't return a value. It does not need to contain a return statement, but it may do so. In such a case, a return statement can be used to branch out of a control flow block and exit the method and is simply used like this:

 return;

If you try to return a value from a method that is declared void, you will get a compiler error.

Any method that is not declared void must contain a return statement with a corresponding return value, like this:

return returnValue;

The data type of the return value must match the method's declared return type; you can't return an integer value from a method declared to return a boolean.

The slightly more complicated question has value (for some people) and the votes/views bear that out. Without a flag to explain people's reaction to the question the OP must rely on votes and comments.

A bunch of downvotes for a newcomer might be interpreted as unfriendly, perhaps they will find it helpful to know that they need to take a second look at what they are asking; but they feel ruined, their few precious reputation points gone, back to the bottom.

A flag that contains a comment suggesting that they should have another try at answering their own question encourages them to learn on their own, rather than running outside and yelling to the world that they have a simple problem that they are unable to resolve.

Many of us have stayed up too long trying to finish something when a rest, and a view from a fresh perspective, is what is needed. A flag such as I have suggested says: 'Hey buddy, take another look at what you are asking' without being quite so blunt.

We all need a little help sometimes, other times the greatest benefit (for everyone) is that we learn to help ourselves. I agree that we need a flag for the situation, rather than a 'downvote pile on' or answers offered where one must bite their tongue while answering.

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    A wonderful use of SO is as an index to the official documentation of major programming languages. Googing "how to do x in Java", clicking through to SO, and if necessary through into the docs, is much easier than going to docs.oracle.com/javase/8/docs/api/index.html and reading it all. As such "The question or product documentation contains the answer" is in no way a good close reason.
    – GKFX
    Dec 5, 2018 at 0:29
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    No. Official Policy on Copying Content, Do not copy the complete text of external sources ..., Can I copy paste an answer from an (external) webpage?, etc. --- No need to read it all, use the search. We are not a sub-search but a value-added product. A self-evident question is simply that, but the concern here is to express that politely.
    – Rob
    Dec 5, 2018 at 1:44
  • I'm not suggesting that a straight copy-paste of docs is a good idea. Rather, many questions on SO link common problems, expressed in natural language, to the relevant page(s) of the API docs. E.g. The question of how to print in Python without a newline has a comprehensive answer for a variety of Python versions. It's unlikely that typing your question in the Python API search would get you that. That sort of question is highly valuable (1.5 M views!) but ultimately fails your criterion.
    – GKFX
    Dec 5, 2018 at 23:32
-5

I think "unclear what you are asking" is appropriate for these questions. The answer is obvious for anyone with minimal understanding, so it is unclear why the asker does not understand. Alternatively, the asker does not understand the basics (of looping in this case), and needs a tutorial or a course of instruction, in which case "too broad" is appropriate.

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    These are tempting options, but there is a catch. If we use "unclear what you're asking" for questions that are clear to readers on a literal level because it is unclear why they are being asked, or if we use "too broad" for questions that can be answered in half a dozen words because they suggest the asker needs a tutorial, we end up making it about the asker rather than the question. I would much rather have a close reason with language that indicates what is wrong with the question itself. See also the comments to Yvette's answer.
    – duplode
    Dec 2, 2018 at 12:36
  • The example on the question is about a mistake on programming logic, something that a good IDE like eclipse would detect and warn.
    – NaN
    Dec 3, 2018 at 0:00
-6

Flag and triage

EDIT: I do now see the error in this approach, I would delete it but the comments might make sense for other people thinking this way.

This could easily be an additional flag and be reviewed in triage.

Have a sub menu in requires editing that asks a quetion towards the author and will unlist/unindex the question until the author has edited their question:

Option could be (but not limited to):#

  • Bad English / grammar / formatting (which can also be dealt with by anyone else)
  • Syntax errors that can be easily solved with an IDE or similar. Author can fix these errors or close the post if that was the issue
  • Not enough information or not enough code to solve the problem

The reviewer can have a free text box to leave additional information.

Once edited the question will be reviewed for its edit again and if Look OK it will be re-added to the index.

I still believe SO should be open for all and people and not everyone is good at using a search index (SO search, google etc). We should not piss people off and discourage them to learn.

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    That goes counter to the "requires editing" usage. "Requires editing" means that users other than the author can fix the post. Two of your three examples are directed to the post author. Are you sure you are using the requires editing option correclty?
    – yivi
    Dec 3, 2018 at 10:50
  • Someone else already made this comment an hour ago and I did respond to that, but yes I might have used it wrong int he past and yes we all know the interface is misleading, but the point is that when you click unsalvageable, you are kind of condemning the author, no ?
    – DarkMukke
    Dec 3, 2018 at 11:01
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    No, you are not condeming the author. You are reviewing content, not users. If the content is not good for the site, the post author needs to be made aware so they can fix it. Closing questions is a very important part of quality control and content curation. If you disagree with clicking unsalvageable, maybe is better if you do not use the review queues. If we didn't need to close posts, we wouldn't need the queues.
    – yivi
    Dec 3, 2018 at 11:03
  • Right but the topic is still beginners / new users, no ? I mean if the author post 3 questions and all of his 3 posts get closed without constructive criticism, you are in fact condemning the author. The topic of the Q/A is about beginners, not beginners posts ( not directly anyway). I do understand we need to keep the site clean, but I do not think we should be so harsh in the resolution. I consider myself a beginner on Meta/SO, and I will probably always be, but I know opensource all to well, and if a certain group is no longer welcome SO looses all properties of community driven
    – DarkMukke
    Dec 3, 2018 at 11:57
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    Each of the close reasons do give constructive criticism though, it's impossible to close a question without giving useful feedback.
    – Davy M
    Dec 3, 2018 at 12:18
  • Well then I'll just give up. If I am having problems after 8 years of using SO I bet I am not the only one. What is constructive for you may not be for everyone else.
    – DarkMukke
    Dec 3, 2018 at 12:24
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    @DarkMukke You might find Mark Amery's comments to Yvette's answer interesting.
    – duplode
    Dec 3, 2018 at 12:45
-6

A dissent:

OK. That's a dumb question

It's not a dumb question. It might be a simple question, but so long as the person who asked it asked in good faith, someone out there was honestly mystified.

But, we don't really want questions like that in the long term. They help nobody but the OP.

On the contrary: We want lots of those question in there long term, and we want to make it as easy as possible for people to find them, so that we don't have to answer those same beginner questions over and over. Again, the OP asked because they didn't know the answer, and it's certain that other beginners will run into the same problem from time to time. If you were so inclined, you could take 10 minutes to write a really solid answer, and you'd probably gain rep from it for years.

Once someone has answered, they are (frankly) a waste of time to even read.

To you, a 500K+ user, perhaps, but SO is about helping each other by answering questions, and that doesn't just mean questions that are interesting or challenging to you.

I appreciate that you're trying to think of ways to get rid of simple questions without being unkind, but the kind and helpful thing to do here is to leave simple questions alone or answer them.

A compromise:

It might be helpful to create a tag for beginner mistakes, so that really simple stuff can be easily identified. If you're not interested in seeing very simple questions, you can add the tag to your ignore list. Beginners could benefit from watching that tag and trying to answer the questions themselves.

We'd need to be careful to have clear criteria for what makes a simple question, so that the tag doesn't get overused and become meaningless. And it'd be good to try to create a fun atmosphere around it, so that nobody feels too badly if their question is so tagged. A funny name for the tag, like (although that one's taken) or or , could help there. Pointing the tag out in the help material would make it more visible.

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  • I just want to mention that all of your name suggestions could be very insulting. Including simple-questions. This very much depends on the asker's culture and state of mind.
    – kabanus
    Dec 4, 2018 at 21:37
  • It would be very hard to hit with such a tag. Perhaps beginner-question may be soft enough - I would shy away from comedy.
    – kabanus
    Dec 4, 2018 at 21:42
  • @kabanus They certainly weren't meant to be insulting, and feel free to suggest alternatives. The point isn't to put anybody down, but rather to make it safe for beginners to ask questions that even they know are probably pretty simple. People often have a reaction like "Doh!" when the answer is pointed out.
    – Caleb
    Dec 4, 2018 at 21:44
  • I know, and I like the sentiment and suggestion, I just think it would be hard to implement. beginner-question seems OK to me, but I'm one guy. The main problem is people not from the US or English speaking countries, may miss the light hearted, warm sentiment (specifically for Doh! as well) - that is exactly how people seem unwelcoming to each other without meaning to.
    – kabanus
    Dec 4, 2018 at 21:47
  • @kabanus I think it's far more unwelcoming to see your question get closed because it was "dumb" than to have it put in a category like "simple mistakes that anybody can make." I think it'd really work out best if the OP him/herself tags the question as being simple, but SO novices likely wouldn't realize that they can/should do that. Anyway, I hear you, and I'm not too attached to any particular tag name.
    – Caleb
    Dec 4, 2018 at 21:50
  • 2
    Historical context relevant to the tag proposal: The homework tag is now officially deprecated ; Would a "facepalm" tag be useful/fun?
    – jscs
    Dec 4, 2018 at 22:08
  • @JoshCaswell Fair enough, and I get the problem with meta tags. OTOH the popularity of this question speaks to a desire to avoid simple questions, and I think being able to search for them (in combination with other tags) could be valuable. Anyway, the important point is that we shouldn't close honest questions just because they're simple and then wonder why newbies think SO is unfriendly.
    – Caleb
    Dec 4, 2018 at 22:22
  • @Caleb: but we still should close them as duplicates where and whenever possible – right? Which in itself is considered "unwelcoming" by some – because they did not get 'their' answer...
    – Jongware
    Dec 4, 2018 at 23:04
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    We shouldn't close a question just because it's simple, no, agreed. As long as we also don't not close a question just because it's by a beginner.
    – jscs
    Dec 4, 2018 at 23:13
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    A good dissenting opinion, even though I don't necessarily agree. To me, it seems there is a threshold of triviality below which even retrieving the question for later use can become difficult, as there is little for a searcher to latch onto. There is also the matter of scale -- the attention of searchers, answer writers, and curators are all limited resources. I do agree with "dumb" not being the notion we actually want to use here -- not only it is vague, it also slides too easily into making it about the poster rather than the post.
    – duplode
    Dec 5, 2018 at 2:46
  • @usr2564301 If the question really is really a dupe and the prior question has answers that cover the one in question, then sure, close it just as we would any other dupe. But don't be more aggressive about closing simple questions just because they're simple.
    – Caleb
    Dec 5, 2018 at 3:09
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    @duplode We should apply Dumbledore's standard: "Help will always be given at Hogwarts to those who ask for it.... But i would in this case amend my original statement: help is always given at Hogwarts to those who deserve it." So I'd close "give me teh codez" questions and those that show little effort, but answer those where someone seems to have put some effort into the problem and the question. And we can use these questions to grow our resources: a simple question doesn't need an expert answer — leave it for novices to answer so they build rep and become part of the community.
    – Caleb
    Dec 5, 2018 at 3:35
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    @Caleb "So I'd close 'give me teh codez' questions and those that show little effort [...]" -- This sounds like the kind of sliding I mentioned above. I don't think we should care about how much effort was actually spent on a question, but rather about whether the end result is something that can be useful in the long run. See these answers to Do we need a close reason for zero-effort questions? and Is “too broad” a valid reason to close a question that doesn't show any research effort?.
    – duplode
    Dec 5, 2018 at 13:10
  • @duplode Fair enough -- I think there's a correspondence between effort expended and utility, but it is indeed utility that we should care about.
    – Caleb
    Dec 5, 2018 at 13:23
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    Why does this loop not loop? while(foo) {print(foo); break} is a dumb question. No matter how you turn it
    – hek2mgl
    Dec 7, 2018 at 0:26
-12

I don't think it is a "dumb" question. It certainly isn't a "bad" question, it has: a reproducable code example, and a clear difference between the desired state (the code should be looping) and the actual state (the code is not looping), and therefore the question: why isn't the code looping?

Also I don't think the question helps only OP, anyone who is new to loops can benefit from this, imagine them searching for "how to stop a loop" and finding this, it would probably be helpful to them to know the break keyword, as someone would surely explain it in the answer, or link to a simple loop tutorial.

I once thought about adding a "RTFM" close reason with link to a tutorial for these "beginner" questions such as "what is the difference between long and int, how to define a function, etc.), but you can just answer them and link the tutorial in the answer for further reading, so I don't think it is necessary.

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    If they wrote the break keyword there on purpose, without knowing what it does, then of course it's a dumb question. However, I think it's far more likely that the break ended up there during some re-write of the code, a copy/paste error or similar.
    – Lundin
    Dec 3, 2018 at 12:32
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    "anyone who is new to loops can benefit from this" - Anyone, who is new to loops, is not (yet) a programmer. As such, whoever may find the information useful is not the intended target audience of Stack Overflow. Stack Overflow is for professional and enthusiast programmers. This may not be a bad question, but it sure as hell does not belong on Stack Overflow. Dec 4, 2018 at 17:17
  • By that logic this stackoverflow.com/questions/513832/… is a sumb question as well. After all the programmer wouldn't use == unless they wanted to compare the refernces, right? You assume that everyone who comes to SO has to already know how the break keyword work, but not knowing how string comparison work is apparently OK.
    – kajacx
    Dec 4, 2018 at 17:30
  • "Identity" and "equality" are highly abstract concepts. Loops are basic, concrete, hard-to-not-grasp, fundamental concepts. What's more, when you actively write the break keyword, and then come here to ask, why it does what its intended purpose is, it's hard to argue that question were not utterly dumb, useless noise. Dec 4, 2018 at 18:01

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