683

Editors note: For the Ask Question Wizard 2022 see Feature Test: Ask Wizard for New Users (trial has completed)


I'm really happy to announce that the Ask Question Wizard is now live on Stack Overflow! This is the end of a long arc of experiments that have been happening for over a year to provide structured guidance to newcomers when asking a question, and I'm so excited for everyone in the community to give it a go. This is the biggest change we've made to the question asking experience on Stack Overflow since we started a little over ten years ago, and it's the result of a lot of hard work and collaboration with all of you in the community.

Guided mode

How it works

  1. Go to the question asking page. If you are under the reputation threshold (currently 111, because that's what we tested with in previous experiments), you will automatically be directed to the wizard, also known as guided mode. If you are over that threshold, you'll be taken to the original question asking page, which we're calling traditional mode.

  2. You can switch from traditional to guided mode at any time by clicking the "Use guided mode" link near the top. When in guided mode, you'll be able to switch to traditional mode after first answering a few questions - a "Use traditional mode" link will appear when this is available.

  3. After you've switched modes, future visits to the question asking page will direct you to the question asking mode you last used for a period of time, overriding the default described in #1. That way, you don't need to keep switching back and forth between the two experiences. After that time period expires, you'll again be directed to the default mode based on your reputation.

  4. Switching between guided and traditional modes should always save your work once you start typing your question, so don't worry about losing any drafts when switching between the two modes. There might be slight differences in formatting when you switch, but the content of your post should always be preserved.

Why we're excited

Everyone on Stack Overflow stands to benefit from this feature:

  1. Guided mode addresses many of the concerns newcomers have about asking their first few questions.

    There is a lot of guidance, history, and culture involved in asking a question, and filling out those few blank boxes in the original question asking page can feel like a daunting task. With guided mode, we've tried our best to bake in many of the best practices when asking a good question on Stack Overflow. We're hoping that, with this launch, asking a question can turn from an intimidating experience into one that is more approachable and even fun.

  2. Guided mode means better questions on the site overall.

    Based on our experiments, we found that question quality improved when using guided mode compared to traditional mode. In our latest experiment, we found a 5.12% decrease in bad-quality questions, and a positive change in neutral-quality questions (2.26% increase) and good-quality questions (1.12% increase). We also saw an overall 3.42% decrease in overall question volume, which correlates pretty well with the decrease we saw in bad quality questions.

These early findings suggest that we're not only helping people ask better questions, but also stemming lower quality questions that occur on the site. These may seem like small percentages, but when we consider the scale that we're operating at with this launch, these small differences can have a large impact that we'll be looking for over the long term.

What's next?

One of the biggest wins with this launch is that we now have a framework for improving the question-asking experience. We wanted to get this first public version of guided mode out so we can continue improving on it as we learn more about how it's used. The team at Stack Overflow has a lot of exciting ideas about how we can improve the question-asking experience with this in place, but we also want to hear from you! Go and try out the wizard, and tell us what you think could be improved and what new ideas you're excited for us to explore.

You'll be hearing more from me and the rest of the team in coming weeks about the wizard and other features that are coming soon. We think this is one of the first big steps we can take to help both newcomers and veterans of the site collaborate better on Stack Overflow.

52
  • 88
    Why was 111 chosen as the limit? I hope it is higher, say 1000, (or 1111, if you don't want to press more than one key), as getting 100 or even 500 rep on Stack Overflow is very easy. Mar 22, 2019 at 17:51
  • 41
    @BhargavRao It's what we tested with during previous experiments, so we're keeping that here for the first release. As we learn more about how people are using this, we'll probably experiment with different thresholds and adjust if needed.
    – Jon Chan
    Mar 22, 2019 at 17:53
  • 183
    Although I just posted a bug and may have some more feedback coming, I want to make clear that this is super exciting awesome news, and that I'm really thankful that this has finally come to fruition. Who knows, it might not make any perceptible difference, but at least we've tried. I should probably only speak for myself, but I'm going to go out on a limb and say that all of the veteran users really appreciate you and the team working hard to make this happen. Mar 22, 2019 at 18:02
  • 13
    I really like how links to the other stack exchange sites go straight to their help center, where one of the first links is what the user can ask about there.
    – Davy M
    Mar 22, 2019 at 18:08
  • 9
    When I opened up the wizards page and saw the options. I was joking to myself that 3 of the options would tell the user to GTFO. I was mildly amused that I wasn't entirely wrong, it sends them to a different site. haha
    – Mysticial
    Mar 22, 2019 at 18:09
  • 7
    Whenever I see percentages like this, I think 'but what are the confidence intervals? Do all those decimal places really mean anything?' :/ Guided mode does look more friendly for new users though (Bugzilla has a similar guided mode vs. non-guided mode).
    – ahiijny
    Mar 22, 2019 at 18:52
  • 10
    @ahiijny Good question! All these percentages are statistically significant from our latest experiment. We had over 100K people involved in the experiment when it was running, and we were able to converge on these results with >90% confidence.
    – Jon Chan
    Mar 22, 2019 at 18:59
  • 13
    So where's the data? I want to be able to audit this and actually do some determinations based on tag or technology.
    – Makoto
    Mar 22, 2019 at 19:09
  • 96
    🙌 so happy to see this finally go out, thanks for everyone's hard work on it, including the community 😍 Mar 23, 2019 at 0:46
  • 13
    @JeffAtwood: if we want to make this scale, time to create a new review queue 'Downvoted questions which were asked using the Ask Question Wizard', so we can spot bugs/weaknesses.
    – smci
    Mar 24, 2019 at 2:24
  • 25
    5% fewer closed (terrible unanswerable trash) questions is... not great, I would've expected a much higher percentage. Either the metrics aren't getting everything, or the testing group wasn't representative, or something... but I was hoping for double digits at least. If the 5% number is correct, we still have a problem.
    – Ian Kemp
    Mar 25, 2019 at 12:20
  • 11
    @smci Jeff Atwood's the wrong person to ask for improvements to the site; he doesn't work at SO anymore.
    – TylerH
    Mar 25, 2019 at 16:13
  • 9
    @IanKemp - It is far more efficient to automatically prevent the need for content removal than it is to have community members do the removal manually. That said, Stack Overflow has gone the tooling route as well, and I have tried to do my share to help with the tooling in order to remove content. In addition, far too often in the past have we had the misuse of tools in order to prevent or remove content. Overall, it is a complex problem, and attempting to minimize the complexity by saying that it isn't being done because of "welcoming" isn't fair to all the hard work from everyone involved.
    – Travis J
    Mar 26, 2019 at 5:24
  • 12
    @TravisJ Apologies - I didn't intend to denigrate the efforts that you, and many others, have put into creating tools to help with curating this site. My anger and frustration is directed at Stack Overflow the company, which has persistently and intentionally frustrated those curation efforts, as well as tarring curators with the "unwelcoming" brush. This wizard is a long-overdue step in the right direction from SO the company, but so much more is so desperately needed.
    – Ian Kemp
    Mar 26, 2019 at 6:33
  • 10
    I read the title as "Ask a Wizard a Question", so I'm disappointed. I wanted to know where they get their hats. :(
    – user3657941
    Mar 29, 2019 at 6:01

49 Answers 49

1
2
9

An addition to Will's answer talking about writing the title before even writing the question:

I still think asking for a title at the end is a better option than before writing the question, but placing the tags first is very good.

I propose:

  • Let the user input a summary of their question
  • Show the user potential duplicates based on their summary
  • If no duplicate questions are found, let the user continue writing their question
  • Then as a last step:
    • Show the summary they've written and let them select it via checkbox to be their title
    • or allow them to write a new one
9

Just tried it for the first time and I generally like it!

To make it perfect for me, the description page would repeat the title I specified.

My brain works better with this context intact. It helps me elaborate with the same words as used in the title step, instead of using synonyms.

Think of writing an email title, then hiding it when writing the body.

enter image description here

7

The titles could be misleading since I performed a random test not with a crazy word like this other answer, but something more common:

idea

And I got similar answers that well, these kinds of titles could be detected as invalid in the regular system.

normal

I believe the logic to identify good titles in the regular mode should be reused.

3
  • The "logic to identify good title in the regular mode" is used, for example it doesn't allow title that ends with "!".
    – user202729
    Mar 26, 2019 at 11:45
  • I didn't add any ! if you see, both are the same title @user202729 Mar 26, 2019 at 12:41
  • 2
    @user202729, it seems to allow you to proceed through the wizard. I did a similar test with the title "Error help with error." and it went ahead and forwarded me to the "Do any of these answer your question?" list. When I click back, it shows the error, but this does seem to be a bug.
    – Him
    Apr 2, 2019 at 18:47
7

The initial screen has the option I need a software recommendation then allows the reader to go to Software Recommendations.

But if they choose Show me other options the top left cell again points to Software Recommendations.

Not only is that redundant, but I think it contributes to the recent flood of off-topic questions on Software Recommendations.

Given that many off-topic questions on Stack Overflow would be allowed on Super User, Super User should be in that grid of other options.

This adds an additional 'way out' instead of repeating Software Recommendations.

Please replace Software Recommendations with Super User in that grid.
(The order may need to change.)
(It's fine in the initial screen.)

13
  • 1
    We shouldn't remove Software Recs; that's a big pile of questions that would stop getting moved over correctly. However, there may be some merit to adding SuperUser as a fork in addition.
    – TylerH
    Mar 28, 2019 at 15:15
  • @TylerH It looks like currently some 30% of questions getting 'moved over' are off topic there.
    – Jan Doggen
    Mar 28, 2019 at 15:43
  • Well, you’ve proven me wrong. Here I thought it would be the Super User folks who first came with their pitchforks yo protest against an influx of low-quality questions from Stack Overfow. Software Recs wins. Mar 28, 2019 at 15:56
  • 1
    @JanDoggen A more in-depth look needs to be provided (perhaps in your answer) that considers whether it's the fault of the wizard for misguiding users or the fault of users not listening to either the wizard or the destination site's help center regarding on-topic questions. There needs to be a significant issue, IMO, to make a removal, as the concept of sites handling their own garbage is a much better paradigm than SO handling everyone else's as has unfortunately been the default case for so long.
    – TylerH
    Mar 28, 2019 at 16:16
  • @TylerH Agreed. I do not have access to that. Maybe people will contribute under the linked meta question there.
    – Jan Doggen
    Mar 28, 2019 at 16:17
  • @JanDoggen Is the Meta question on SoftwareRecs where you got the 30% figure from? I'll try to swing over there and raise the subject if it hasn't been brought up yet.
    – TylerH
    Mar 28, 2019 at 16:19
  • @TylerH No that's my very rough estimate after several weeks of (re)visiting the First Post review queue on an irregular basis (from 0 to 3 times a day). I have posted a meta feature request today to help speed up the triage.
    – Jan Doggen
    Mar 28, 2019 at 16:21
  • @JanDoggen how can you tell these new questions (and the 30% or so that are off-topic) are from people directed to SoftwareRecs from the SO asking wizard?
    – TylerH
    Mar 28, 2019 at 16:22
  • @We don't know for sure yet. See the discussion under the meta question. That's why we need more research.
    – Jan Doggen
    Mar 28, 2019 at 16:23
  • @JanDoggen I couldn't find a question on the SoftwareRecs meta site discussing the SO Ask Question wizard. Also, after going through the ask question wizard trying to follow your instructions above, I see better what you mean; Super User ought to be in that grid of 5 sites. At the very least, having "Software Recommendations: For software recommendations" is not the most useful description... it should say something that makes it more clear it's for asking for recommendations on what software app/library to use, not general improvements that could be made about software you're writing (for ex)
    – TylerH
    Mar 28, 2019 at 16:26
  • 1
  • @JanDoggen That's an answer on a question of a different subject, not a question itself.
    – TylerH
    Apr 4, 2019 at 16:31
  • 2
    @TylerH the related meta question for 30%: What's up with all the low-quality questions in 2019? (yeah, it's posted 10 minutes after your last comment on Mar 28...)
    – Andrew T.
    Apr 18, 2019 at 20:18
6

Would appreciate Cancel button.

Because you know, sometimes you start describing the problem and great idea may come to you and you don't want post question anymore.

It may be some simple icon (a.) or form button (b.) or any other simple and obvious way to cancel whole form: enter image description here

2
  • Why can't you just navigate away from the page? Apr 6, 2019 at 9:34
  • 5
    @CodyGray first what comes to mind to me as user - because in today's "autosave-everything" world, your input can be saved as draft and you need to be sure that form you started to fill is actually erased
    – Kos
    Apr 6, 2019 at 9:47
6

I expected the "Show some code" to only be about the code, meaning whatever I write there in any format must always end up as a formatted code, but that was not the case, even though it did turn my text to code, it failed in some parts and I had to post my question and try to fix it the classic way!

So here are the things I think must be fixed/added to the wizard:

  1. Everything inside the "Show some code" must finally end up as a code no matter how you write it.

  2. The wizard doesn't have to follow the restricted editing of the main site, it must be much simpler, its called wizard to allow beginners to post a well formatted Question!, it shouldn't force them to follow the classic and hard way of formatting in Stack Overflow, one example would be that one still can't use Tab to indent even in the wizard. Which is really annoying.

My final thoughts:
I believe the wizard section must have its own editing/tool environment and it shouldn't follow the traditional/classic environment, obviously a conversion from this new environment to the traditional environment happens when the user posts its question, so this medium meaning the wizard can and should become very user friendly without upsetting the old settings.

2
  • Related other answer: meta.stackoverflow.com/a/381796
    – Mathieu K.
    Apr 11, 2019 at 3:15
  • Changing the editor too drastically will make it harder for users to learn the traditional editor later, though. Any changes should be done carefully, because they will conflict with the traditional header --- inside the user's brain, if not within the technology itself.
    – jpaugh
    Apr 25, 2019 at 20:48
6

GREAT initiative! I liked how the wizard's form validation would not let me use "I need help with..." in the title.

Suggestion on the sections: Others have said that it's easy to miss that those sections with the plus signs are sections. I changed it to use 4 different icons to show some possibilities. They could be open/close arrows to show that the sections are collapsible. Or they could be checkboxes to show whether or not the section has any text.

section icon suggestions

I'd also just add the word Preview above the inline preview. I put it in orange here so it would be easily noticed.

5

An opportunity to reduce edit wars over homework questions

The Answer Wizard has a question type "Homework Question":

Great! Our community is here to help you with homework questions about code. We’ll take you through a step-by-step guide for writing a great question.

Tip: Focusing on a specific code question - rather than a general homework problem - will help you get fast, high-quality answers. Make sure to have any code handy.

I suggest changing this to:

Great! Our community is here to help you with homework questions about code. We’ll take you through a step-by-step guide for writing a great question.

Tip: Focusing on a specific code question - rather than a general homework problem - will help you get fast, high-quality answers. Make sure to have any code handy.

Questions and Answers are public and intended to help future viewers. Assume your classmates and course instructor are in the audience. Be at your best when posting or responding to the community.

Reasoning: A frequent headache for homework questions is deletion/edit wars. Someone wants help with their homework and does not want to share that help with future viewers, or share evidence that they have violated a course policy by either receiving help or posting course materials without permission. The additional paragraph helps educate new users and reduce misunderstandings without being heavy handed.

Another alternative would be to mix in a similar hint into paragraph 1.

Great! Our community is here to help you with homework questions about code. While many instructors actively encourage use of Stack Overflow, it is your responsibility to know course policies before posting. All questions and answers are publicly visible. We’ll take you through a step-by-step guide for writing a great question that will help you and your classmates facing similar issues.

Tip: Focusing on a specific code question - rather than a general homework problem - will help you get fast, high-quality answers. Make sure to have any code handy.

4

I really like it and we've been asking for this for years.

My only feedback is the Example1 and Example2 never change, perhaps a few rotating examples, ideally based on chosen tags.

4

Tag page needs better explanation with examples what to do and what not.


There are two problems:

  1. Confusing X which can be understood as "don't do that", but version tags are good thing.
  2. Poor explanation: "when absolutely necessary" - you could as well remove that line, because it doesn't tells anything useful.

Suggestion:

  • Make few "good" and few "bad" examples, perhaps one after another to make it clear what we want.
  • Remove version hint or replace with a good quote from answer on meta where version tags are discussed (they were I just can't find the question).

Maybe it's a good idea to keep everything short, but add meta links to every statement on every page in the wizard? All those titles, tags, etc. were 100 times discussed.

2

I had to scroll upwards to see the guiding text when I went from one page to the next -- I might not even see the text if I wasn't paying attention!

For example, after selecting a "Java" tag and hitting "next", I see: scrolled window

1
  • I try not to use my laptop screen, but if I make my window as big as it would be on that (1366 x 675px), I'm getting this behaviour too. I don't know if 1366x768 is still a common laptop screen size—hmm, yes, it's the second-most common one on Lenovo's site for my country.
    – Mathieu K.
    Apr 7, 2019 at 23:22
2

It should be easier to go back to the traditional interface.

Two suggestions for this:

  • Add a user preference. This also covers the possible case where a threshold-passing user prefers the wizard.
  • Put a Use traditional mode link on the What type of question do you have? screen, which is as far back as Previous / Previous Step will take me.

Current UI behaviour: I must

  • press onward through the wizard and, on the four-step Tell us more about your question part, click Use traditional mode; or
  • browse to https://stackoverflow.com/questions/ask?guided=false; or
  • aha! Navigate creatively, to get the Great! screen to come back up:

    1. click the Previous / Previous Step as far back as I can go (the What type of question do you have? screen).
    2. Make any choice that leads to Stack Overflow.
    3. Click Next to reveal the Great! screen, which was skipped over by the last Previous Step button and which has the Use traditional mode link I needed.

I just found that last one. It was hidden in the bottom-left corner of a screen I couldn't intuitively get to. I mention the bottom-left corner because, in my experience, that's the easiest corner to overlook.

1
  • Going back should be easier, possibly based on rep. I did a quick try because I wanted to play around without posting. And then I was stuck with the wizard. "You have to answer a few Qs first" should take existing answers (look at rep!) into account. Apr 8, 2019 at 7:53
2

I saw this mentioned in a comment but think it merits being raised if not already:

Sometimes the process of asking a question directly leads to solving the question. Figuring out how to explain things, trying to make a MCVE and struggling when it doesn't have the same behaviour. Heck, sometimes even editing your question when it "unfairly" gets closed causes you to figure out the answer!

In such cases, a way to tell SO/SE this was the case might be great instead of just closing the tab.

0

When will it be released on localized SO sites?

5
  • Do those sites have the same level of problems with low-quality questions that the original English version of Stack Overflow does? If so, you should probably put together a separate [feature-request] to roll it out on these sites. Oct 28, 2019 at 22:11
  • @CodyGray should I ask here or on MSE? Oct 28, 2019 at 22:19
  • It doesn't really matter. Staff members are supposed to check both places for feature requests. But I'd say it makes the most sense to propose this feature on MSE, since it is not specifically related to Stack Overflow. Oct 28, 2019 at 22:24
  • @CodyGray ok. But what data do you expect? Will be decision on our local Meta enough? Or we need to provide some sort of metrics? Oct 28, 2019 at 22:28
  • I don't know. I'm not the one who makes the decision. Whatever you think will be persuasive. I expect that a consensus from the community will be very persuasive. Perhaps you should begin by posting a feature request on your site-specific Meta to gauge community support? Also, since I left my first comment, I found out some more details. What's actually going to happen is that the best parts (most successful bits) of the Ask Question Wizard will be incorporated into the standard /ask page, and then that will definitely be rolling out to all sites. Oct 28, 2019 at 22:45
-1

The idea is very good, and also its realization.

What I find particularly wonderful:

  • Motivates people to improve, instead of punishing them.
  • Helps them to find other SE sites to their off-topic questions, instead closing their questions after they've posted it.
  • The problem of many newbies is clearly not only to understand and follow the SE rules, instead they seem simply incapable to understand that we are not an answering machine knowing everything (also what do they think). The wizard seem to care also them.

You are also making a huge improvement on the common intelligence level and communication skills of the humanity on the whole world.

I expect a huge increase in the count of the satisfied newbie visitors.

I think it is your best improvement since many, many years.

4
  • 14
    "You are also making a huge improvement on the common intelligence level and communication skills of the humanity on the whole world." That seems like a tiny bit of an overstatement. Just a smidge...
    – Cerbrus
    Mar 25, 2019 at 8:35
  • 1
    @Cerbrus Typically, IT is a leading industry world-wide. The impact of the SE/SO world-wide is imho far stronger as it seems. But if you have a better, maybe not so overstatement-like formulation, which still preserves the point, feel free to improve the post.
    – peterh
    Mar 25, 2019 at 8:52
  • 1
    I too hope that this feature will help. However, I think I have already seen new authors skipping it. The age-old feature request of spell checkers and waffle detectors are also not delivered, and they may not ever be - so the jury is out on whether the experience of quality on the site will notably improve. I try to be optimistic, but there is an awful lot of woeful material out there.
    – halfer
    Mar 30, 2019 at 9:23
  • @halfer Well, they can skip, but with the reduction of the new crap content, the reviewer resources will probably more focused to the few what remained. And, with the general improvement of the site quality, also the tolerance of the crap will decrease on the long-term. The SE is doing many things badly also in my opinion, particularly these.
    – peterh
    Mar 30, 2019 at 15:10
-1

Will this also become available on other Stack Exchange sites?

I did a quick check on my favorite Stack Exchange site and the Ask a Question page has not changed there or a few others. Are there plans to implement this on all Stack Exchange sites? How soon? I am particularly interested in the customizability of such an implementation on other sites, such as the ability to change the sections that are suggested or maybe different tips for each section. It seems to me that each site has something of it's own community with it's own expectations for how good questions are asked, and a customization this tool might be an easy way to improve questions on numerous sites.

Will there be a CLI for the new guided interface?

Kind of a joke question, but indicative of my overall impression. There are perhaps too many clicks and too many sections for those of us who are more keyboard-centric. I would suggest less clicks necessary for the sake of efficiency and sanity. I mean, we are programmers here, let us use our keyboard. :-)

4
  • 1
    This is not designed for experienced users, so it doesn't make sense to optimize the interface for efficiency. The most efficient interface is one that isn't guided at all, and that's the one we direct experienced askers to. Regarding other Stack Exchange sites, no, it's not live anywhere else. I don't know if there are plans to adapt it for other sites eventually, but I'm guessing no. It is designed to handle a quality problem writ large on Stack Overflow. Other sites don't suffer from the same problems. Start reading here for background. May 23, 2019 at 21:31
  • @Cody Gray Thanks for the answer about other sites, but I disagree that other sites don't suffer from poor questions as well. For example, TeX.SX has a common desire for Minimum Working Examples (MWEs) in questions that could be included in a customized question interface. May 23, 2019 at 21:39
  • @Cody Gray Can you give a clearer definition of what you call "experienced users"? Is this solely based on reputation. If so, which category am I (since I'm asking with a relatively low rep here but enough experience to want less clicks)? I can see many cases where having an efficient system for new users is also good. For example, many people read and use Stack Overflow and Exchange sites for a long time before contributing a question. Are they experienced? Perhaps they need less guidance due to being patient enough to know what a good question is before trying to ask one. May 23, 2019 at 21:42
  • I cannot; I do not have a good definition. It is currently based on reputation, as described in the question above, but as you mention, there are certainly other relevant considerations as well. Those would probably be new feature requests. May 23, 2019 at 21:53
-3

This looks great, and I am very keen to see some data coming out of this project.

In the "title" section of this wizard, there is this advice:

Say “How to fix ‘Headers already sent’ error in PHP”

That advice is not bad, but since it is suggesting a question for the title, it should end in a question mark, like so:

Say “How to fix ‘Headers already sent’ error in PHP?”

9
  • 1
    Debatable. Is it grammatically a question, or the title of a topic about accomplishing the stated task? (Neither is actually wrong, depending on context.) Does it actually matter? Mar 29, 2019 at 3:09
  • That would not be grammatical. "How to x?" is not a question in English. Frankly, it's not a good title at all, because "How to x" isn't even a good English sentence---it's a mere fragment. But to the extent it makes any sense at all, it's declarative, rather than interrogatory. It would need to be, "How do I fix [a] 'Headers already sent' error in PHP?" or "How does one fix [a] 'Headers already sent' error in PHP?" or "How can [a] 'Headers already sent' error be fixed in PHP?". A non-question formulation could be: "Fixing [a] 'Headers already sent' error in PHP". Mar 29, 2019 at 3:10
  • 2
    @CodyGray: in the suggestion you have made, it becomes worse, since it is better for sentences not to contain "I". We are not specifically interested in helping just one person, and anything that suggests that (helping just the question author) is, to my mind, not ideal. I don't understand how my version is not grammatically correct, but either way, the sentence is there already, and my point is that it is a question, and it needs a question mark. The meaning is unavoidably interrogatory.
    – halfer
    Mar 29, 2019 at 8:14
  • 3
    (If the content writers intended this sentence to not have a question mark, then that's fine - though I think this is just an oversight. Whether the sentence should be scrapped entirely and replaced with something else can be raised separately).
    – halfer
    Mar 29, 2019 at 8:16
  • That is my whole point. They obviously intended it not to have a question mark. Putting a question mark there makes it wrong and confusing, because it's not a question. Mar 29, 2019 at 16:49
  • We have found out point of disagreement @CodyGray, thank you.
    – halfer
    Mar 29, 2019 at 17:47
  • I generally agree with this, and I agree that "How to __?" feels grammatically acceptable as a question. I'd suggest, upon briefly thinking about it, that the example is not necessarily "unavoidably interrogatory". If I may make so bold, it could have an understood "(Can you tell me) how to [...]?", which would be a question, or it could have an understood "(I'd like to know) how to [...]" or maybe even "(Here's) how to [...]", and those would not.
    – Mathieu K.
    Apr 7, 2019 at 23:10
  • @MathieuK.: thanks for your thoughts. I tend to trim "can you tell me" in titles or bodies as it seems to lack personal agency; it seems to be a variant of "please help me out" in which the author has become passive and believes they can no longer help themselves. "How can I" has good agency and is perhaps grammatically preferable, but in titles the "I" strikes me focussing too much on one person - we have long said here that answers are for the community, and not just for the OP.
    – halfer
    Apr 8, 2019 at 8:14
  • I meant that it might be a statement rather than a question, as the part that's understood (i.e. implied) could be "Can you tell me" or it could be "I'd like to know".
    – Mathieu K.
    Apr 11, 2019 at 2:47
-4

On the "What's your question title" page:

enter image description here

The do-examples read:

  • Say “How to fix ‘Headers already sent’ error in PHP”
  • Say “Is there an R function for finding the index of an element in a vector?”

To me this looks like it violates the rule "Don't include tags in question titles".

The above examples could very well read:

  • Say “How to fix ‘Headers already sent’ error” (tagged as php)
  • Say “Is there a function for finding the index of an element in a vector?” (tagged as r)

Or am I missing something here?

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    The intent behind the rule is to not tag-spam in question titles, or 'tag' questions with the title. Naturally mentioning the technology - whether or not it's already tagged, is fine.
    – Rob Mod
    Apr 11, 2019 at 5:05
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    It might be good to add one more example to the list, showing a good title without any tag-words in it, and a bad title with one or more tags artificially attached. But it's not always helpful, or even practical, to try to leave out all mention of language, framework, environment, etc. After all, question titles must be globally unique. Apr 11, 2019 at 6:49
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    From the post you linked: "The only time you should use tags in your title is when they are organic to the conversational tone of the title." No violation there. A title should give context to the question. Apr 11, 2019 at 7:24
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Example of the question title uses "tool recommendation" case.

enter image description here

Given example gives an impression that asking for a function recommendation is not an off-topic on SO.

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    Asking for function features is not off-topic. Asking for tool recommendations is off-topic.
    – yivi
    Mar 29, 2019 at 9:31
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    That "good" example would indeed be better phrased as, "How do I find the index of an element in a vector using R?" Apr 4, 2019 at 22:47
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