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Sure, we have a system in place that prevents a question from being asked if it "looks like there isn't enough code".

But, I noticed that there is a lot of situations where people will have to leave a comment suggesting the OP include more code that relates to their question if there isn't enough or less if it's out of scope.

Then there are times when a new user's question is downvoted but nothing is said about it.

I think we should have a system in place where a comment will be left, welcoming the user and pointing to how to ask a question and creating an MCVE if the question reaches a score of -2 or lower.

This would save a lot of people time from just repeating the typical "Welcome to SO. Do X, please."

Similar situations where this could be applied:

  • 2 or more close votes
  • When the Tumbleweed badge would have been triggered

The actual numbers don't matter so much, it is the principle of considering this implementation.

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  • 5
    Welcome to SO. Do X, please. If the X that the OP needs to do to improve the question could indeed be accurately identified, sure, but auto-comments aren't capable of that (yet) Aug 10, 2019 at 22:17

2 Answers 2

7

Of all the comments to leave on a question, "Welcome to Stack Overflow; please do X" is probably the last one I'd want automated.

Questions get downvoted for a plethora of reasons:

  • The question isn't well researched, or otherwise not useful (what the tooltip suggests)
  • The question is poorly written
  • The question is incomplete or a "give me teh codez"-style question

...and automating which one makes the most sense in a given context is impossible, since it could not be any of those reasons at all.

If your motivation is to "save people time" from commentating to the effect of, "Please do X", then I feel like your motivation is misplaced. The fact that someone has to say that at all is backwards. A user should understand why their question isn't suitable for the site, and that can only really come from better UX, which is allegedly being worked on now.

13

A problem I see with this idea is that actionable suggestions about specific issues tend to be more useful when it comes to providing guidance to new users than generic comments directing them to general purpose help pages (see this answer for an extended argument on the matter). For instance, there is no way an automated procedure can tell if telling the user to add an MCVE is actually a relevant suggestion in the context of a specific question. That being so, the kind of comment you describe isn't, or at any rate shouldn't be, repetitive boilerplate that can be uniformly replaced.

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