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I'm an enthusiast programmer. I usually ask questions on Stack Overflow when I can't solve hard programming problems myself. But when I ask questions, people usually start downvoting them (my worst question with 10 downvotes which banned me from asking a few days ago).

If it is a good question, people usually only give one or two upvotes. I have read the How do I ask a good question page but I think I fulfil all requirements stated there. Here is one of my good questions which has only 94 views in 2 months and only one upvote (at the time of asking). According to the Help Center, I should add correct tags and an informative title, but I think people don't see questions when they have too many tags or are too specific. Usually, they just come and downvote (sometimes even without reading the full question), but don't explain why my questions deserve them.

What should I do? Should I use fewer tags? It is painful to get anonymously downvotes and having my questions closed.

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    Questions are scored based on their usefulness to the people voting. If it's a question that only applies to a very small subset of users... it's going to get few views and even fewer votes. A better title and better tags can help people looking for it find it, but, if there aren't people looking for it... it won't help.
    – Kevin B
    Sep 22, 2020 at 16:40
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    Asking questions is a very difficult task. I wish I had an answer for you but even my questions get downvoted and they are good. What you can do is try to write the question to the best of your abilities, show your research, clearly explain the problem (if you can provide a code then even better) and if possible ask a friend to review it before posting. Tags have descriptions and you should pick one main language tag and up to 4 others that are relevant for your question. If we think there is a better-suited tag someone will edit it for you.
    – Dharman Mod
    Sep 22, 2020 at 16:49
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    You have upvotes and an awesome answer on that example question. There is nothing we can advice on, except telling you to wait. Votes and views don't come overnight.
    – rene
    Sep 22, 2020 at 16:50
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    To clarify on tags, tags will increase the visibility of your post (on some level) simply because it will get the post into more tag communities and in front of more eyes. Always add tags that are relevant to your question, but don't add useless ones just for visibility either. Adding irrelevant tags can add confusion, and may bring negative consequences.
    – zcoop98
    Sep 22, 2020 at 16:50
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    Also, for what it's, you should care a lot less about views on posts than answers on posts.
    – zcoop98
    Sep 22, 2020 at 16:52
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    @zcoop98 the question was answered by the OP. Since they self-answered their question, it makes sense they accept it; but I don't think it's fair to say "they got an answer".
    – yivi
    Sep 22, 2020 at 16:52
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    @yivi You're right, I missed that
    – zcoop98
    Sep 22, 2020 at 16:53
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    @yivi TBH, I don't think I would have ever thought to expect another answer on a self-answer post. I thought the point of those was to simply share gleaned knowledge with the community, not to solicit more responses.
    – zcoop98
    Sep 22, 2020 at 16:56
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    @zcoop98 It would be great if I get answers with good solutions than me. I'm here to learn (and teach). Sep 22, 2020 at 17:08
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    @AkibAzmain Asking people to upvote a question is against StackOverflow guidelines.
    – 10 Rep
    Sep 22, 2020 at 17:14
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    "this is far to big a topic to be answered here" It doesn't matter whether you agree, others think that, and it happens to be a reasonable opinion. Also you seem to have a specific debugging problem, but give no [mre].
    – philipxy
    Sep 22, 2020 at 17:18
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    What is your ultimate goal here? Are you looking for more/better answers to your questions? Or are you looking for more points/votes on your questions? Those two things can require different types of changes.
    – bta
    Sep 22, 2020 at 22:29
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    If you want attention, start a bounty. Its straightforward Sep 23, 2020 at 5:23
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    People are always zoomed in and locked on asking questions. What they should really be wondering is: how do I get better at searching for existing answers?
    – Gimby
    Sep 23, 2020 at 7:58
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    Is there a reason why this question keeps getting edited again and again to put more blame on the community? Sep 25, 2020 at 15:14

6 Answers 6

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In an ideal world, info in "How to ask" should be enough. However, given that many users ask bad questions on Stack Overflow, one additional powerful technique is to set your questions apart from the bad questions. Try to think like a user who reads 100 questions per day, 90% of which are junk. Try to convince that hypothetical prejudiced user that your question is different (not junk). Easier said than done; however, here are some ideas:

  • Make sure your question doesn't look like homework; that answering the question is the only missing detail in your current task, and you can do all the rest yourself
  • Prepare a minimal, reproducible example; if not needed, make sure people understand why it's really not needed
  • If possible, point out a clear way to verify an answer is good (e.g. say "How to do X with O(n) complexity", don't say "What is the best way to do X")
  • Show that you really care about the answer to your question (e.g. if people ask for clarifications in comments, do clarify by editing the question)
  • Avoid obviously bad things, like pictures of code, bad spelling, etc. "How to ask" already mentions this.

The above reflects my experience with bad questions; it might be different from everyone else's, but this is at least something.

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    I completely empathize with the OP here - I feel like I'm careful to make my questions check all these boxes, but I'm still terrified of posting. I find my questions also go unanswered or receive a passing, anonymous downvote with not further explanation. Not all of us are rolling in rep; it's really hard to gain and painful to lose.
    – end-user
    Sep 22, 2020 at 22:30
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    @end-user IMO you can build a reputation pool a lot faster with answers than you can with questions. Driving views to questions is hard, but an accepted answer will always earn you points, and the act of posting an answer counts as more "activity" which will boost that question in the "hot questions" list (leading to more views and upvotes).
    – bta
    Sep 23, 2020 at 0:44
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    This is good advice. I think a lot of people simply skim and downvote. I'd also say be very careful when using examples as well. A lot of questions are closed as duplicate because the example can be solved using some other technique, despite it being clear that you're looking for a specific technique. Don't try to dumb down a question to make it easier to understand; just leave it in the existing context, because this can appear like homework.
    – Muz
    Sep 23, 2020 at 8:08
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    @end-user terrified - because you might lose a couple of Unicorn points that you may have lost no matter how much work you put into the question? I used to get defensive and depressed about down-votes too, but I've come to learn that some people are going to punish you whether you deserve it or not, and reputation points on a Q & A site are just not worth being terrified about.
    – Aaron Bertrand Staff
    Sep 25, 2020 at 16:50
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    ... said the guy with 100x the points.
    – end-user
    Sep 25, 2020 at 18:07
  • @end-user And how do minor fluctuations in your points or my points or Jon Skeet's points change any of our lives?
    – Aaron Bertrand Staff
    Sep 10, 2021 at 14:47
  • @AaronBertrand, if it hasn't escaped your notice, points in SO are a currency; indeed, you can even pay a bounty for answers with them. "Minor fluctuations" are all a matter of scale - 10 points is minor to someone with several hundred thousand. But it's much more significant to someone only a couple thousand. The callousness you exhibit is the same shown by billionaires.
    – end-user
    Sep 10, 2021 at 15:25
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    @end-user meh. if having more rep would make you feel less terrified, earn more rep. The rep game is won with quantity. Answer often, and rep will just happen. don't answer at all, and you'll remain in a state of "terror" worrying whether or not you'll be able to ask your next question. My first dozen or so answers were awful, but it took taking that leap to get over it and improve.
    – Kevin B
    Sep 10, 2021 at 15:31
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One of the best ways to improve your writing (for Stack Overflow questions, or anything else) is to read what others have written. Find questions that generated lots of good responses and study them to see how they have used tags, how the question is structured, etc. Do the same for questions that were received poorly. After a while, start reading through newly-asked questions and try to predict how well they'll be received. If your predictions are mostly correct, then it's a sign that you understand how good questions are written.

To bring more eyes to your question, you have to understand how people find your question in the first place. This includes (no particular order):

  1. Listed on the home page
  2. Listed in the feed for a tag that someone is following
  3. Listed on the "questions with bounties" page
  4. Featured in the "Hot Network Questions" sidebar
  5. Listed in the "Related" sidebar
  6. Found by searching on the site
  7. Found via external search engine (Google, etc)

Some of these are out of your direct control (like #4), but some of them can be used to make your question more visible. #2 is why using the appropriate tags is helpful. Adding a bounty is generally considered the best way to draw more attention. The last three are tricky because they're dependent on what other people happen to be looking for. Try to think about what terms other people would use when searching for answers to questions like yours and include those terms/phrases in your question. The home page used to list questions by "most recently asked", and asking at certain times of day would attract more views than others. The front page feed is now tailored to each user's specific preferences, so it's a lot harder to break into that list.

It's also important to make your question something that other users want to read. Users don't always have time to read an extremely long or detailed question. Similarly, users are less likely to take the time to write answers when the question requires answers that are long, open-ended, or that require writing a lot of code. The way that points are structured on this site incentivizes people to answer a larger number of smaller, simpler questions over a smaller number of longer, more difficult questions.

Speaking of the point system, I've found that having a higher reputation makes it more likely that your question gets read and responded to. The site has lots of users who create an account, ask a low-quality question, and are never heard from again (they don't even mark an answer as accepted). Because of that, the temptation for a user with limited time is to read the questions of higher-reputation users since they're more likely to be better questions. Spend some time answering questions and build up a decent-sized reputation pool. Aside from making people more likely to read your questions, you'll be better suited to add bounties as needed.

Specifically regarding the question you linked above: your comments indicate that you're hoping for answers that are better than the existing one. In my experiences, few people take the time to add an answer to a question that already has an accepted answer unless the accepted answer is incorrect, missing something critical, or is no longer the best solution due to changes in technology (new language features, etc). The question is seen as not needing an answer any more, and the asker is much less likely to return and upvote/accept a newly-posted answer. This is even more true when the asker answers their own question. Your answer there is extremely long, which means very few people are going to read all the way through it, decide that they can do better, and take the time to write up a new answer. That's definitely not saying that your answer is bad, it's actually one of the most complete and detailed answers that I've seen in a while (good use of ASCII art by the way). That question, as it currently stands, appears to be answered and complete, and is thus unlikely to attract new answers.

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The question you link as worst question, that has 10 downvotes and is deleted, is an easy one to crack. For starters, each tag has their own culture, because different people roam different tags as their experience differs. But so do their motivation, patience and skills.

You happened to post in the C++ tag, where the unforgiving nature of the compilers seems to have rubbed off on its users.

The question basically asked:

Why is a unoptimized function call in a loop slower than having the same code inline?

Searching Google for C++ function call overhead site:stackoverflow.com yields 26,000 results, and C++ properly benchmark code site:stackoverflow.com has 5,000 hits.

This could warrant downvoting your question, because it doesn't show that you researched those or related terms. If you did actually do research, but didn't understand what you found, then mention that as well. Explain what you do and don't understand, this helps potential answerers.

The commenters could have linked you to some canonical questions that they know explain the relevant stuff well, found from the aforementioned or other searches. They didn't search or link for you, but they did go out of their way to prove that your code was useless and would be optimized away entirely instead.

While commenting (paraphrased) "Your code doesn't take 2.5 seconds, it takes 0 when optimized" even then they're barely helping you, more like taunting. They care enough to copy your code to an online compiler and prove that, but don't bother explaining why a compiler may do so if it finds dead code whose implementation is trivial and its results unused.

tl;dr: show your research, and know your audience. You do the latter by lurking more and getting the feel of a room, which more people should do online anyway.

9

I want to add to what the other answerers have posted from a different perspective:

Stack Overflow is a collection of knowledge. It's not mainly for direct help (tutoring) but indirect help: by providing information that you can find e.g. over Google. The whole Q&A-thing is the way to aggregate all this information.

It's even mentioned in the very first sentences of the Tour:

[...] With your help, we're working together to build a library of detailed answers to every question about programming.

So when you post a question that is e.g. a duplicate (or is not useful for future readers in any way), then it's not useful for Stack Overflow and its intention and therefore rightfully downvoted and closed. Some people take that more serious, so don't take downvotes too personal and try to see the question from their perspective.

When you post something that is kinda similar to other questions, your question most likely won't receive many upvotes. The questions that receive many upvotes are the ones that actually bring new information to Stack Overflow. They are upvoted because they are "useful", not necessarily because all are technically better than your question.

Then there is the luck-factor. Sometimes just the right person must click on the right time on your question to write a good answer. Sometimes you get just unlucky and those other viewers were not in the mood or don't know the answer or whatever. It's similar for the viewing-count and the amount of upvotes.

What I want to tell you is that following the recommendations in the Help Center is not a guarantee that your question is ideal to gather many views and upvotes. Maybe your question is just not "new"/"original"/"interesting" enough to attract many upvotes and views. Or the question is useful to you but not to future readers and attracts downvotes.

One tip I can give is: write your questions while having the idea behind Stack Overflow in mind. How would a future reader see the question? Does it get straight to the point, exactly what the reader was searching for? Is it well written and formatted, which improves readability? Is it easy to distinguish from similar questions?

The ideal is that someone searches for an answer because they have a question and Stack Overflow provides the identical question with the corresponding answer to them. Nothing more, nothing less. Not 10 times the same thing. Not 10 times something in low quality or not focused on what the searcher is searching for.

As you might have guessed: most questions have already been asked and answered. You can't artificially "make" your question something "new" to attract views and upvotes. What you can do is coming up with high-quality content and hope for the best.

6

I wanna add some points that will help you in asking questions.

  • Always research first. This is vital, an important number of questions have already been answered here. Search here, search outside on the web, read documentation, try debugging. If you didn't come up with a solution in SO, but found the solution somewhere else, it is good that you ask and answer your own question, so we have the answer here!
  • Give insight on how you expect a good answer to be. Since you have done your research, you might have found potential answers for your question, that didn't meet your bar for some reason. Including in your question restrictions that clarify why your research didn't help you out, will avoid people answering the same stuff you've come across once and again. Furthermore, if you have special needs, like not using external frameworks for example, including these restrictions will also save time from everyone.
  • Keep in mind the time constraints of the people who will reply to your questions. Many of us in SO are people who try to help out others in their journey, but our time to help out is finite. If a question requires too many effort for us to answer, we'll probably skip it and find a better question. It's not even about how many time we can dedicate to SO, it's more about being productive, if a question takes 1 hour to reply, unless it's somehow exceptionally interesting, we'll probably move on to another one that takes just 10 minutes, that's 6 questions we can answer in the same time span. When asking, ask yourself: "if I had the knowledge to answer its question, would I be able to quickly get an idea of the problem and provide a valid solution?". This means short, concise and readable questions, where clutter is avoided but all relevant information is still there.
  • Keep editing your question, and even the answers While you have no answers, you may be still researching, probably. And maybe you come across more invalid solutions, or realise that you have new constraints, or that you can clarify something (probably because some user has asked you in the comments). Keep updating your question with all this new research, it will help in finally getting the answer you need. Not only that, but even beyond the time when you get the answer, perhaps you pull the cord and find other insights that can improve the answer. Edit the answer in that case! Your posterior research is very valuable to other users that come up with the same question.
  • The title of the question is very important! It's how you get people hooked to your question. The title of your question should already give me the feeling of "oh, I think I know how to do this". Maybe when reviewing the question content I see that I didn't know, but making unambiguous titles will attract the right people to your question.
  • Asking is not always your best choice. If your question was already asked in SO, but has no answers, or you dislike the current answers, start a bounty on that question instead. Not always the solution to your problems will be asking in SO, sometimes, the amount of detail that you need to provide to have a minimal, reproducible example, is just so insane that people will not take the effort to try to answer. Or you're working in a project under NDA and asking a question would mean either leaking relevant information about the system you're building, or providing insufficient detail that makes the question unanswerable. In that case, you'll have to research on your own or ask a colleague -probably Stack Overflow for Teams is a better fit in this case-.
5

Several years ago, I drew on personal experience, various SE-network questions & answers, and some "formal" documentation (ie from various companies' "how to file a support/bug case") into an eBook that covers this: Debugging and Supporting Software Systems

Here's what you need to do:

  • Have a "real" question - something you've actually run into (even if you have to sanitize the data/situation)
    • Parallel to this: it [probably] should not be a "homework question"
    • ...Though some "homework" questions are actually "real" questions
  • Alternatively, have a "real" question that's a personal curiosity (how/why does this thing to that action)
    • ...So long as you're not only asking these, you should be good
  • Structure your question in a clear, easily-followable format (some of this is drawn from that eBook's second chapter on "Helpful case titles and descriptions")
    • describe the basics of what you are trying to do, and where you are trying to do it
      • give a useful tl;dr question title like, "Cannot start Tomcat6 on Ubuntu 10.10 x64 server"
    • explain what you've already done/tried
      • "After successfully running sudo apt-get install tomcat6 on my Ubuntu 10.10 x64 server, Tomcat will not start"
      • "Debugging steps taken: ..."
      • "The suggestion at askubuntu.com/questions/90823498237... did not work"
    • explain any errors/messages you've gotten
      • "The following message is showing in /var/log/tomcat/stderr.out: ..."
    • explain the end state you're trying to achieve
      • "I am trying to run Goorbleblurk Whiznag 7.2, which requires Tomcat6"
  • Don't:
    • Tell anyone "what you know is not wrong" - unless you can document that you've tried it already, and it didn't fix your issue

Lastly

If you have the time, and ability, take the answer(s) you receive, and write them up somewhere - an internal knowledge base, your personal blog, into a status report email ...

So that you not only acknowledge the help you received, but also save someone else (likely yourself) time in the future.

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  • Why not homework? Some are paid to do homework for somebody else through Fiverr and they post it on Stack Overflow (often without bothering to not have it look like homework). Sep 23, 2020 at 18:40
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    @PeterMortensen - it's a simplified rule-of-thumb based on being here for a dozen+ years. Also see: meta.stackoverflow.com/a/334823/4418 :)
    – warren
    Sep 23, 2020 at 19:58

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