Yesterday, I asked a valid technical question regarding WPF.
Well, I'm an experienced software architect. I know what I'm doing and how to ask a question in a correct manner. In my question I provided a use-case, incl. sample code and I concluded my question text with two concise and clear questions, which I've been looking to be answered.
Tonight, a member closed my question as being unfocussed. Now it's not open for any answers ... and all I can do is wait for some lost souls to wander around a plethora of closed questions, randomly finding my unique question, and lower their hands on my head to give my question their absolution?
This is a professionals' forum, not some private users' home-brew fun forum. I tend to consider closing my professional question an act of sabotage. An attack by someone arbitrarily not comprehending to my valid and precise question.
This should not be allowed to happen.
So, I propose the following:
- It should not be possible to have questions arbitrarily closed without giving a detailed reason in a comment (min. 200 characters).
- A checkbox (labelled
needs info
) should be added to the Comments input field, requesting the original poster to provide missing information to his/her question or to update his/her question. - When the checkbox is checked while the comment is sent, the topic is getting flagged
stale
and the original poster is sent an e-mail with the comment requesting the update. - The question may then be edited by the user or a comment may be added requesting further details on the improvement request.
- If the question has been edited, the
stale
(needs info
) flag is getting cleared. (I'm not sure if this should happen automatically or if the commenter requesting the improvement should be required to approve the change.) - If the question has not been edited within 7 days, the question is automatically getting closed.
BugZilla, for example, comes with such needs info
Boolean flag for each comment on a bug report. That flag is associated with a recipient. When it's set, the bug gets blocked and the recipient receives an e-mail asking him to provide the missing info. Only when that info is provided (and the needs info flag gets cleared), the bug is then further processed. Stack Overflow could use a similar process.
I concluded my question text with two concise and clear questions
.... you must ask one and only one question per question.