I wholeheartedly agree with this. The last re-organization and renaming of the close reasons was a huge mistake. I cannot tell you how many users I've seen confused by this, and I can honestly never even remember myself what the name of the category is when I'm telling users without close-vote privileges how to raise these "recommend closure" flags. (Spoiler alert: it's "needs improvement".)
Changing the name on the category would help, for sure. But the real problem is that there are just too many close reasons, they're too deeply nested (making for a confusing UI, where it's impossible to see all of the choices displayed in front of you at once), and the descriptions of each individual reason are relatively poor, leading to a lot of misguided closures.
I've been noodling about this for a while. I think, if it were up to me, I'd revamp the close reasons (yes, again; sorry), whittling them down to only 6 options—7, if you count duplicates:
Too broad
As currently posed, this question is too broad for our Q&A format. It either asks too many different questions at once, or a complete answer to this question would be prohibitively long (i.e., would fill an entire book).
Consider rephrasing this question to focus on only one problem, narrowing its scope so that it can be adequately answered within our Q&A format.
Seeking opinions or recommendations
The way this question is currently posed makes it likely to attract spam and/or answers that are primarily opinion-based. We cannot accept polls, questions where the answers would be based entirely on personal opinions, or questions soliciting recommendations for an off-site resource (such as a book, tool, or software library).
Consider rephrasing this question to allow it to be answered with facts and citations. Instead of asking for open-ended recommendations, you should ask how to accomplish a specific task/goal.
Unclear
This question cannot be answered in its current form because it lacks a clear problem statement and/or is missing key details.
Please edit the question to clarify your specific programming problem and include more details. Make sure to check the comments to see if anyone has requested the inclusion of specific details.
Needs debugging details
This question is asking for help with debugging some code ("why isn't this code working?"), but it is missing the minimum information needed to make it answerable. Debugging questions must include:
- the desired behavior (i.e., a clear problem statement),
- a specific problem or error (e.g., an error message or stack trace),
- representative input(s) and the expected output(s) [if appropriate], and
- the shortest code necessary to reproduce the problem (i.e., a minimal, reproducible example).
All code and error messages must be included in the body of the question itself, and they must be in text form, not as images.
Not reproducible or caused by a typo
The problem(s) described in this question arose due to a typo and/or can no longer be reproduced (e.g., because of a transient failure in a third-party service). While similar questions may be on-topic, the root cause here was a mistake that cannot be identified or reproduced, thus making the solutions unusable for future readers.
If you are experiencing a similar problem or have found a way to reliably reproduce this one, then please ask a new question. Make sure to include a minimal, reproducible example.
Blatantly off-topic
This question is not about programming or software development within the scope defined in the Help Center. It does not relate to either a specific programming problem, a software algorithm, or a software tool commonly used programmers.
Although your question is off-topic for Stack Overflow, you may be able to get help elsewhere:
(click to expand)
- Questions about general computing hardware and software can be asked on Super User.
- Questions about Linux, BSD, and other Un*x-like operating systems can be asked on Unix & Linux.
- Questions about usage of Apple hardware, software, services, and associated products can be asked on Ask Different.
- Questions about general usage of Android devices and applications can be asked on Android Enthusiasts.
- Questions about professional system and network administration can be asked on Server Fault.
- Questions about database administration and/or design can be asked on Database Administrators.
- Questions about operating and managing your own website, including questions about SEO, domain names, and web/email hosting can be asked on Webmasters.
- Questions about statistics, data analysis, and machine learning can be asked on Cross Validated.
- Questions about TeX, LaTeX, and related typesetting systems can be asked on TeX.
- Questions about copyright and/or licensing issues can be asked on Open Source or Law.
All of the close reasons would be generically described as "unsuitable", such that the "recommend closure" flag would be raised by attempting to flag a question as "unsuitable for this site", and then selecting the specific reason why the question is unsuitable. (The banner presented to the asker of the question could still emphasize "needs improvement", because that's an actionable goal for them. Also, it's apparently friendlier. But the person voting/flagging to close doesn't need to see this. To them, "needs improvement" means "edit". If they can't improve it, then the question is "unsuitable" for the site as posed, and that's the flag/vote they should be raising/casting.)
Most of these reasons are self-explanatory. Although the wording of the explanations is only a first draft, each is carefully crafted to reduce the chances of misunderstanding and misapplication. Notes about each of the reasons and why they were chosen are as follows:
The wording "too broad" is brought back to replace the current confusing duality of "needs more focus" and "needs more details". The description of "too broad" also now includes both of the two things that this reason was meant to capture: questions that include a numbered list of multiple questions all-in-one, and questions that are inherently too broad to be answered in a Q&A format.
The "seeking recommendations" and "opinion-based" reasons are collapsed into one. This is done primarily to reduce the number of different close reasons, which reduces the cognitive burden placed on each close voter. I believe it is manageable to collapse these, considering that both the motivations and the corrective actions for these two close reasons are essentially the same.
The wording "unclear" is brought back because it is simply more clear than the current "needs details or clarity".
As a bonus, I'd love to have a similar feature here to what we already have now for "off-topic", allowing close-voters to type in a specific, detailed explanation of what/why the question is unclear. But this would require more significant changes in the software than just rearranging the reasons, so I would completely understand if this was deferred.
The "needs debugging details" reason is kept essentially in its current form, but the explanation is tightened up in hopes of restricting its usage to questions that are actually asking for debugging help (which are the only questions to which it is meant to apply).
The "not reproducible or caused by a typo" is also maintained in essentially its current form, with the wording tweaked (and largely borrowed) from Shog9's answer explaining the intent behind this reason.
"Blatantly off-topic" is included because duh. Except that this is now the only off-topic reason: the current "Super User" and "Server Fault" reasons are removed, because:
- Fewer reasons are better than more reasons: this is the general theme.
- Besides, 90% of the time, users on Stack Overflow don't know how to choose correctly between these two reasons anyway.
- And that shouldn't even be our job. We don't want to have close reasons recommending specific places for askers to go. (Askers are on their own to do their research, read the Help Center, and decide which other site, if any, would accept their question—it is not our job to do this work for them, and we don't want to accept the blame for an invalid recommendation. Stack Overflow's user-base can only be expected to be knowledgeable about their own site's scope.)
Out of the kindness of our heart, a general list of related Q&A sites, maintained by moderators or staff, can be presented on demand to anyone reading the explanation for a question's closure. Or, maybe, instead of this curated list, we just provide a link to the "all sites" list on Stack Exchange's homepage.
When choosing the "blatantly off-topic" reason, users with the requisite privileges would also get an optional textbox, just as they do now, into which they could type a more detailed explanation for why they think the question is off-topic. This explanation would be posted on their behalf as a comment—again, just as happens now.
What's missing? Well, nothing! This covers everything we have now, scattered out as it is over some 9 or 10 different close reasons, depending on how you count, which are themselves divided into confusing hierarchies. Programmers love their hierarchies, but it doesn't make for a good user experience. Besides, the more reasons you have to choose from, the more mentally taxing each closure becomes, and the more frustrated and bitter the curators get.
Oh—one thing is missing: the option for users to migrate a question to another site. That's by design. Moderators would still have the ability to migrate a question elsewhere, but regular users would not have that ability because the large majority of the time, it is misused. As noted above, Stack Overflow users cannot reasonably be expected to be knowledgeable about the scope of any other sites except their own. Thus, they should not be responsible for migrating their unwanted questions to other sites. Besides, migration in general results in a relatively poor experience for the asker, doubly so if the recommendation was not quite apt. We just don't need migration. There's no benefit in that over having the asker delete and repost the question on another site. The only benefit to migration is preserving the answers, but considering questions more than 60 days old cannot be migrated anyway, even by moderators, there isn't much concern about the preservation of answers. If an exceptional situation arises, a moderator flag can be raised, as always.