As background, the primary tag that I assist with here (as well as Super User, Ask Ubuntu, and Unix & Linux) is windows-subsystem-for-linux (originally known as "Ubuntu Bash on Windows", which is a bit more descriptive for those that don't know what it is). This tag gets a lot of off-topic questions (at least here on Stack Overflow). I also do some fish, which as a shell tends to get some non-programming questions as well.
Some of this has apparently been asked before, but the original question seems to be deleted. I only found the link to that question via Why do forced closed questions retain upvotes?. And honestly, I can see reasons behind this for most of the "Close" reasons (duplicate, lacks details or clarity, etc.). But "off-topic" is another story.
And anyway, "upvotes on off-topics" is just a small part of my question here.
From What is a "closed" or "duplicate" question? (summarized and reformatted to highlight each point):
When a question is closed:
- no additional answers may be posted to it
- ... although the question and existing answers can still be edited
- ... and voted upon
- ... and will continue to count for badges
And, while not stated there, the question and all answers continue to accrue reputation from upvotes.
Throughout that post, I see the "What?", the "Who?", the "How?", and even the "How many?". But nowhere in there do I see "Why" this works the way it does.
So why ...
Why are upvotes allowed on off-topic questions?
Since the original question and any answers along with it have been deleted, I need to ask this part again. What is the purpose in an off-topic question being eligible for upvotes? According to the Help Center, off-topic questions are by definition not "well asked":
Answer well-asked questions
Save yourself some frustration and avoid trying to answer questions which ... are not about programming as defined in the help center.
So it the question is determined to be off-topic, then it's (per the Help Center), not "well asked", and it shouldn't be upvoted, right? Or again, why is upvoting even enabled for off-topics?
At present, the highest voted question in the windows-subsystem-for-linux tag is the (IMHO wildly) off-topic Disable beep in WSL terminal on Windows 10. A comment on the day this question was originally asked pointed out that it was off-topic, but it took 3 years to get a close-vote to pass (two previous attempts were invalidated, presumably because it's a low-traffic tag).
Shouldn't we instead be highlighting good, on-topic, programming questions as the highest-voted?
It's clear that this information was helpful to a number of people, but it would have been just as helpful on Super User, where it belonged in the first place.
And that's just one example. Looking at the highest-voted questions in that tag:
- Five were closed as off-topic
- Three more probably should have been (note - I'm not asking for close-votes on these "inactive" questions. Just highlighting the problem):
- How to copy/paste
- A general installation issue with 22 different answers (so far)
- Moving the root filesystem to another drive
- Two seem fully on-topic (and should be the ones that are highlighted, IMHO):
- Oddly, one of the ones that was closed feels on-topic to me, regarding creating multiple development environments using different WSL instances. That's really something that would typically be best answered here on SO by programmers.
As you get into the 11-20 range, things start to look a bit better (but not totally). The Top 10 likely has more off-topic questions because "general-computing" questions are, by definition, helpful to more people.
Wouldn't having off-topic questions automatically set to "0 upvotes":
- Highlight the better questions?
- Still provide the answers for people searching? (assuming that's one of the goals here for off-topic questions - see below)
Side-note: I see no problem with allowing upvotes on the answers, since (as long as the question is there), there needs to be some way to "sort" the answers by "helpfulness", at least.
Why do off-topic questions and their answers gain Rep?
A.k.a. "Why do we give rep on a programming site for non-programming topics?"
Upvotes and Rep, however, are (or should be) two totally separate topics. Even if we do allow upvotes for off-topic questions and answers, should those upvotes result in rep?
Given the current system, there's almost no downside, and tremendous potential upside to asking and answering off-topic questions. Taking just the top 5 off-topic WSL questions, we can see that (roughly) 13,000 rep has been granted to the askers of these 5 questions. More astoundingly, nearly 30,000 reputation has been granted to those who provided answers.
The aforementioned Disable beep in WSL terminal on Windows 10 has (so far) granted almost 16,000 reputation to the asker, because it was also self-answered almost immediately after asking. While I know that there's nothing inherently wrong with posting a question where the answer is already known, the problem here, of course, was that it was grossly off-topic. But that non-programming question and answer have given one user a number of privileges and responsibilities on Stack Overflow, a (to state the obvious) programming-focused site.
Perhaps the answer is that the question should have been deleted much earlier, but that's often difficult-to-impossible on lower-traffic tags. That particular question failed to muster even enough votes-to-close in two previous reviews, let alone getting enough delete-votes.
But an equally bad issue can be found in the zsh tag, with How to permanently set $PATH on Linux/Unix. I'm not too worried about the question-asker, in this case, since there's clearly enough other rep in programming-related topics to offset any off-topic rep. But the top answer there has given over 11k rep (of their 12k). And here's the kicker -- That answer originally had a fairly significant security issue in leaving a trailing
:
in the path (as noted in the comments). It was only fixed in an edit by another user some 18 months later. So here we have granted over 11k rep for an answer in an off-topic question, but one that wasn't even very good in the first place.- Should off-topic questions and answers gain rep at all?
- Or at least stop from the point in time that the question was determined to be off-topic?
Why "freeze in place" the answers that are in effect at the time of closing? Why not allow new answers?
Shifting gears a bit, but it seems odd that the "one downside" of a question being closed is that it can't gather new answers. If a question is closed while it still has no answers, then this is great. But if there are answers, then:
- The pool of answers is limited to those that were in place at the (often arbitrary) time that the question gathered enough close-votes.
- The "fastest gun in the west" problem means that a hastily-written answer may have been the only one that got locked in (assuming the question is closed quickly).
- Things change (especially when it comes to constantly-updated software like WSL), but those changes can only be noted in the comments (or by editing an existing answer, if appropriate).
- Upvotes (see previous issue) are divided among a smaller pool of answers. While the answer may be "helpful" (even if off-topic), there may be a better or updated way of doing something that cannot be shared or voted up.
I've actually become hesitant to vote-to-close some older off-topic questions now after seeing this problem manifest multiple times. For example:
How to change default directory in Windows Subsystem for Linux is a question that I VTC'd as off-topic, and it was subsequently closed. Through a meta discussion here, the question ended up being reopened. Even though it seems most people disagreed with it being reopened, it got the 3 votes needed.
And you know what? I ended up being happy that the question got reopened, since someone posted a new answer that was the right answer, given recent updates in WSL, Windows, and Windows Terminal.
There are a few other off-topic questions where I believe there's a better answer, but I'm torn between VTC'ing them since I do believe they are off-topic, or answering them to make sure they have the most up-to-date info. If the questions are here and visible, I'd personally rather be able to provide good answers to them even if I didn't receive any rep in return (see #2).
Why not
noindex
off-topic questions?The problem with upvotes and rep gains is likely compounded by them being returned in search results in the first place. Searching Google (signed out, so as to not contaminate results with my past history) for:
- turn off beep in wsl
- disable bell in wsl
- (and other variants)
... returns the closed question here. But perhaps even more surprisingly, general, non-WSL searches:
- disable bell in bash
- (and other variants)
Also return that same question!
Meanwhile, the equally good questions:
- How to disable Bash on Windows notification sound effect on Super User
- How to disable system beep for non-privileged user (Unix & Linux Stack)
- How to turn off the beep only in bash tab-complete (Unix & Linux Stack)
... get buried.
Why not set closed tags to
noindex
so that the on-topic questions and answers on other Stack sites can get the traffic, votes, and rep?
Why are off-topic questions not migrated to a more appropriate site more often?
I can probably answer this one myself, but I still see it as a bit of a chicken-and-the-egg problem. I've been told that migrating questions takes deliberate moderator effort, so it should only be done when an off-topic question has answers, and preferably good answers. And, of course, it needs to be within a relatively short span of time.
That narrows the list down quite a bit, especially since many questions don't get enough close votes in time to be migrated anyway.
Why are off-topic questions not deleted more often and more quickly?
Mostly, the same issue as before. It's often hard enough to get enough close-votes on a question in time, let alone (especially for something like WSL) get enough 10k rep users to delete-vote it. And, in the meantime, they can clearly gain massive traction. Close and delete-votes "expire" fairly quickly, but the rep gained from these off-topic questions continues even after they are deleted.
Related - Why are off-topic questions with upvoted answers not Roomba'd?
Auto-delete scripts only clean up questions with no or low-voted answers - Why? We know that users are likely to upvote even off-topic questions (and especially their answers). If we want to keep things "on-topic" as much as possible, why not auto-delete off-topic questions after a certain period of time, regardless of votes?
Related side-note -- When is (and isn't) WSL (or bash, etc.) "off-topic"?
While I try to "squint" and see the "programming" side of many of these questions, I hope we can agree that the off-topic question, "How do I copy a file from WSL/Linux to Windows?" doesn't magically become on-topic if it changes to, "How do I copy a Python file from WSL/Linux to Windows?". However, if there was some particular reason that Python files acted differently than regular files in this case, then yes, that would likely make it a practical, answerable problem that is unique to software development.
Hopefully, those would be weeded out by a variation on the minimal-viable-example rule. If the MVE boils down to a "general computing" case (it can be demonstrated without any developer tool or language), then it's usually off-topic. If the MVE can only be demonstrated in a way that it is "a practical, answerable problem that is unique to software development", then it's probably on-topic.
That said, it seems to me that even the moderators here struggle with agreeing with "on-topic". I'd love to understand why:
- One mod considers Windows 10 Bash (Ubuntu) - How to scroll up? on-topic and specifically reopened it after it was closed (it's now been closed again), but ...
- ... another mod closed How do you install multiple, separate instances of Ubuntu in WSL?. Again, that one seems "unique to software development" to me.
zsh
example cited, even be a bad answer from day one, but still get upvoted (it was "useful", but a security risk, unbeknownst to the upvoters).noindex
the off-topic SO question so that it gets fewer views. What did I say that makes you think I advocate promoting bad answers?