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Based on the feedback from the comments and my editing of this question, my actual feature-request is a duplicate of:

We need to improve the chances of reopening closed questions

I'm not sure how to proceed from here.


Recently I've seen a few questions closed for not being clear or include a minimal example, but where the question as is contains enough information for some readers to post a proper answer, based on those readers familiarity with what the question is asking about, such as some known caveat(s) or common mistakes made when implementing a particular algorithm.

I've seen a few cases where someone commented that they had prepared an answer, but found the question was closed by the time they were ready to post their answer. Generally they will summarize what would have been in their answer.

Based on some comments here, if the community feels the need to close questions ASAP, then there should be a better way to communicate to the closers that the question has been edited. Apparently, unless a closer chooses to follow the question, they don't get notified of an edit update.

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    These determinations will always be subjective to some degree. It can't be helped. If you are in this predicament where you find such a closed question, consider editing it to help improve its clarity (if your sure that you understand the author's intent) and improve its utility for future visitors, and then possibly route it to the re-open queue. Mar 28, 2022 at 0:02
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    @HovercraftFullOfEels - Unfortunately, there is little point to editing a closed question. They almost never get reopened as those who vote to close are not notified of edits. I advise the OP to take the improvements they've learned to make their question clear to everyone and post a new question.
    – jfriend00
    Mar 28, 2022 at 0:21
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    @jfriend00: that is not necessarily true. If you are the first to edit the question and send it to the re-open queue (by clicking the appropriate checkbox), it will go to the re-open queue for review. The danger of asking a new question rather than improving the old, is that the old one will probably be deleted and will count against the OP if they are at risk of a question-ban. Mar 28, 2022 at 0:23
  • @HovercraftFullOfEels - What is the reopen queue? I've never seen a question come back to life that way. It appears to me to need some number of reopen votes to ever get a chance at getting reopened and it just doesn't happen very often - as best I can tell that process just doesn't succeed much. Yes, the OP needs to worry about a question-ban if they post another bad question (so they need to make sure they've fixed the question). But spending energy on a closed question is very unlikely to be fruitful.
    – jfriend00
    Mar 28, 2022 at 0:27
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    @jfriend00 For the last few years, close voters have had the option of following the question. However, I only follow questions I close-vote if I think there's a reasonable chance that the question will be salvaged. That partly depends on the state of the question, and partly on how responsive the OP is to comments.
    – PM 2Ring
    Mar 28, 2022 at 2:10
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    Bear in mind that if you edit an unclear question you need to be fairly confident that your edit is actually clarifying the OP's intentions, and that you aren't altering their question to conform to the answer you want to write.
    – PM 2Ring
    Mar 28, 2022 at 2:15
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    @rcgldr In that case, you should still try to get confirmation from the OP that you've interpreted the question correctly before you post your answer. The whole point of closing unclear questions ASAP is to prevent answers from people who are just guessing at what the OP means. If multiple answers are posted by people who all guess differently, you get a chaotic mess that can confuse the OP and future readers.
    – PM 2Ring
    Mar 28, 2022 at 3:28
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    "But I also wish more OPs would respond constructively to those comments." - And that is the root of the problem. After a few thousand non-responses or inadequate responses, we just lose patience. Do you have a good way to recruit lots more experienced people willing to play the "post constructive comments" lottery on StackOverflow?
    – Stephen C
    Mar 28, 2022 at 4:10
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    No that is not a proper minimal representative example. A proper minrep includes the expected and actual results.
    – Stephen C
    Mar 28, 2022 at 4:15
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    That's beside the point. A minimal representative example should include the expected and actual results. It should not be necessary to run to code to find out what the error message is.
    – Stephen C
    Mar 28, 2022 at 4:21
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    The minrep canonical link says this: "Describe the problem. "It doesn't work" isn't descriptive enough to help people understand your problem. Instead, tell other readers what the expected behavior should be. Tell other readers what the exact wording of the error message is, and which line of code is producing it. Use a brief but descriptive summary of your problem as the title of your question.".
    – Stephen C
    Mar 28, 2022 at 4:21
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    I agree with StephenC. The OP has just dumped their code without the slightest mention of what their actual problem is, or what error messages they're getting. At least it's a complete runnable example, and kinda sorta minimal.
    – PM 2Ring
    Mar 28, 2022 at 4:22
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    The point is not that whether or not the question could be answered. It is whether it should be left open once it was answered. Especially since (in the case you identified) the OP has shown zero interest in fixing the question. My feeling is that a question that meets the criteria for closure should be closed. If people want to answer it anyway in an answer or in comments that is fine.
    – Stephen C
    Mar 28, 2022 at 6:10
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    But until and unless the question poster is prepared to fix the question to address the closure reasons, it should not be left open ... gathering random hits, confusing / wasting the time of other readers who are using the Stack Overflow site as information center (as it is intended to be) rather than a help desk (which it isn't). (Despite having a votes -4, that Question has still managed to get a 100+ visits so far. While a lot of those visits will be due to this Meta question ... it won't be all of them. It is hard for us to know.)
    – Stephen C
    Mar 28, 2022 at 6:11
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    The only true solution is to make it so questions do not need to be closed to begin with, because they were not allowed to enter the system (visibly) in a poor state. That is the only way to deal with a site that has the scope of Stack Overflow - prevent rather than correct. That being said, I would not be apposed to a tab in my user CP which holds the latest questions I close voted on which shows they were edited since I cast that vote. Then I can choose for myself to act without getting an avalanche of notifications from the system.
    – Gimby
    Mar 28, 2022 at 12:58

1 Answer 1

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First and foremost the question has to be written in such a way that it is helpful to the future readers. Is the issue properly described? Will other people search for the same problem hoping to find the potential answer to this question? Do we have all the details needed to exclude unrelated issues, e.g. XY problem? If the answer is yes, then the question should probably be left open and answered.

Bear in mind that even if a question can be answered, it doesn't mean that it should be answered. Sometimes the root cause is a simple typo, misunderstanding of the problem or a question in style "can somebody help me". A skilled developer might figure out what the OP is asking for, but does answering such a question actually help the community? I think not.

We want to close questions ASAP to prevent low-quality answers. They usually come from new Stack Overflow users who are not yet experienced enough to understand what is a useful question and what isn't. Of course, it doesn't mean that we want to close all questions. Just the ones that are truly not clear enough to be usefully answered. If the question asker edits the question and improves it, then feel free to cast your reopen vote. There's no need to notify the original close voters, because the question can be placed in the reopen review queue where other people will give their opinion on how clear it is.

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  • My question is a duplicate of a prior question, and covers the situation I wrote about in my question, so there's no need for my question above any more other than to note it's a duplicate. In the prior thread, the issue in my question was described in the prior question's comments as "type 1 - questions that should never have been closed in the first place".
    – rcgldr
    Mar 29, 2022 at 16:07

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