Currently, while one stumbles upon a NAA (Not An Answer), or VLQ (Very Low Quality) post, they can flag it accordingly.
The problem is these flags cover a broad spectrum of answers, ranging from obvious ones:
- answers not even remotely related to the problem
- link-only answers
- answers that are in fact other questions, sometimes related to the current question
- answers added by the asker that should've instead been edits to the question
, to more subtle ones, like:
- answers only tangential to the problem
- answers given in other similar programming languages
While the first category of problematic posts are easy to detect, the second one might pose some difficulties, and this is one of the reasons we get many NAA/VLQ flags declined due to technical reasons.
However, the problem I want to raise is that the burden of categorizing the NAA/VLQ flag falls on the shoulders of the reviewers, since the flagger has no other options than flagging as NAA/VLQ. So the flag reviewer is the one that needs to pick a category.
I propose improving the UX of the flagging feature by allowing flaggers to also specify why they think the answer falls into one of the NAA/VLQ categories. Similar as with the close reasons, we could have a list of choices for the user to choose from, so that reviewers can easily agree or not with the flag.