I see a lot of questions about, "Why was this issue closed for lack of clarity/focus/opinion-based?" I'd like to propose something that could preemptively answer these questions before they're even asked.
I want to preface this by saying I'm aware that I am proposing something extremely specific and detailed, but I'm doing it as food for thought. I'm not tied to the specifics; I just think it'll help others visualize my mental model and provide fodder for a discussion that leads to the best possible solution.
With that out of the way, let's look at the current UI for closing a question:
Here's the change I'm proposing: if you select "Needs details or clarity" or "Needs more focus" or "Opinion-based", you must populate a text field that requires elaboration relating to the specifics of the question.
For example, if you are closing a question for, "Needs details or clarity," the closer might write, "I can't tell if this question is asking about apples or oranges. Please clarify."
If you are closing a question for, "Needs more focus," the closer might write, "This asks how to tell when apples and oranges are ripe. It should focus on one or the other."
And if you are closing a question for, "Opinion-based," the closer might write, "Asking if apples taste better than oranges is subjective."
When the next person votes to close the same question for the same reason, the UI would look similar to closing a question for, "A community-specific reason":
But in this case, the list of radio buttons will be populated with the text written by previous closer(s). If you disagree with the specifics written by the previous closer(s), the last radio button will be a text field, allowing you to add your own reason to the list.
Ultimately, I think this could reduce the number of, "Why was this closed?" questions/comments, improve question quality, make these interactions less intimidating for new contributors, and increase the sense of "fairness" when one's question is closed.
status-declined
since way before I joined.