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The idea of a one size fits all template is a terrible one.

The idea of a few templates for a few special question types is a terrible one.

Any kind of template system will fail, no matter the number of templates, because if the template is just pre-defined headings they will either be ignored or just deleted by the problem users. If it is a form with individual fields, the the current Title field kind of proves that approach as useless as well, no reason to expect better form field data than the current title data.

Want a different outcome, you have to force a completely different behavior.

I think the idea of offering users a "type/classification of question" drop down before they ask a question that includes all the off-topic classes as well as a few common general type of on-topic questions and a Other.

##Some Example Categories ( not complete )

###On Topic:

  • I am getting an error message and I do not know what it means.
  • I have some code that compiles and runs but give the wrong results.
  • I have some code that does not compile and I do not understand the compiler error.

###Maybe On-Topic/Maybe Not:

  • I have a question about how to do something the best way.
  • I have a question about which design pattern to use.
  • I have a question about some code and how it works/why it was written that way/etc.

###Off-Topic:

  • Why did the team X team do Y?
  • Which framework should I use to do X?
  • Framework X vs Y vs Z?
  • Explain "some basic CS concept/theory" in detail.
  • Where can I find examples of X?
  • Lots more all listed in "What not to ask?"

###Other:

  • My question does not fit in any of those categories?

Other should go into some kind of queue like reviews to get people to vote on what category it fits it. If say three more people pick Other then it is Other, if it is something Off-Topic then it should be a strike against them and after some point of them just picking Other over and over, they should not be allowed to pick Other anymore.

When those Off-Topic types are picked, the user is educated why they should not ask that type of question, and this should be tracked, especially when they then pick Other. If they go ahead and ask a question and it is closed for that specific off-topic reason(s) they have picked then it should weight like 10X against the question ban.

There are a few basic machine learning and expert system techniques that could improve the remediation of low quality questions easily. And fewer low quality questions means probably an order of magnitude fewer low quality answers.

This requires a completely different behavior and would more likely result in different outcomes.

Templates is just more stuff to ignore; which is actually no different behavior than now.


Stackoverflow should not be so concerned about fewer new questions being asked because 99.999999% of all the general problems already have duplicates.

Ad revenue is not made by lots of people asking new low quality questions, it is made by people finding answers to old common questions that have been answered, most of the time for years.

Accepting all the sewage as someone else calls it, is actually drowning out the answers to these highly common questions.

So punitive measures to people selfishly ignoring the site guidelines and just posting read me the docs, send me teh codez, and explain this code line by line questions can not be too severe.

Right now, these people easily claim ignorance, many times when they have a long history of asking the same types of questions selfishly that is easy to see.

All that said, I still think this is a better idea to help force the education of new users and remediate the flood of low quality questions from brand new users that selfishly want an answer to their highly localized, most likely off-topic and assuredly low quality question immediately and do not care about anything else.

user177800