64 votes

Is there a minimum length to consider a question as 'a good one'?

Is the question clear, and does it contain enough information to be answered? If so, it's fine—maybe even "good". There is a minimum length enforced by the system. I believe it's currently ...
  • 237k
29 votes

Is there a minimum length to consider a question as 'a good one'?

Is the question clear and focused? If so, we shouldn't encourage people to write more text that everyone who comes across it will have to read.
  • 17.6k
24 votes
Accepted

How should I handle questions which show the desired output in code, but not in writing?

If it is clear what the author is asking about or if there is any indication as to what they want to achieve then edit the question and provide the necessary explanation yourself. If you can't ...
  • 29.9k
21 votes
Accepted

Post quality? Site etiquette?

There is no telling why people downvote things; they are not required to explain, and don't always volunteer. There are good and bad reasons to downvote questions. I tried to edit the question to make ...
20 votes

Questions with simple syntax errors

For how-to questions, the asker's attempt only exists to help describe the goal The question is asking "How to specify multiple conditions in an if statement in JavaScript". If you aren't ...
  • 17.6k
17 votes

Is there a minimum length to consider a question as 'a good one'?

We already have a flag for a question that needs more detail. Adding a way to flag questions for being too short (on the assumption that shorter questions need more detail) is really just duplicating ...
  • 1,876
15 votes
Accepted

How to encourage people to use linebreaks and periods?

If this makes the post completely unreadable and you can't edit it to make it make sense, then downvoting is the best choice. If it's a question then vote to close. The problem is as old as time: ...
  • 103k
13 votes
Accepted

What should we do with questions from users that didn't even try to learn the language?

If you think this will be useful to other people learning the language then answer it. However, there should already be a suitable duplicate for "How to declare a variable in Rust". If there ...
  • 29.9k
12 votes

What should we do with questions from users that didn't even try to learn the language?

If the user "tried to learn" (did(n't) demonstrate research effort) is a reason to upvote/downvote but it's not a reason to close. A reason to close is that the question is unclear, off-...
  • 86.1k
11 votes
Accepted

Question Quality Control

It sounds like this is a well-covered circumstance in which, if the question is explicitly missing details that are required for some layperson to answer the question, it should be closed as off-topic....
  • 103k
10 votes

How should I handle questions which show the desired output in code, but not in writing?

I would have voted to close as needs more focus. The fact that OP wanted to title it "Complex dictionary construction" originally, indicates the problem. There are several steps that need to ...
7 votes

Why do people answer inscrutable questions?

Because they can. As others have written: they either hope to actually help the person asking the question, or they hope to gather upvotes. It is that simple: gaining reputation comes with real ...
  • 137k
6 votes
Accepted

How can I ask a "good question" and not get flagged?

Concerning the last part: This combination of code windows is called a snippet, and you can create it by clicking on the "<>" icon (see following screenshot):
  • 63.3k
5 votes

How can I ask a "good question" and not get flagged?

Here's your questions as they stand: Usually, the kind of folks that get this warning and come to Meta about it are the sort of people that have questions that are downvoted or are closed in excess, ...
  • 103k
5 votes

Is there a minimum length to consider a question as 'a good one'?

Questions need to have enough details for people to reasonably be able to identify what the OP is confused about; otherwise, they may waste time answering something that doesn't really address the OP'...
5 votes

How to improve question quality of new Stack Overflow users

Instead of the checkbox "I will keep these things in mind" which can be mindlessly clicked by anyone without reading the text above it, maybe an actual quiz would help. On Upwork for example,...
  • 24.5k
3 votes

How should I handle questions which show the desired output in code, but not in writing?

The problem is not only that questions that only show the desired inputs and outputs as code examples are not good signposts, the problem is also that examples can only ever show what the code should ...
3 votes

How should I handle questions which show the desired output in code, but not in writing?

but not in writing? Clear problem statement in prose that's not just code is a must! What the author in the referenced example question is asking about is how to convert a list of lists into a ...
  • 10.7k
3 votes

Require new users to check the preview before posting

Every user now goes through a preview review phase before they can post any question. This phase of the asking process encourages users to review their content and explicitly points out any deficits ...
  • 359
3 votes

Is there a minimum length to consider a question as 'a good one'?

Provided the question is clear and contains all necessary information I consider brevity is a positive rather than a negative.
2 votes

Is there a minimum length to consider a question as 'a good one'?

No Post minimal length validation is done automatically to help reduce spammy posts and prevent the reviewing queues to be cluttered with very likely bad posts. It should not be used by SO members as ...
  • 33.9k
2 votes

Are there legitimate "fix my code" questions?

The issue with such questions If a competent coder asks a "spot the bug" question where the answer is non trivial, should it be downvoted? I wish to challenge the premise. A competent ...
1 vote

How should I handle questions which show the desired output in code, but not in writing?

Not only was this asked before, there's a dupe for it. It should be closed as a dupe. The OP wants to convert a list of lists into a dictionary. That's it. That's all there is to it. Python ...
  • 103k

Only top scored, non community-wiki answers of a minimum length are eligible