Click here to Skip to main content
15,889,216 members

Bugs and Suggestions

   

General discussions, site bug reports and suggestions about the site.

For general questions check out the CodeProject FAQs. To report spam and abuse Head to the Spam and abuse watch. If you wish to report a bug privately, especially those related to security, please email webmaster@codeproject.com

 
SuggestionBroken links in article Pin
Edgar Maass10-Nov-14 3:20
professionalEdgar Maass10-Nov-14 3:20 
GeneralRe: Broken links in article Pin
Marco Bertschi10-Nov-14 22:15
protectorMarco Bertschi10-Nov-14 22:15 
GeneralRe: Broken links in article Pin
Chris Maunder10-Nov-14 22:56
cofounderChris Maunder10-Nov-14 22:56 
GeneralRe: Broken links in article Pin
Edgar Maass10-Nov-14 23:11
professionalEdgar Maass10-Nov-14 23:11 
SuggestionBack to closed questions PinPopular
OriginalGriff10-Nov-14 0:51
mveOriginalGriff10-Nov-14 0:51 
GeneralRe: Back to closed questions Pin
Jochen Arndt10-Nov-14 3:05
professionalJochen Arndt10-Nov-14 3:05 
GeneralRe: Back to closed questions Pin
Chris Maunder10-Nov-14 23:44
cofounderChris Maunder10-Nov-14 23:44 
GeneralRe: Back to closed questions Pin
OriginalGriff11-Nov-14 0:59
mveOriginalGriff11-Nov-14 0:59 
It is a tough one.
But I try to think about it from the POV of the author of the question.

Probably, when you started in this business you were the same as me: didn't have a damn clue! Laugh | :laugh:
And that's scary. You have a task, you don't know what to do and it doesn't work. It's easy for panic to set in and for you to assume that everybody knows exactly what you are talking about. So when you ask a question, you just assume that your code is all we need: we can fix it because we are clever and experienced. You don't think about the problem (if you think at all) because it's there; it's in front of your face; you can't think about anything else. You have already put a fair amount of work into finding us in the first place!

And asking questions is a skill. Quite likely it's one that experienced developers use all the time - even if only with their own code - without even thinking about it. I suspect it's what makes us good developers: knowing which questions to ask and how to ask them! And like any skill, it goes through the four stages: Unconscious incompetence, Conscious incompetence, Conscious competence, Unconscious competence. But it has to be taught, it isn't something that come naturally to a lot of people.

So picture it: in mid panic (because you need to hand this in tomorrow and you spent too long in the Student Union Bar instead of working, just like I did) you found us, dumped your code and sat back for help. And if you are lucky you got a brief note saying "This was not a question, so we closed it".

How much work does it take to ask for clarification? To tell someone what details we need and why, and to explain how to add them?

I have a boilerplate for it:

This is not a good question - we cannot work out from that little what you are trying to do.
Remember that we can't see your screen, access your HDD, or read your mind.
Use the "Improve question" widget to edit your question and provide better information.

And I extend that to explain the problem for the specific question.

Just killing complete beginners questions is wrong, I think - it shows the same kind of rude arrogance that SO show to noobies. Or are people just hitting the "Not a question" button because it gets them rep points? I dunno, but it does seem to be the same set of names which crop up as the "closers".

With the exception of spammers and trolls, people post a question because they don't know what to do. If they knew what to ask and how to ask it, they would have 90% of the solution already and wouldn't have to ask us. Closing the question specifically because they don't know how to ask it, or they use the wrong words doesn't help anyone! Laugh | :laugh: Does it?
Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...

GeneralRe: Back to closed questions Pin
Richard Deeming11-Nov-14 2:24
mveRichard Deeming11-Nov-14 2:24 
GeneralRe: Back to closed questions Pin
ZurdoDev11-Nov-14 4:01
professionalZurdoDev11-Nov-14 4:01 
GeneralRe: Back to closed questions Pin
Richard Deeming11-Nov-14 4:12
mveRichard Deeming11-Nov-14 4:12 
GeneralRe: Back to closed questions Pin
ZurdoDev11-Nov-14 4:15
professionalZurdoDev11-Nov-14 4:15 
GeneralRe: Back to closed questions Pin
Richard Deeming11-Nov-14 4:26
mveRichard Deeming11-Nov-14 4:26 
GeneralRe: Back to closed questions Pin
ZurdoDev11-Nov-14 4:36
professionalZurdoDev11-Nov-14 4:36 
GeneralRe: Back to closed questions Pin
Richard Deeming11-Nov-14 4:47
mveRichard Deeming11-Nov-14 4:47 
GeneralRe: Back to closed questions Pin
ZurdoDev11-Nov-14 4:55
professionalZurdoDev11-Nov-14 4:55 
GeneralRe: Back to closed questions Pin
OriginalGriff11-Nov-14 4:31
mveOriginalGriff11-Nov-14 4:31 
GeneralRe: Back to closed questions Pin
Richard Deeming11-Nov-14 4:35
mveRichard Deeming11-Nov-14 4:35 
GeneralRe: Back to closed questions Pin
Pete O'Hanlon11-Nov-14 1:05
mvePete O'Hanlon11-Nov-14 1:05 
GeneralRe: Back to closed questions Pin
OriginalGriff11-Nov-14 1:15
mveOriginalGriff11-Nov-14 1:15 
GeneralRe: Back to closed questions Pin
Pete O'Hanlon11-Nov-14 1:16
mvePete O'Hanlon11-Nov-14 1:16 
GeneralRe: Back to closed questions Pin
Richard Deeming11-Nov-14 2:29
mveRichard Deeming11-Nov-14 2:29 
GeneralRe: Back to closed questions Pin
Pete O'Hanlon11-Nov-14 2:52
mvePete O'Hanlon11-Nov-14 2:52 
GeneralRe: Back to closed questions Pin
Nelek11-Nov-14 13:22
protectorNelek11-Nov-14 13:22 
GeneralRe: Back to closed questions Pin
PIEBALDconsult11-Nov-14 5:17
mvePIEBALDconsult11-Nov-14 5:17 

General General    News News    Suggestion Suggestion    Question Question    Bug Bug    Answer Answer    Joke Joke    Praise Praise    Rant Rant    Admin Admin   

Flags: Fixed

Use Ctrl+Left/Right to switch messages, Ctrl+Up/Down to switch threads, Ctrl+Shift+Left/Right to switch pages.