6

This question comes via an anonymous submission to Ask Slashdot: The problem with "Ask Ubuntu"

Say a new user has a problem, searches Ask Ubuntu and the UNIX site for a solution, and comes across an existing question about this problem that doesn't have an answer yet. How should he indicate that the problem also affects him or otherwise draw attention to the question in order to get an answer?

  • Upvoting to get it higher on the unanswered list list is impossible with a new user's reputation.
  • Adding a bounty to get it on the featured list is impossible with a new user's reputation.
  • Posting something other than an answer as an answer is forbidden.
  • Asking an exact duplicate question is discouraged.
  • Flooding the suggested edit queue with minor edits to get seven +2 rewards for accepted edits is also discouraged.
  • Even asking this question would have been impossible with a new user's reputation.

If all the questions that affect a given new user have already been asked but not answered, how should he get an answer? Or if someone new is thinking in terms of "this also affects me", should he be directed to Launchpad instead of AU?

8
  • 2
    Suggesting edits that remove noise isn't discouraged. Going on a rampage and removing "thanks" from a ton of posts that are otherwise fine is discouraged. Biiiiig difference there ;)
    – Seth
    Oct 29, 2015 at 15:54
  • @Seth Is "a ton" more than seven? Oct 29, 2015 at 15:57
  • 1
    A ton: askubuntu.com/users/41229/hugo?tab=activity. Did you read the entirety of terdon's answer? What you are interpreting in that post isn't what it's about.
    – Seth
    Oct 29, 2015 at 16:00
  • 1
    The way I see it personally is that askubuntu is a questions and answers site. We're not the same as launchpad ,where you need a users to confirm bug reports affecting them as well as OP. Think of stackoverflow. Would anyone post something like "Yeah, I had the same problem about sorting array in java with heap sort " ? Likely , not. Again, with launchpad bug reports , at least for me personally, it's very annoying to see 125 comments saying "This affects me as well",while actually useful comments are lost in clutter. Oct 29, 2015 at 16:08
  • A new user might not be able to tell if it is a good question or not. A new user can't vote so that the new user doesn't vote for any question whatsoever. That is why they cannot vote. Jan 19, 2017 at 14:25
  • Then what should a new user, who cannot vote, do instead of voting in order to get an unanswered question answered? Jan 19, 2017 at 15:23
  • They just aren't allowed, I'm explaining why they can't. Jan 19, 2017 at 15:25
  • Related (but not a duplicate): Me-too post? Or partial answer? Oct 15, 2017 at 6:21

3 Answers 3

9

The first thing one has to understand about the Stack Exchange family of sites is that they are question and answer sites, not forums and not bug report platforms. There is simply no point whatsoever in informing the world that I have the same problem. On bug report sites, the number of people affected by a bug is a useful tool when deciding what bug to focus on. On a Q&A site, the number of people interested in an answer is irrelevant.

So, there is no way and there really shouldn't be any way for anyone to indicate that a problem also affects them. It's simply not in the remit of the site. It is kind of like wanting a "I was wondering about this too" button on Wikipedia. What would be the point?

The only real problem I see here is when a question has been asked already, but there are either no answers or none of the existing answers help the new user. In the second case, the solution is to post a new question, referencing the old one and explaining that the solutions offered there didn't work (also explaining exactly how they failed). For the first case, where there are no answers, it is reasonable to write something like "I know this has been asked already here, but that was months ago and there have been no answers. I am therefore posting the question again in the hope of reviving it." Then, the old question can be closed as a dupe of the new one and the new user might have a better chance of getting an answer.

These are relatively rare cases though. The most usual situation is that a question has been both posted and answered so there is nothing the new user should do. There would be no benefit from a "I had this question too" button.

8
  • "On a Q&A site, the number of people interested in an answer is irrelevant" except to the "questions needing answer" tab, as the Q alludes with "unanswered questions". Only questions that affect at least two people (the asker and at least one voter) are listed there. Oct 29, 2015 at 16:41
  • 1
    @tepples I don't understand your first point. Why is the number of people interested ever relevant? The tab you mention simply lists questions with no upvoted answers. How would "10000 people desperately need to know the answer to this" improve their chances of being answered? By the way, if your question is indeed about those rare cases, why not ask that instead of the quite different issue you raised here?
    – terdon
    Oct 29, 2015 at 16:44
  • I thought I did ask about that, mentioning "an unanswered question". Oct 29, 2015 at 16:54
  • @tepples if so, that's not very clear. Your question is basically asking how someone can indicate that a problem also affects them, not how can someone get an answer if a similar question has been asked and not answered. Anyway, I hope my answer addresses both issues.
    – terdon
    Oct 29, 2015 at 16:56
  • Thanks. Is this wording for the question any better? Oct 29, 2015 at 17:10
  • @tepples Your title is still asking something different, otherwise it's better.
    – Seth
    Oct 29, 2015 at 17:16
  • @Seth Thanks. Now that I know the question is OK, I've updated the title. Oct 29, 2015 at 17:59
  • terdon: I think your answer is still the answer for the modified question (ask a new question) but you might want to edit your answer to highlight it a bit more.
    – Seth
    Oct 30, 2015 at 0:52
4

The answer is simple: ask a new question.

The new question can't be closed as a duplicate of an unanswered question.

3

I agree with Pilot6. While reviewing, and also while noticing deleted posts on questions I browse outside of review, I see numerous "me too" posts where someone is really trying to add new information about their related problem. These users should post questions instead, and we should encourage them to do so when we can.

Although terdon is correct that "me too" additions are not valuable, often people who have the same problem as described in an existing question (or believe their problem is the same) want to post so they can add information about the problem as it affects them, and provide details about their situation that they think may be relevant to the problem. What that means is that:

  • Their situation is actually different, or
  • they think their situation may be different, or
  • they can provide information about their situation that goes beyond what has been provided in the existing question.

That means they really have a new question. It's a related question -- except when people are totally mistaken about the similarity to an existing question, which is also something that happens, and then it's not even related -- but it is a new question. It might one day be closed as a duplicate of someone else's question once that question has an answer, or the earlier question might end up getting closed as a duplicate of theirs, but when someone has information about their own problem that isn't captured by an existing question, they have a new question.

When a new question links to an old question, they appear on each other's lists of linked questions.

By the way, those of us who do have enough rep to post comments should post our new questions as questions, too.


The other dimension of this, though, is why do people think they need to post comments to get help? Part of it is that people are accustomed to using forums, which encourage them to post on existing threads. The Stack Exchange system is non-intuitive to many people. Even highly experienced users who have been involved since the earliest days of the Stack Exchange network have occasionally come back after a period of inactivity and posted non-answer answers.

So that's why we have the review queues. When things that aren't attempts to answer a question get posted as answers, we tell people what to do instead and delete those posts.

And I think this offers some insight into why so many newcomers to our community feel powerless that they cannot yet post comments. It's because reviewers keep wrongly telling them that what they really want to do is post a comment.

We have official guidance about what comments are for, but reviewers keep advising people that their posts should be comments in situations where those rules explicitly state it is wrong to do so. The biggest irony is that the wrong advice is often given in the form of an incorrectly chosen canned review comment that itself links to that page.

It is sometimes correct to advise someone that what they've posted as an answer is the sort of thing that ought to be posted as a comment. However, comments are not a catch-all for content that is posted in the wrong place, needs improvement, or need not exist at all. Before telling someone that what they have written as an answer should be a comment instead, I recommend:

  • Checking that it is at least not wrong to post it as a comment.
  • Considering if the author should instead post a question, even if they would need to provide more information or a better explanation for their question to be answerable.
  • Considering if the author should have posted an answer, just not the one they did post. (And when what someone has posted is an answer, just not a very good one, please remember that answers that are wrong, partial, or low in quality do not make appropriate comments.)
  • Considering if the author should instead have submitted an edit to an existing post. This is perhaps the least common situation. When someone is posts a "me too" answer, even with potentially useful information, that should still virtually never be an edit. But there are other situations where someone's post is really an attempt to improve another post (usually an answer) without changing its meaning, and an edit would be appropriate.
  • Considering if this is a post would not be useful on our site in any form. "Me too" non-answers that provide no additional information shouldn't just be reposted as questions, but they shouldn't be comments, either. (On the other hand, it may be reasonable to encourage someone to post a question with full details of their problem.)
  • Considering whether or not the advice is useful to them or likely to result in them using the site better (or otherwise lead to a better outcome for anyone). This may sometimes be hard to know, but in some cases it clarifies some of the other considerations. For example, if I encounter a post while reviewing and I think to myself, "This looks like a comment... but this person is really trying to get help with their problem, and if they post a comment it won't help them or anyone else," then I've figured something out about would and wouldn't help that person.

Occasionally I have heard people express the concern that if we tell people to post questions, we'll have more bad questions on the site. The thing is:

  • We can tell people what they need to do to ask a good question. We can even show them the official advice.

  • Questions can be voted on, edited any number of times by their authors and others, commented on specifically, reviewed, closed (if appropriate), and reopened (if appropriate). Totally useless questions can be deleted and useful questions that turn out to be off-topic for our site can be migrated. Negatively scored questions are shown far less often on the front page, so they rarely prevent other good, answerable questions from getting answers.

  • Speaking of deletion, and the concern about littering the site with bad questions: The system automatically deletes many such closed questions, and question deletion is more transparent and more readily reversed when mistakes are made than comment deletion. I'm not saying we shouldn't delete worthless comments--of course we should. I'm saying that that if we are going to have low-quality content on the site, it should be in the form of posts, which can be both improved and curated in ways comments cannot.

    I cannot think of any way to clean up comments anywhere nearly as effectively as the system makes easy for posts. (I suppose this could be achieved by mass-flagging based on SEDE queries, but that's controversial, an outright no-no at least on Stack Overflow, and if done enough to make a big difference would be a massive drain on the time and energy of both flaggers and moderators.)

  • Suppose a new, 1-rep user needs help with a problem, posts a non-answer, and it is deleted. But before it is deleted, they get a comment telling them they really should post a comment, and can do so once they earn more rep. And imagine that's what they do -- they think, "Well that's weird, I thought this was 'Linux for human beings,' but whatever -- if this is what I need to do to get help, so be it." So they put some time into the site, get their 50 rep, and post a comment. But since Ask Ubuntu is a question-answer site but not a forum, this doesn't get them any help with their problem.

    That's a bad outcome -- for that user, for our site, and for the Ubuntu community.

If someone came along and proclaimed, "Ask Ubuntu is a great place for low-quality content that will help no one ever, so long as it's posted in thousands of comments strewn all across the site!" we would know they were mistaken, and suspect they were trolling. So let's stop nudging the whole community in that direction.

2

You must log in to answer this question.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged .