Per the Help Center: What types of questions should I avoid asking?
To prevent your question from being flagged and possibly removed, avoid asking subjective questions where …
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you are asking an open-ended, hypothetical question: “What if ______ happened?”
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Currently I ...
We should not accept those question.
One of the rules that makes so many Stack Exchange sites so successful, is that askers must ask about a problem they actually face.
There are several good reasons for that.
One is that if one person has that problem, there's a pretty good chance that many p...
And the last four should be mentioned there (- content policy with H content (where do we draw the line?; should we even?; revisited) was left out) too as a teaser, and will be left for the next discussion
To support the claim here that ID requests aren't really significantly hurting our answer rate, our current answer rate is 87.70%. If we removed every question from the site tagged identification-request right now, it would indeed increase our rate...all the way to 87.80%. We'd only gain 0.10%, which is not even measurable by Area 51 metrics, and corresponds to about 3 total unanswered questions sitewide. We'd gain somewhat more by removing every question tagged nanoha (gain of 0.18%) or speed-grapher (0.13%). — Logan MJul 25 '14 at 21:08
I've noticed a trend among regular Stack Overflow users which, as someone who doesn't use SO, is frankly bizarre. SO users tend to think of SO (and by extension all SE sites) as a battleground between "good questions" and "help vampire questions". They think the people asking for help are lowerin...
What I'm saying is that you can fully follow the guidelines and provide a question which cannot be answered even by someone who knows the target manga or anime.
I remember we already talked bout the requirements for a "valid" id request like it has to answer some significant number of questions about the events of the descriptions of id'd work
if somebody says "there was a girl and a boy and they fell from a roof, this is all I can remember, sorry", you can ask what the girl looked like, the size of her breasts the color of her hair, was she the only girl, etc
@MadaraUchiha when a question gets closed because of not complying to the guidelines we currently have, I always write "please add more details according to these guidelines, so that your question may be reopened again", and that's how it should be regarded and everyone should do it
My viewpoint is that many of the identification-request questions coming in are bad questions, but few of them need to be closed. This is, in my opinion, the same viewpoint that JNat suggested in his answer here.
Hence, IMO the first course of business should be to create an FAQ on meta regardin...
@GaoWeiwei You can commented, not answer, but you can flag for reopen if you think you can answer it. But generally, too vague questions should not be answered
Taking cues from sites like TV & Movies.SE, Sci-Fi.SE, and Arqade, I've come up with the following guidelines:
An identification-request should have as many of the following points as possible:
Any description of the leading/recurring character(s) (i.e. physical description, behavior,...
The answer I posted above suggests a more heuristic way of determining whether or not an ID request is a good fit for the site. The two examples he posts are excellent examples of how short ID requests can be answerable and long ID requests can be unanswerable.
In any case, in my opinion changes to the guidelines are not the most pressing matter, enforcing them strictly is what matters most. That and consistently down voting crappy but guideline compliant questions
My proposition: Cast close-votes as per this answer; cast downvotes as per the hover text: "This question does not show any research effort; it is unclear or not useful."
@GaoWeiwei The "there aren't that many" argument is not valid in my opinion. If there's something we don't want on our site, I say we should get rid of it before there are that many
@Eric I get that, but once again many of them are asked by hit&run users. I know I'm stressing that point a bit, but we want quality q&a's that can build a community
My viewpoint is that many of the identification-request questions coming in are bad questions, but few of them need to be closed. This is, in my opinion, the same viewpoint that JNat suggested in his answer here.
Hence, IMO the first course of business should be to create an FAQ on meta regardin...
Taking cues from sites like TV & Movies.SE, Sci-Fi.SE, and Arqade, I've come up with the following guidelines:
An identification-request should have as many of the following points as possible:
Any description of the leading/recurring character(s) (i.e. physical description, behavior,...
Finally online. Can't read back right now but I agree with @Eric here. A good ID request doesn't just go through and check a bunch of boxes. It typically has one or two single data points which individually narrow down the list to a very small amount.