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With me being a relative newbie to Super User, I am trying to understand how the system works.

As per the SU FAQ, questions have to meet certain standards, and that low quality ones will be closed. I understand that we need these standards in order for Super User to be a high quality Q&A site.

What I want to know:

  • How does closing ensure higher quality posts? Closed off-topic questions, for example, only clutter up search. Why don't we delete these instead of closing them?
  • And when is is appropriate to delete a question?
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    If it can be found by using search, it will hopefully prevent the next guy from asking the same off-topic question, especially if it's not that obvious that the question is not desired. That's also why we don't delete duplicates.
    – Daniel Beck Mod
    Sep 19, 2011 at 13:35

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Why don't we delete these instead of closing them?

  • To serve as an example of what is off-topic here. The rationale is that people who see off-topic questions closed remember them and don't ask any off-topic question. The same goes for "bad" questions (i.e. "not constructive" ones).
  • For historical purposes (some people really want these to stay, which would lead to delete-undelete wars)
  • As a stage prior to deleting (e.g. you can go through all the "Not a real question" questions and delete them sooner or later)
  • etc.

And when is is appropriate to delete a question?

When it is …

  • absolutely off topic
  • insulting, offensive
  • spam
  • not valid anymore
  • of really bad quality
  • etc.

The reasons vary here.


See this blog entry for more details:

The Stack Overflow Question Lifecycle

Why do you allow content to be deleted?

Just like death is an unfortunate but normal part of life, I believe deletion is also an unfortunate but normal part of living websites.

Why would you delete a question? Isn’t closing it enough?

  • Some questions are of such poor quality that they cannot be salvaged. They’re literally nonsense. Not every byte of data that is created in the world is infinite and sacred.
  • Some questions are so incredibly off topic that they add no value to a programming community.
  • The mental cost of processing these closed questions is not zero, particularly for users who are actively engaged and scanning questions to find things they can help answer.
  • If users see a lot of closed questions, they’ll note that we don’t enforce the guidelines, so why should they? Without any final resolution, asking questions that get closed becomes something we are implicitly encouraging — a broken windows problem. If this goes on for long enough, we’re no longer a community of programmers who ask and answer programming questions, we’re a community of random people discussing.. whatever. That’s toxic.
  • If enough of these closed questions are allowed to hang around, they become clutter that reduces the overall signal to noise ratio — which further reduces confidence in the system.
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  • I suppose it is just the way it is, but I don't fully understand why you would let some of the faulty content exist to serve as an example. A new user likely isn't going to search before posting, and therefore would not encounter the content, which is viewed as unwanted. If said user would post a question, which is unwanted, doesn't that just lead to more clutter instead of education? He would only learn when the faulty question would get closed.
    – Duijf
    Sep 19, 2011 at 14:05
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    I know – it's not only new users though. Even long-time users repeatedly ask off-topic questions. Most of the "not constructive" / "not a real question" ones will eventually be deleted anyway. As Daniel said above, the duplicates are kept though.
    – slhck
    Sep 19, 2011 at 14:07
  • Thank you for clarifying.
    – Duijf
    Sep 19, 2011 at 14:09

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