@treyBake I haven't read the question yet, but if you can edit a question to remove a single line so that it otherwise is on-topic, you should do that rather than close voting it.
@TylerH well, the main problem then comes: it's no longer a question just a bunch of statements about the problem rather than the problem itself (if that makes sense)
I want another predefined close-vote reason "OP has left within 3 minutes after posting the question and has not been seen for more than half an hour".
If the OP isn't in a hurry that isn't a problem. If the post lacks information it needs to be answered, then close it for that reason. Once the OP decides to get back to it they'll have a nice message of what they need to do in order to get an answer.
It is not about "hurry". It is about "Here is my question. I am off to bed."
With all that "SO is so hostile and condescending" going on, nobody can seriously believe to have asked a question without clarification being requested for something within 10 minutes.
There is nothing wrong with that. Treat it like an email exchange. It concludes when it concludes. There is no requirement for immediate response from anyone.
@Yunnosch There is no expectation of immediacy in SO posts. The point is to create a useful question for as many future readers as possible into the future. Some questions go years without getting an answer. Likewise, a question could be closed for years and then get edited and subsequently reopened and answered.
I disagree. Read "Post the question and respond to feedback" and onwards here stackoverflow.com/help/how-to-ask That phrasing does not sound like "next day".
@Yunnosch There's no explicit mention of immediacy, but that page is about guidelines to help you improve your experience. It's not a ruleset used for justification for closure (that's elsewhere in the help center)
just people in Tavern on the Meta and other, bot-powered efforts
There was a similar effort predating SOCVR as I recall on one of the math sites, but I don't know if it's still around, and it was never as organized as this group is. It was mostly just one or two guys posting close-worthy questions for the few folks who dropped by on occasion.
Probably the change to make close votes age away after a couple weeks was a death knell to that kind of effort on smaller sites.
@TylerH There's CRUDE, which is for Mathematics. It predates SOCVR by almost 2 years. At this point, they are fairly well organized and have considerable traffic in the room.
A while back, they contacted us and asked to be able to use SOCVR's tools. I made modifications: The Request Generator (both release and alpha) work for their site and room (actually any site/room, but with explicit config for theirs), although CRUDE also uses some other request formats. There's a version of the URRS which works for CRUDE. I expect, eventually, to get to changing the URRS so there's only one version, which works in any room/site combination, but it hasn't happened yet.
While the Archiver was changed to work for CRUDE—actually, to work for ROs/mods in any room, with in-code configuration of destination rooms and archiving criteria)—, users in CRUDE objected to moving requests out of the transcript, for various reasons, so CRUDE doesn't use the Archiver, leaving all requests in the room's transcript.
@Coronon Normally we are OK with a bit of off-topic chat in this room, but the stuff on Meta is a bit sensitive at the moment, so I think we're steering clear of it.
@Coronon Thanks. It's no problem. I certainly understand your curiosity in asking about it. It's just a topic which has a lot of associated issues and points of view. It's coupled with quite a bit of frustration and strong feelings. We just feel that it's better to keep the discussions to a relatively few locations, or at least stay away from it in this room.
(I'm not saying I'm for or against it, just pointing out that questions with fewer views over the same time span have been locked for 'historical significance')
@Coronon If you just want to read more information, there are several questions dealing with it on Meta Stack Exchange. One of the questions with recent activity has a summary of some of what's gone on.