I realize I'm dense, but if I can't wrap my head around a question, I usually leave a comment to clarify or make the question reproducible.
Only then I bother with really working on a question. I think that the least OP can do is convey the message in our lingo. Which takes time to learn, I'll admit, but I think most of us have been more than accommodating in that regard. If everyone who has been pointed to the question about how to convey a reproducible example took the time to read (and understand) what's in that thread, they would probably be pretty much up to speed.
@Frank the % unwelcoming (and especially abusive) comments looks pretty low to me. Secondly, perhaps they could've looked at the quality and wording of questions that inspired "unfriendly" comments.
This question of mine was made community wiki by someone other than me. I'm aware of discussion (e.g. here and here) arguing that big-list questions should be CW so that the voting system can be used to rank the answers without affecting the reputation of the posters. I suppose someone might ha...
TLDR: mainly 3 reasons for Mod to make it CW: 1.Career advice questions, 2.Questions regarding style (e.g., in writing papers), 3.Big-list questions, especially if they quantify over all mathematical fields.
I like the 3rd one... when post attracts million types of answers, to discourage rep-lovers, Mod can turn everything to CW.
@Sotos hm, interesting case. never worked with "edge sequences" in igraph (like Cath, i just learn one thing at a time from the pkg) ... fwiw, data.table translation of the other answers: DT[, g := .GRP, by=cumsum(BSTN == O)][, g := g - first(g) + 1L, by=.(BSTN, ASTN)][]
@mtoto oh, to me they look high... i tried their process but got bored by the lack of content i could find objectionable even on the most broad grounds. yeah, it would be really useful to get a sense for the correlation of passive aggressive comments and "bad" content and look at the timing (eg, do downvotes pile on after a harsh comment?)