86

Are people sympathetically upvoting bad questions that have been downvoted?

https://i.stack.imgur.com/Dh4ec.png

Who in their right mind would upvote such a ridiculously awful question?

I tend to see this late at night, and suspect that it's because someone (me) from a different timezone downvoted and left the sarcastic comment. How can one hope to improve the quality of questions on Stack Overflow when people upvote crap like this?

Enter image description here

Other examples

47
  • 48
    'Close Vote' is your friend here. Vote early and vote often (to maintain site's quality) :) May 9, 2014 at 6:12
  • 34
    @AzizShaikh That I do. I've considered programming my middle mouse button to execute a close vote macro. May 9, 2014 at 6:13
  • 5
    Now that is a nice idea. Regarding your question, I believe you are correct but the sympathetic up-voters are less in number. I understand your frustration but you have to keep in mind that not everyone here has a "right mind" :) May 9, 2014 at 6:24
  • 9
    That is a dreadful question. But then, just as people are free to downvote as they like (as long as they are not abusing the system with sock-puppets or serial voting), they're free to upvote as they like. Luckily the community tends to even it out. May 9, 2014 at 6:28
  • 60
    The problem with the "close vote" solution is that I think it's pretty clear from meta that we should not be closing these problems. The second example, for instance, currently has 3 close votes marked as lacking sufficient information to diagnose the problem. But that's wrong; there's plenty of info to diagnose the problem, because it's a simple problem. So, we don't vote to close, and then the questions get answered, and then it encourages more such questions. What we need is a clear mandate from the powers that be that these questions should be closed, and quickly.
    – yshavit
    May 9, 2014 at 6:33
  • 19
    @yshavit Agree x1000. The problem is that even the powers that be can't agree on this. The argument is that even all of the crap awful questions (that are probably 100x duplicates) somehow add to the value of the site because they point to the good answers (somewhere). I disagree in that they bring the overall quality way, way down, diluting the good questions, and exhausting the experts. May 9, 2014 at 6:34
  • 12
    Also, OMG, there's a "rant" tag?!?!?! Meta is not a place for rants!!! :P Only civilized discourse! :P
    – user456814
    May 9, 2014 at 6:35
  • 5
    @dilbert I disagree.
    – podiluska
    May 9, 2014 at 8:31
  • 39
    This strategy is known as keeping the question alive. Reward poor questions with upvotes so that your answers can be seen by more folks and you get more upvotes in the process.
    – devnull
    May 9, 2014 at 8:41
  • 6
    I have literally hundreds of examples of this. There are questions that are just barely readable and show no signs of research but a blatant disregard for the culture and conventions on SO, which still get upvoted multiple times - this is one of the worse example thus far, which was at 4 upvotes before OP edited in his meager try (check the edit history/timestamps and my comment on the question). I guess too many people interpreted "be nicer to noobs" as "upvote every post by a new user as long as it's not horribly offensive"...
    – l4mpi
    May 9, 2014 at 10:35
  • 9
    I would agree that question is extremely poor and broad. I'm disappointed at seeing the sarcastic comment on that question though. Clearly the OP has very little knowledge of PHP and SO purposely led him astray!
    – InternalFX
    May 9, 2014 at 16:38
  • 21
    @InternalFX "PHP expansion board" doesn't even show up on Google. I think he'll quickly find it to be sarcasm. If we can't have a little fun, I don't want to be a part of Stack Overflow. May 9, 2014 at 19:24
  • 7
    I can't believe that you didn't specify that it's the left-handed PHP board, @JonathonReinhart; we are supposed to be helping clueless people who ask strangers to take them by the hand and spoonfeed them!
    – jscs
    May 9, 2014 at 19:57
  • 7
    @InternalFX The question was utterly fatuous because it probably took more effort to join SO and type in the question than it would take to find a simple tutorial using a popular search engine, and therefore it deserved a fatuous answer. Whilst this is something that should not be done regularly (I agree that it might put off newbies), sometimes a question is daft it deserves some ridicule. The first lesson of anything is how and where to ask the right questions, and sometimes the lesson is harsh. May 12, 2014 at 14:23
  • 9
    I give sympathy upvotes because this community is ridiculously elitist and hostile to new users. It would be one thing if it was just the down votes, but the comments are also incredibly rude. There have to be some people around who try to encourage new users to stay and to improve as members of the community.
    – asteri
    May 18, 2014 at 19:04

12 Answers 12

162

You're assuming all people see "good" and "bad" in the same way. If there are people who think those are good enough questions to ask, then there are people who will think those are good enough questions to up-vote.

4
  • 47
    Have an upvote; because this is how I often feel.
    – motiur
    May 9, 2014 at 16:31
  • 28
    The type of people that upvote low-quality content are not the type that will also coherently defend their bad ideas. I'd rather see the latter because it's has a higher entertainment value.
    – Charles
    May 9, 2014 at 16:41
  • 8
    This is also why some bad edits get approved.
    – BoltClock
    May 14, 2014 at 6:39
  • 1
    some questions can be asked "broadly" since people should be familiar with the problem that is asked. something like "how can i avoid this known bug xyz when doing xyz" with no code sample and no detailed explanation could still be considered a good question in some cases, because the bug may be known
    – Alan
    Mar 19, 2019 at 11:47
65

Who in their right mind would up-vote such a ridiculously awful question?

  • The same type of person who would ask such a ridiculously awful question.

    Who are these people, you may ask? Probably those with excessive laziness, lack of respect (for oneself and others) and/or total and utter obliviousness.

  • Someone who favours usefulness and largely ignores quality.

    We strive to have a high-quality site. This behaviour is actively harmful and definitely part of the problem.

  • A sock puppet.

Sympathy upvotes?

That could also be.

Lack of seeing the bigger picture? Definitely.


There are plenty of possibilities to deal with this, but a necessary precondition is that the SE staff realizes that this is a problem and are more open to suggestions.

22
  • 7
    Just one thing, these lazy people are lazy because everybody starts from somewhere. Can we all not give some space to these lazy people.May be they do not still manage to have that smart culture in them yet.
    – motiur
    May 9, 2014 at 17:23
  • 16
    @whoknows Laziness is rarely something you can just shake off. Obliviousness? Now that's a bit easier to change (but maybe not so much the "total and utter" variety). I don't know what "some space" is meant to imply, but having these terrible questions float around is actively harmful to the quality of the site. I'd happily explain my downvote if the reason for it is unclear, but most of the time (like in the above cases) I literally can't even wrap my head around how "does not show any research effort" requires any explaining, or why/whether me repeating it would have any value whatsoever. May 9, 2014 at 17:31
  • 12
    @whoknows how does "starting from somewhere" justify laziness? These people are lazy because they are lazy. Giving them rep points will not lead them to be less lazy, but quite the opposite. May 12, 2014 at 8:31
  • 2
    Probably the same type of person who would ask such a ridiculously awful question.. Not necessarily. The question can be awful, however the topic brought up can be interesting. For example I see almost 100% of questions worth upvotes, so I do. I encourage people to ask even "bad" questions. Well there are no bad questions actually.
    – dfsq
    May 12, 2014 at 13:54
  • 7
    @dfsq So you're saying that you're actively trying to decrease the quality of the content on this site? That's something you should be ashamed of, not proud of. There most certainly are bad questions, and we don't want them here.
    – Servy
    May 12, 2014 at 14:20
  • 2
    @Servy I don't see it the way you put it. The reason why the quality is decreasing, is not because bad questions are upvoted/downvoted.
    – dfsq
    May 12, 2014 at 15:23
  • 3
    @dfsq That's not the only reason, but it's certainly a significant contributing factor.
    – Servy
    May 12, 2014 at 15:28
  • 3
    @Servy Do you really think the user that posted this cares anything at all about their reputation? Look at the username and rep. They are here for an answer, not for reputation. If I am to believe that this is the typical example of a user who is decreasing the quality of the site, and your hypothesis is that somehow up/down votes encourages/discourages these low quality questions, then in light of the fact that the user has no rep or account I would conclude that your hypothesis is false, as far as it applies to this type of user.
    – AaronLS
    May 12, 2014 at 20:47
  • 3
    @AaronLS So, as Dukeling begins to discuss, it has a more indirect effect. First off, there are some users that are asking questions to earn rep. Next, there are others that, while they don't care about rep, still see a big negative number next to their question and do recognize that they did something wrong, and try to fix it. Beyond that, questions with a score below 3 don't show up on the homepage, decreasing the odds of an answer, unanswered closed questions with a negative score will be automatically deleted, and can be manually deleted more quickly, and the question ban, etc.
    – Servy
    May 12, 2014 at 21:13
  • 1
    @Dukeling It's not hard to cycle an IP when you don't care about an account or rep. You're treating a symptom instead of treating the cause. Comments encourage an improved question, and also it shows the asker that there is some interest in answering the question once they've put some decent effort into it.
    – AaronLS
    May 12, 2014 at 21:17
  • 1
    @Servy " do recognize that they did something wrong, and try to fix it" Do you teach dogs to sit by hitting them with a crowbar? How do you think the dog will try to correct their behavior if you don't make your expectations clear? There's lots of science to show what you are talking about is pretty ineffective. Keep whining about decreasing site quality but ignore the solutions that history has already taught us.
    – AaronLS
    May 12, 2014 at 21:21
  • 2
    @AaronLS You totally missed the point in my last comment. I could argue something about implicit community membership through participation, but that part really wasn't even the important part of my comment. And I was saying too many users in #2 just don't care (or are hopelessly too inexperienced to be asking questions here) - no amount of comments is going to lead them onto the right path. Time commenting would be better spent answering decent questions. May 12, 2014 at 22:20
  • 2
    @AaronLS Speaking from personal experience - 95%+ of the times I've commented and/or waited around for a change, either nothing happened (i.e. the probably don't care) or there was a bit of a back and forth after which I realized the user really shouldn't be asking questions here and no amount of explaining what's wrong with the question or answering it is going to help them a whole lot. And I really do want to help the 5%, but my sanity can't handle doing something with a 95% chance of (failure with a chance of more failure) and a 5% chance of a really, really small reward. May 12, 2014 at 22:48
  • 3
    @AaronLS So when your dog poops on the rug you give him a treat, so that he learns not to do it again? And that works for you? You think that positive reinforcement for negative behavior discourages that behavior? It does not. Negative reinforcement for negative behavior does discourage the actions in question. When people post bad questions they almost always do get feedback as to what's wrong. When their questions are closed that provides very helpful guidance. Most bad posts get some comments explaining what's wrong, yet the percent of questions that get fixed is very, very low.
    – Servy
    May 13, 2014 at 14:00
  • 5
    You missed a group of people... the ones that don't know/understand how the site works. Many people are happy to change the way they post/vote if you just educate them.
    – Rachel
    May 14, 2014 at 13:04
18

Perhaps the upvoters felt like rewarding the original posters for attempting to contribute, even if their contribution was poor. The examples you cited are, admittedly, pretty bad. But many people believe that positive feedback is more effective at encouraging good behavior than negative feedback. After all, most of us get defensive at negative feedback, and often tend to tune out the critics. Whether upvoting a bad question is an effective method for delivering positive feedback is another issue.

Other possible reasons: perhaps the upvoters misread the question. (After all, the downvotes vastly outnumber the upvotes; it seems plausible that it was just a mistake.) Perhaps the upvoter is not particularly strong on the substance of the question and therefore thought it was a good question. Perhaps the upvoter is not familiar with (or does not agree with) the approach of most people on SO and thought a general question (in the first example; the second one was incomprehensible) was a good one.

I could probably think of a dozen more reasons similar to the ones above...people do things for lots of crazy reasons.

2
  • 16
    Providing positive feedback for negative behavior doesn't encourage positive behaviors. It simply validates that the negative behavior is good, and encourages the user to repeat that negative behavior. As for the possibility of a mistake, yes, that does happen, however this described situation is simply so common that its clear that that is not the primary explanation.
    – Servy
    May 9, 2014 at 20:49
  • 10
    @Servy Some people believe that making a good-faith attempt to participate is a good behavior, even if the overall effort was poor. The question was why people would upvote a poor question, and that is, arguably, a good reason. May 9, 2014 at 20:53
11

If your assumption is that sympathy upvotes of these types of questions are decreasing site quality, then that assumes that askers of these questions are encouraged/discouraged from asking such questions based on overall score. If you look at the username and rep you'll realize these types of users are here for answers, not reputation. Up/down votes mean nothing to them and will not change their behavior. The overall negative score warns other users away from wasting time on the question. If you want to modify the users behavior, then a comment goes much further. As another said, we tune out critics when the criticism is negative. If you can offer a suggestion for how the question can be improved, then that will set a foundation for good behavior. If you slap a dog because he didn't sit, he will never learn to sit cause he doesn't know what it is you want him to do. A little hand holding to guide someone into improving a question goes a long ways. And then in the future maybe they'll have a better idea as to why they are getting downvotes and no answers.

Often times I will withhold making an attempt at an answer until the asker has provided sufficient information. That's the carrot they want.

Comments also show the asker that there is some interest in answering the question once they've put some decent effort into it.

6
  • 1
    I hope our typical user is more intelligent than a dog, and would be able to figure out that negative means bad here (or at least mouse over the arrows to figure it out) and go looking to the help center to find out what's wrong, or possibly find their way to Meta, which hopefully leads them to somewhere like here or even to asking a question, to which the answer is hopefully more complex than "You didn't do any research effort". It's all about caring enough to do this, and if they don't, their loss. Oh, and question bans and such. May 12, 2014 at 21:25
  • 3
    @Dukeling These expectations are part of the culture of stackoverflow. If you punish without guidance, then you don't establish an expectation of what modified behavior is expected. "negative means bad here" What part of "he doesn't know what it is you want him to do" do you not understand? It doesn't have anything to do with equating negative with bad, it has everything to do with establishing expectations. Of course negative==bad, that's not the point at all :/
    – AaronLS
    May 12, 2014 at 21:57
  • 2
    @Dukeling "It's all about caring enough to do this, and if they don't, their loss" If this is your attitude, then why are you so worried about site quality or a single upvote in a pile of downvotes that effects the overall score by less than 10%? I don't see any coherent logic in any of what you are saying.
    – AaronLS
    May 12, 2014 at 22:00
  • 3
    I sincerely hope someone who shows even the faintest attempt would be able to guess that the help center and/or Meta would be good places to start looking to figure out why they were punished, and find them. (Not a big sports fan, but) I can't imagine a referee would explain offending behaviour to a player in a whole lot of detail particularly often - they're expected to know the rules and know when they did something wrong. Is this that different? May 13, 2014 at 0:36
  • 2
    I also don't see any coherent logic in how you got to your last point. I care about site quality and having people get upvoted gives them tons of reputation compared to a downvote and makes it take longer for them to get banned if they keep up the unwanted behaviour, or makes the motivation for improving their own behaviour so much less. May 13, 2014 at 0:39
  • 2
    "Up/down votes mean nothing to them and will not change their behavior" - generally agree, but they will be questionbanned if they are sufficiently down- and closevoted. They might not change their behaviour, but they won't be able to keep up this behaviour for a long time. Sympathy upvotes of course affect this process and will result in keeping these users around longer...
    – l4mpi
    May 17, 2014 at 9:28
11

I think the snarky and misleading comment does a lot more damage to the site than the simplistic question. Perhaps people are only upvoting the question because they can't downvote the comment.

5
  • 3
    As I said in a previous comment, "PHP expansion board" doesn't even show up on Google. I think he'll quickly find it to be sarcasm. If we can't have a little fun, I don't want to be a part of Stack Overflow. May 14, 2014 at 2:20
  • 2
    If you start with sarcasm soon everyone will use it, I guess. May 15, 2014 at 9:13
  • You can always flag comments for moderators to take a look at, if you think that there's something wrong with them.
    – user456814
    May 19, 2014 at 2:55
  • 7
    Jonathan, can you imagine if someone you worked with gave you an answer that you thought might be real and you wasted an entire day before you realized that they were just being a sarcastic dick? How would you feel about working with that person? That's you, isn't it? The guy that knows a lot that no one wants to work with because he works against the common goal.
    – AJB
    May 23, 2014 at 18:53
  • 2
    @AJB understands the spirit of StackOverflow. ^ This comment epitomizes the attitude we need to have toward negative influences in our community. You can fix ignorance with knowledge and guidance, but it's much harder to fix a bad attitude toward the userbase. Jan 5, 2018 at 19:39
8

I believe that you shouldn't vote based on the current vote count of a question, that is, if you see a question having -2, it shouldn't make you more likely to upvote than if it was 0. Your vote should be cast as if you were the only one vote, it shouldn't be cast in order to "cancel out" other votes.

5
  • 1
    Another suggestion that's floating around somewhere is to charge rep for upvotes -- either all upvotes, or only upvotes on negatively-scored questions.
    – jscs
    May 9, 2014 at 19:59
  • 4
    Preventing voting based on score to ... prevent voting based on score. Hmmm... I'd rather have < 125 rep users not be allowed to vote at all if we're going in this direction ... or weighted voting based on reputation or voter's tag score in the tags on the question. May 9, 2014 at 20:41
  • 7
    @JoshCaswell Charging rep for upvotes would be a terrible idea, though. My idea is about fighting pity-upvotes, this would obliterate all upvotes. No one will upvote if they charge rep for that.
    – sashoalm
    May 10, 2014 at 8:15
  • It would make everyone think a lot more carefully about their upvotes, and I don't think that would be a bad thing. I'm not completely in favor, but it's an intriguing idea.
    – jscs
    May 10, 2014 at 8:21
  • 1
    On occasion I will upvote an answer (I haven't seen applicable questions) which are at -1 because the answer is a relatively good answer that was downvoted (Sometimes even if I wouldn't upvote otherwise). For some strange reason, I've noticed that downvoted answers tend to be downvoted more, even if the answer is a good answer. So by bringing the score to 0, I make it more fair for the answerer.
    – Justin
    May 18, 2014 at 4:54
6

I think the important question is

Who in their right mind would ASK such a ridiculously awful question?

That's the point! I don't think that there is THE answer. My guess is that there is different type of stackoverflow users:

  • The one that are specialist or at least good developer. Those one search a lot, google a lot and when they are blocked it is because of a quite complex problem, something interesting and that require other specialists expertise. I think this is the stackoverflow "purist" developer.
  • The beginner-qualified user. Good developer that are looking for reputation point and that want to be part of the community.
  • And a new type, the one that doesn't know stackoverflow philosophy and they use it as a "do my research work for me". They maybe think that stackoverflow is a kind of board, ask a question, usually stupid, and as soon as they got their answer never come back. They can't help and don't even try (maybe because they can't).

The problem is that this last type is pulling S.O. down. The feed is full of stupid, ininteressant and very basic question that can be answer by Google in two clicks. There are tons of tutorials and that is not the S.O. purpose to answer stupid basic questions when there are ten times duplicate. And the one which upvote and support it are the second type that are looking for easy reputation point. And the one looking for interesting question can't do anything cause every interesting question is answer in the minute as everybody rush at it, and other are just too basic.

But as some peoples says those people are beginners and may become experts. We all have been beginners at a time, so I am not for the extreme "get rid of them" solution. Maybe creating a new platform especially for beginners where other beginners can help them could be a solution. And once they become better they switch to classic S.O.

Beginners helping each others and professionals helping each others.

That's my opinion, I am not an expert, but a professional that has been helped a lot by SO and want to bring something back to it.

7
  • 6
    No experts will want to participate in a new platform for beginners for the same reasons that experts are being pushed away now. Beginners "helping" beginners causes the same mutual upvote wankfest that we're suffering from now. It won't help anything, and the new site would be awful.
    – Charles
    May 9, 2014 at 17:32
  • 7
    Honestly, the majority of experts that I've interacted with don't have a problem answering questions that are easy so long as they are quality questions. It's important to have the questions that are of low quality (regardless of their difficulty) removed. Of the remaining quality questions, there's no real reason to separate them into difficult or easy (not that you can effectively do so anyway). Most of the top experts love to come across a question from an enthusiastic new user that can describe their problem well, clearly researched and tried to solve their problem, but couldn't.
    – Servy
    May 9, 2014 at 17:41
  • 4
    @Charles "No experts will want to participate in a new platform for beginners" - everyone keeps saying, but I actually doubt it (these days, at least) - some 'experts' love reputation a bit too much - if there's a site where the questions they want to answer don't get downvoted into oblivion and closed, I'm sure they'll be happy there. Currently (pretty much) everyone is getting pushed away, help vampires and rep whores are pushing those of us away who want high quality, and we are pushing them away by downvoting and closing the questions they like - no-one's winning. May 9, 2014 at 18:13
  • I see SO as a marketplace for questions and answers with a clear defined rule what is on-topic. We should be interested in bringing all the different interests together as smoothly as possible. May 15, 2014 at 9:18
  • See Should we fork Stack Overflow for beginning programmers?
    – user456814
    May 19, 2014 at 3:15
  • See Would it be a terrible idea to split SO up into a tiered platform?.
    – user456814
    May 19, 2014 at 3:16
5

I think people see downvotes on a sliding scale. SO users are happy to see truly terrible questions get 10+ downvotes. Merely mediocre questions deserve to be downvoted but not as much, hence they'll upvote if they see the amount of downvotes as "unfair".

This is actually how I used to think (as evidenced by this question three years ago).

0

Sympathetic voting is as bad as agressive downvoting, which at places looks absolutely unnecessary. Another thing you "left a sarcastic comment" I guess that is a problem in itself.

P.S. A question! What you "belonging to a different time zone" have anything to do with those upvotes (and I agree wrong/sympathetic upvotes)?

3
  • I don't know what it has to do with it, but it's a behavior I've seen. May 12, 2014 at 17:46
  • 6
    And aggressiveness is another behaviour that I observed frequently. May 12, 2014 at 20:31
  • How does one downvote aggressively? Click the mouse extra hard? May 28, 2017 at 19:41
-5

I didn't read all of the replies so this could have been said already.. what if there was a way to link questions together. It seems a lot of these questions have been answered before somewhere else on the site, so if you could group them all together then the answers for these simple questions would be better organized and more easily searched for, reducing the problem. maybe??

3
  • 4
    This is why we users can close questions as "duplicates" of other questions, so basically we already have this.
    – user456814
    May 19, 2014 at 3:00
  • Maybe I wasn't clear. I mean instead of closing the question as a duplicate, link that question to the question that was duplicated.
    – Evan
    May 19, 2014 at 17:35
  • 1
    This already happens when you close the question as a duplicate. What's the difference, other than the duplicate doesn't get closed? We close duplicates so that answers all get funneled into one question, instead of having answers spread out among many questions.
    – user456814
    May 19, 2014 at 17:56
-9

I would not be so quick to downvote such a question and I might even upvote it and add a comment explaining that I upvoted because the OP is a newbee and is trying to learn from the experts here, but it's really not an appropriate question, and explain why:

It's obvious that the OP is a newbee and downvoting is likely to scare them off. IMO, people should be encouraged to come to the site to learn - it should not just be about big time experts "scratching each other's backs". So encouraging with upvote and providing guidance in a comment and/or vote to close seems appropriate to me. Nobody is going to be garnering thousands of rep points from newbee questions and "sympathy votes", and you're not losing anything with the upvote.

In general I am very reluctant to downvote questions unless they are just plain stupid and show blatant negligence or malice. A naive newbee doesn't deserve a downvote IMO. Let them feel good and teach them. Their questions will improve, and the site at large will be the better for it in the long run.

3
  • 6
    "This question shows research effort; it is useful and clear" (question upvote button text) somehow doesn't match with "encouraging with upvote [...] and/or vote to close" for me.
    – PlasmaHH
    May 14, 2014 at 12:43
  • 1
    I think the question cited by the OP is essentially "useful and clear" it's just way too broad. So I see it as a "teachable moment" - but not necessarily to downvote IMO. Perhaps I am not entirely within the guidelines here... just my own particular opinion - I'd prefer to upvote and educate than downvote or vote to close without a reason. I understand that that might not sit well with others.
    – Gramps
    May 14, 2014 at 16:40
  • 7
    By upvoting poor questions, you're only encouraging users to continue asking poor questions, instead of communicating to them that their questions can be improved. You're not helping anyone with upvotes in such cases. If you don't want to downvote, then you absolutely must not upvote either, just to make the original poster "feel good" about themselves. Upvote good questions, don't upvote junk.
    – user456814
    May 19, 2014 at 3:04
-22

It amazing me all the people on here who whine about simple questions. For goodness sake... These people are beginners trying to learn how to program. They aren't masters of Google search (yet). Call them lazy. Maybe they aren't in the same mindset as you on how to solve problems.

They are asking basic questions and think this is the place to do it. This place is a buzzkill for beginners. People sign up and get downvoted to hell on their first questions. I doubt they ever come back. I've never had trouble sifting through bad questions to find an answer. I get people want to improve quality but if the question is clear and concise, I don't get the point of downvoting it or closing it. I still run across plenty of answers that have been closed. They still show up in search engines, so you guys are accomplishing very little other than hurting the advertising profits of the company by turning away new people. The PHP question I agree, but someone asking how to parse a string... Ok, so no one ever had to look up how to do parsing the first few weeks they started programming?

10
  • 19
    "They aren't masters of Google search (yet)" - Doesn't take a lot to learn to use Google and if you haven't taken that simple step first then you probably shouldn't be trying to set up Apache. I suspect this whole thread applies more to that kind of question than the parsing one (and I agree with you on that point: We all start somewhere). But even my aged step mother, who has the IQ of a fence post, understands how to use Google to ask questions and get answers before asking other people. May 12, 2014 at 14:28
  • 23
    If people aren't capable of doing basic research before asking their question then this isn't the place for them to ask. This site expects a sufficient level of research for all questions asked. If someone cannot, or will not, take the time to do that, then their questions don't belong here. If people are being driven away due to an inability, or unwillingness, to ask questions this site considers acceptable then that's a good thing. We want people who will provide quality contributions, not people who will proved any contributions.
    – Servy
    May 12, 2014 at 14:29
  • 3
    It's ironic because I came across a horrible question right after posting this. Someone said their programmer was out sick and had a question on how to do something. lol >> Maybe new people need a little grace on how to use the site. People look at this site as a way to ask more experienced people how to do things... All the experienced users are looking at this site as a last resort when all other research fails. Personally even if someone could search 20 minutes and find an answer to a tough question on a blog somewhere, is it so bad to have an easy to find answer on SO. May 12, 2014 at 14:32
  • 1
    I do get where you're coming from, I really do - and I try and tell people to search Google for a quicker response than waiting for downvotes to kill off their question - but sometimes the 'questions' are a waste of space. I suspect a lot of people do take the time to find out how to post a good question and in doing so essentially realise that they can answer their won question quicker and easier than posting it on SO (although we'd never get metrics on that), but those who don't probably never will as they want someone else to do the work for them, be that write code or search Google. May 12, 2014 at 14:39
  • 11
    The bottom line is that the experts get really tired of seeing the same question over and over again, questions asked by people who have no business on a programming site in the first place, and many also the constant flow of questions that show little to no research effort. Whether or not you agree with this, many experts feel this way. So either we downvote these questions, or the experts try to find a place where there aren't such questions ... and leave the blind to lead the blind. May 12, 2014 at 14:42
  • 4
    I think closing a duplicate question is really a different issue. If the question has already been asked then sure... close it. But, if it's too "basic" in the eyes of an experienced programmer, I don't see the need to discourage the user. I've been programming 25 years and I still find myself looking up basic things on SO that I forget the syntax of, etc., and I'm honestly glad the questions are here. I wouldn't ask what I consider a basic question, but it is nice that someone else has. SO has such as great interface for finding things. Compare it to the MSDN forums for example. May 12, 2014 at 14:47
  • 2
    Furthermore look at the huge amount of questions that have been closed that have TONS of upvotes. It just shows that the "experts" are out of tune with what the audience wants. I guess if I spent all day answering questions, I would feel different. I answer questions here and there, and obviously ask my own. Also ironic in regards to basic questions is the really difficult questions are hard to get replies to. I think people fish the easy ones for reputation, which I guess is a problem. May 12, 2014 at 14:50
  • 6
    "People sign up and get downvoted to hell on their first questions. I doubt they ever come back." Great. Fine. I have not the slightest problem with that.
    – PlasmaHH
    May 14, 2014 at 12:41
  • 1
    This site isn't designed or intended for beginners to get help, it's for "professional and enthusiast programmers" to get solutions to programming problems. Stack Overflow is first and foremost a knowledge repository
    – jscs
    May 18, 2014 at 20:00
  • 2
    Define professional? Define a professional level question... It is all subjective. I'm sure if you posted a CSS question, a CSS expert would say your question was a "beginner" question. Programmer typically suck at CSS. I am a UI designer and a programmer (of 25+ years), so I see plenty of them. I am also thankful for basic questions in this "professional" knowledge repository as I don't have a photographic memory. May 18, 2014 at 20:05

You must log in to answer this question.

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