contra Tim Post, almost every time I see the phrase "I am new to X" in a question, the question is poor quality, worthy of down votes and closure.
Examining your "where is the coffee analogue" a little more closely illuminates why. In the social situations where we would excuse ourselves like that, are we not say "this is a trivial question, but there is no way to know its answer without troubling you"? But we don't want trivial questions here, and there are no questions here that only the SO community can answer. Trivial questions are not useful (to others, what used to be closed as too localised, but worthy of a down-vote) or have easy to find answers (and thus indicate a lack of research, also a reason to down-vote).
Almost every time I see this kind of excuse on SO, it is clear that the poster is actually new to programming in general. They do not know what features of code are important for understanding why it might not work, so their problem description focuses on irrelevant details (such as what their entire program is meant to achieve), and the question is typically a code dump rather than a small self-contained snippet. They do not know how to debug programs or read a stack trace, so there is rarely any indication of useful debugging having been done, or what it uncovered ("I've been working on this for hours" is a common and useless statement). They do not know how to specify a program, so there is rarely a clear description of what the program is meant to do. So there is often a reason to close the question as off topic for not providing adequate debugging information. In some cases, answering the question properly would require explaining so much about basic concepts about which the asker is confused that the question is too broad.
Down voting usually doesn't work in this case because they are often a 1 rep user.
On the contrary - getting such users question-banned is sometimes the correct course of action, and downvotes are the mechanism to accomplish that.