For example, I have this neatly formatted question on another website:
What are the rules and regulations or general netiquette constraints against posting it on, say, Stack Overflow at the same time? If any?
For example, I have this neatly formatted question on another website:
What are the rules and regulations or general netiquette constraints against posting it on, say, Stack Overflow at the same time? If any?
Standard netiquette from the last thirty or so years suggests that cross-posting is discouraged (and thus on Stack Overflow, claiming not to know this does not usually save a question from downvotes). Cross-posting has the potential to waste people's time both in reading and in responding.
However, my view is that if you have not succeeded in getting an answer in one place, it is fine to cross post and declare that you have done so prominently in the new post, using a hyperlink. That way, people who know the answer can check to see whether they would be duplicating an answer elsewhere before expending effort upon it.
A commenter under your question here suggests waiting a couple of days before considering a community unable to answer your question - I think this is about right. Some sites will allow you to "bump" the question by adding a dummy reply to it, but others dislike this behaviour, so try to find that out before doing so. Here on Stack Overflow, well-written questions get bumped by upvotes or by bounties.
What are the general netiquette constraints against posting it on, say, Stack Overflow at the same time?
Don't post it at the same time (regardless of whether you acknowledge the cross-posting). I'd say that goes against the spirit of the guidelines, and it suggests to all the groups in which you are posting that you are just in a rush for an answer, and are not interested in being a member of the community.
;-)
. Netiquette arguably stems from Usenet, which Wikipedia tells me started in 1980. Thus, 34 years is a bit more accurate - but that the social norms are "several decades old" is still true.