Square wheel or XY questions questions are often easily answered. It always helps to have some examples. Here's an old one, slightly edited for demonstration's sake:
How can I reset a stream? Because the first time I want to count how many lines are there in the file, and then I want to read the lines. I need the lines in an array.
using (StreamReader sr = new StreamReader("TestFile.txt"))
{
int lineCount;
while ((line = sr.ReadLine()) != null)
{
lineCount++;
}
string[] lines = new string[lineCount];
int i = 0;
string line;
while ((line = sr.ReadLine()) != null)
{
lines[i++] = line;
}
}
Actually I have reconstructed the question text and code entirely, as it was pulled out of OP using various comments.
The base question itself, "How do I reset a stream in .NET" was answered within 5 minutes. It also had been years before, so looking at it like that it should have been closed as a duplicate instead of answered.
Please note the offending question is answered in that duplicate. This is how I think the duplicate system works. The question does not need to be the same, as long as the question asked is answered in that thread. The duplicate linked also is (for me) the top web search result on the query "C# reset stream".
Apart from being a duplicate, as which it could have been closed, it clearly is an XY problem. Anyone with any programming experience will notice reading a file twice for first counting the lines and then actually reading the lines is a bit convoluted and will perform badly on larger files.
The actual question that should have been asked is "Read all lines in file to array using .NET". Put that query in your favorite web search engine, and the top two results are MSDN: File.ReadAllLines Method and SO: What's the fastest way to read a text file line-by-line?.
Asking the proper question will get it answered, and usually before it becoming a question on SE.
Remember:
give a man a fish and you feed him for a day; teach a man to fish and you feed him for a lifetime
By not properly reading and understanding the real question behind the question, but dumping an answer that seems to solve the most obvious problem, the answerer gets a few points and the asker can happily continue copypasting code. Both haven't learned anything.
The proper answer was ultimately given:
Why not just read it into a List<string>
and then build an array from that? Or more simply still, just call File.ReadAllLines
:
string[] lines = File.ReadAllLines("TestFile.txt");
The problems addressable from this example and other experiences:
- Question askers may or may not have a clue to what they're doing. This may cause them to ask the wrong question. Their experience level often is not clear from their profile, nor necessarily from their language as many non-native English speakers (such as me) take part.
- Question askers may have made a design decision earlier on which created the need for the question at hand. Preventing the design mistake could render the question obsolete. The mistake may or may not be fixable.
- Duplicate flags can be disputed in comments by users who don't see the the similarities, usually causing the question not to be closed. This can be fixed by revising reference questions.
- While comments are being exchanged (or not, especially new users will ask and run) about some things that must be cleared up before a proper answer can be given, users will post answers to their interpretations of questions without conforming their beliefs with OP.
- A question-and-answer-game can be played in the comments, leading to actually multiple questions being asked, while a plain answer to the question may not answer the complete question. This requires effort from the commenter, and meanwhile answers giving a quick win are being posted, which should have been duplicate votes instead as they're unoriginal.
This all boils down to either the experience and lack thereof in askers and answerers, or not understanding that handing out fish by the dozens will leave you both hungry by the end of the week.
The main problem I have with users answering duplicate, too broad and XY questions causes is that knowledge is spread out. Yes, the askers are helped for now and the answerers get reputation, but more and more knowledge that may become outdated or otherwise needs maintenance is spread amongst more and more answers, and unhelpful or plain incorrect answers are less likely to be noticed because of the sheer volume of new content on the site.
Users with the appropriate voting rights and tools and experience are unable to keep up with the stream of questions that should be closed or redacted.
Experience does not mean reputation, by the way. Julian Reschke hardly ever gets an upvote while he is the HTTP authority on this network and "Principal Software Design Engineer" (WinAPI designer) Raymond Chen's comments are often ignored.
What possible solutions are there to that problem?
Other solutions I've read about on Meta:
Neither solve the real problem.
There is one silly solution I've been thinking of lately, which could become a feature request later to vote on appropriately, consider this my sales pitch:
Questions from certain users* should not be posted open, but temporarily** put on hold, so it won't attract any quick answers***, as such answers most likely are duplicate anyway. During this 'timeout', users can use all tools available to them (edit, flag, definitely close, except reopen) and request clarification using comments.
The 'reopen' action should be only available to a select group of users****, enabling them to 'green light' a question before the automatic on hold-timeout expires.
This will cause less questions to be necessary to be asked and answered, freeing resources to find and answer the really interesting questions again. It will also provide an incentive to find and polish reference questions.
Implementation details, subject to change:
*: new users or users with a bad question history.
**: for example the first 15 minutes.
***: users can type a draft answer, which they'll have to explicitly submit
after the question unlocks.
****: moderators and another group of users.
This new group of users will have to be responsible for redirecting the askers of duplicate, too broad or XY questions to resources the asker can use to narrow down or even solve their issue. Other users can then take those users' behavior to learn how one should properly interpret a question and act accordingly.
It's about setting an example, for which I think for now most high-rep users apply.