Traditionally, all but the most wildly successful get closed and deleted. If they make it to the end of 4/1, they're doing pretty well - only a tiny handful are ever good enough to stick it out for the long haul.
Look everyone! It's a vomiting clown!
In my mind, there are three broad guidelines that determine whether a question is appropriate for Stack Overflow:
- Does this question match the criteria provided in the Stack Overflow FAQ?
- Is this question accepted by the community, as reflected in upvotes, favorites, views, and answers?
- Does this question teach me anything that could make me better at my job? Can I learn something from it?
So let's examine that "install jQuery" question: Fail (not based on actual problem that you faced), Fail (closed, heavily down-voted, rarely viewed), probably fail (you don't "install" jQuery).
Oh... And then there's this:
The bottom line is that posting joke questions or answers on Stack Overflow intended to deceive your fellow users is unacceptable and anti-community, and it will not be tolerated.
Any argument you might make for the validity of that question falls apart when one realizes you rolled back edits that might have turned it into a valid beginner question in favor of keeping it a more effective mockery of a beginner question... And then returned today to tag it april-fools.
Hah. Joke's on you.