When a user clearly states that they are a newbie, people should be encouraged to give an interpretation of the documentation, not just a link to the documentation. Increasingly, Stack Overflow is the goto place for many people on coding courses, and although many may think this is a bad thing, for the community it is a good thing.
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This principle holds even when it's not a newbie asking the question. Posting a bare link to the documentation in lieu of an answer is rarely if ever a good response. We actually block answers that consist only of bare links, and automatically flag answers that consist of little more as low-quality. If you come across such an answer, don't hesitate to encourage the author to expand on it. See also: Are answers that just contain links elsewhere really "good answers"? |
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There needs to a check on users who want to use Stack Overflow as a proxy for doing their own basic research. Otherwise, the site becomes flooded with basic questions, many of which are not very good questions because the OP didn't get a basic education on their craft. A site filled with poorly-worded basic questions is a turnoff for the experts, which is who we want to attract. No experts, no answers. Consequently, embellishing a link-only answer to a basic question that's easily answered by reading the documentation is the moral equivalent of polishing a turd. If you really want to be helpful to the OP, provide a link to the appropriate documentation in a comment below the question. Then, vote to close as Too Localized. |
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