A user walks into the Stackoverflow and asks a question. The answer for his question is in the first result of a google search. Well, it is fourth result, to be precise, but first link in the discussion under the first link leads there anyway.

Long story short: the question is very simple and the answer is two clicks away in google. What should I do? Should I give user the link to answer or should I point him to the google search results? What is SO, a place to learn something (even if it is googling) or a black "insert question, receive answer" machine?

(meta's policies prevent me from posting a link to google? wtf)

share|improve this question
2  
This has so many duplicates that I cannot even begin to pick: meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/7515/why-is-linking-bad, meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/15650/…, meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/13607/what-makes-a-bad-user. Interestingly I found these searching MSO and off the siderbar :) – Diago Aug 30 '09 at 17:14
1  
Unfortunately, none of these duplicates were in the "possibly related" suggest bar. – n1313 Aug 30 '09 at 17:17
1  
As an alternative, you can downvote the question. – Eric Aug 30 '09 at 17:46

2 Answers

up vote 14 down vote accepted

There's nothing to be done except to answer the question. Where the solution ranks in Google is irrelevant, and it's discouraged to provide an answer that's basically a link to another source (as links may get broken).

share|improve this answer
10  
Amen. Be thankful for the easy rep and help us build a canonical site. Yeesh. – Eric Aug 30 '09 at 17:39

You should answer the question, but it doesn't hurt to also tell the person what you searched for to find it. In a lot of cases where an answer is easy for you to find, the person asking the question already searched and couldn't find it. Sometimes when you know a partial answer, the right search term is more obvious than if you have no idea at all. I won't speculate more than that about the root cause, but some people just don't have strong Google-Fu. You can help them learn if you include what search terms you used in your answer.

share|improve this answer

You must log in to answer this question.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged