Compare this 2 questions:
What is catcomplete in jQuery's autocomplete plugin?
and
What is the meaning of the 'aria-describedby' property?
https://stackoverflow.com/search?q=What+is+the+meaning
Compare the questions I linked. One got downvoted for lack of effort in googling, the other got upvoted. Googling for hashset was actually very easy, while answering the other by googling was impossible. So I get confused on the commens which are reported here in cursive. We can find many reasons to close one and upvote the other. But in this discussion I would like to focus just on one which is very well cleared by some comments:
How about learning something about 1) JavaScript objects ({}), 2) jQuery callbacks 3) jQuery plugins?
Do you have a point or are you just ranting? Consider just learning your lesson and doing more research next time to ask a better question.
*There are thousand of questions which lack of any efforts (which the community liked for other reasons) how can it be considered not simply an excuse when the sentence: "lack of effort" is used to blame questions we don't like?**
The problem which annoys me more is the attempt to hide the emotional mistakes of some community member when they go to an excess, if the excess is in the direction of asking questions to be improved.
It can be made a (very distant of course) paragon with the american police which defends policeman wich beated black color men, which violated the laws.
So SE defends users which, for example, dowvnote too much, without any comment, without any attempt to make it really constructive.
I've splitter it into pieces. The questions are many: who is catcomplete? How JQuery autocomplete calls it? What are minLenght, source, open and select? Who decided their name? Which part of code knows how to use them? Are them a JQuery standard?
The plethora of subquestions makes it hard to fit into the Q&A format that is tailored to a 'one question per question' layout.