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So, considering that when you hover over the up-vote option of a question, the clarification text says "shows research effort" you would think that questions like this would get down-voted because anyone who actually read the documentation knows how easy this is in python.

I'm not trying to discriminate at all, this just happened to be the question that prompted me to ask. In fact, I have seen some very, very trivial questions with 1k + up-votes in the past. This is presumably the result of all of the other beginners who didn't want to read the documentation.

So my question is as follows: If the point is to create resources for the future, If we can think of a question that would directly help many people who are just searching for quick answers, but could also easily be solved with a little bit of patience, Should the question be posted?

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    Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat. Jan 15, 2015 at 14:19
  • Is it ever okay to ask obvious questions? No. You see the recursive irony in the answer, don't you? Well, then, no.
    – frasnian
    Jan 23, 2015 at 12:33

5 Answers 5

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My personal thought (and what I've used to guide my moderation practices), is yes. We want to be the canonical resource for programming problems.

But the stars have to align just so to make that happen:

  • The question has to be one that has stumped a lot of new developers (in this case, you notice that question has over 600K views, that's a lot)
  • It has to have relatively simple text; not overly complicated. Well explained. Concise.
  • The answer has to either:
    1. Be equally concise and helpful, or
    2. Explain the topic in such a way that the question becomes more useful.

If those criteria aren't met, it's very likely that the community will vote to close the post. There is no 'one size fits all' answer; it all comes down to the particulars of the question and whether or not the answers make it 'worth it'.

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    I should think that some simple questions might be a good fit for SO as long as they are not dups. Documentation does not have all the answers. Questions ranked a touch higher than obvious might have a good fit. Ultimately the community will decide though.
    – Matt
    Jan 14, 2015 at 4:54
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    @Matt: Ideally, these questions will become canonical dup targets. The example question has 26 linked questions, including 4 closed as duplicates. This is a sort of a win - win situation: people new to Python can get a quick answer and experienced Pythonistas don't have to see the same question asked over and over. Jan 14, 2015 at 19:07
  • I think that first bullet point is one of the most important ones for determining whether a question of the nature will survive. The last is a very close second.
    – AstroCB
    Jan 14, 2015 at 19:57
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    There's one more thing that a question can do to qualify for hits - match a string exactly. Exceptions, compiler/debugger output, event log entries, and syslog messages are worth their weight in gold when included in a question. When an error string matches, I know I'm looking at a potential solution if someone has answered the question. Jan 15, 2015 at 21:28
  • The first bullet point is indeed an important one, but IMHO is largely made irrelevant by age, "except in that magic sweet stop case" where this is indeed a canonical answer and not subject to change. Language based questions mostly fit that criteria. But framework and server systems largely mean the older answer is either incorrect or not optimal. Other answers can be added, but tend to fall into obscurity. There are solid cases where new answers are not duplicates and are truly informative answers to build on. The older answers should then be "obsoleted"
    – Neil Lunn
    Jan 16, 2015 at 15:21
137

What is obvious to you is not necessarily obvious to everyone else and so many manuals are written for people who don't really need the manual. Manuals tend to be loaded of technical terms and you have to parse a lot of things to find what you are actually trying to do.

The question you pointed to is a good example. I started reading a book about Python but never really played around with it, so I figured I was in perfect position to test run it. Let's see what it takes to answer the question using Python's manual:

I found the page about input-output. It's 2,500 words long. Starts with output formatting. Oh wait there is a "reading writing files", let's check that. Open returns a file object bla bla bla. How do I get an array? Ah, file object methods. There is a .read method, a .readline method, a readlines method and no mention of array in the whole page (I guess in Python, you'd use a list).

And the Python manual looks like it's actually pretty good, but compare that experience with finding the SO question on Google:

You search your question in natural language, land on SO, check the first answer and it says:

with open(fname) as f:
    content = f.readlines()

I'm guessing that you meant list and not array.

You get exactly what you need, you can continue on what you were doing in 30 seconds, and you even know not to waste your time looking for documentation on arrays because apparently the thing you want is called a list.

All these upvotes to the question and the answer? That's people who saved a bundle of time because SO allowed the question. It was worth it.

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    Sorry, are we talking about the Python language? The one that there are tons of easy, clear tutorials, blog posts, and cheat sheets on? Jan 14, 2015 at 20:15
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    @DavidConrad I'd prefer getting the information I need from a single SO post rather than sifting through an entire tutorial, no matter how clear and well-written Jan 14, 2015 at 20:41
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    @DavidConrad (and any other fans of manuals): Hey, I am a huge fan of manuals. I think the tutorial in the standard Python documentation is one of the best, and it's how I learned Python myself. I do think more people should be reading manuals. I do think that folks who never investigate things deeply for themselves, and who only ever ask questions on Google and Q&A sites, will usually wind up with a poor or incomplete understanding of things. But y'know what? That's OK. It's not SO's mission to make its readers better programmers. It's SO's mission to answer specific questions.
    – John Y
    Jan 14, 2015 at 23:00
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    @JohnY: you can be excellent programmer and still find the question useful. Not every programmer have to know Python well e.g., I sometimes have to edit programs in unfamiliar programming languages -- it would be waste of time to read a manual instead of a simple google query in this case. Also, a beginner programmer might write a program before memorizing the manual i.e., a manual should not be the only way to learn
    – jfs
    Jan 15, 2015 at 14:47
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    @JohnY I am a strong believer in personal development and ongoing study, but there is a time for everything. If I am trying to crank out a small utility, or if I have a tight deadline and I need a tidbit of Python code to load a file in an array, I don't want to start studying Python I/O operations and Python data structures. Loading a file in an array is a solved problem, I just need the codez so I can get back to doing what I need to so. I'll make a note to look into Python I/O next time I have some down time.
    – Sylverdrag
    Jan 15, 2015 at 16:00
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    @DavidConrad Python was just the example discussed here. The little I have seen of Python's doc/tutorials, it looks pretty good, but like Marks, if you need a specific tidbit of "how-to" information, nothing beats a straight answer.
    – Sylverdrag
    Jan 15, 2015 at 16:03
  • @J.F.Sebastian: I never said a manual should be the only way to learn.
    – John Y
    Jan 15, 2015 at 16:06
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    @JohnY: you implied that such questions might be useful only to bad programmers
    – jfs
    Jan 15, 2015 at 16:08
  • @Sylverdrag: I'm not sure if you're trying to give a rebuttal to my comment. If so, you missed my point entirely. My comment was in full support of your answer (and Question Mark's comment).
    – John Y
    Jan 15, 2015 at 16:08
  • @J.F.Sebastian: Nothing of the sort. Please read carefully. I said that people who only ask quick questions (i.e. never do any "study")... will usually have poor or incomplete understanding. I never even said that it was impossible to learn solely by asking quick questions.
    – John Y
    Jan 15, 2015 at 16:12
  • @JohnY then how do you suggest to interpret "It's not SO's mission to make its readers better programmers."?
    – jfs
    Jan 15, 2015 at 16:17
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    @J.F.Sebastian: I suggest taking it literally and at face value. It is simply not SO's mission to make its readers better programmers. I believe SO would like its readers to become better programmers, and I believe SO often does make its readers better programmers. But that's not its mission. Its mission is to create a comprehensive repository of specific, directed questions and answers. Also be clear, anyone can use this site. Some of the programmers here, both askers and answerers, are world class, I have no doubt about that at all.
    – John Y
    Jan 15, 2015 at 16:53
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    Even for what seems simple, lots of tutorials online use questionable/insecure/terrible techniques, and either have no feedback or no ability to provide feedback. SO's mechanisms are great at separating the good from the bad.
    – AaronLS
    Jan 16, 2015 at 1:18
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    @onewhaleid COBOL ;-)
    – CJBS
    Jan 16, 2015 at 3:08
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    @onewhaleid: C++ comes to mind immediately. The differences between the '03 and '11 standards are extremely broad and can be very subtle (think "sequence points" vs. "sequence before/after/indeterminate") The extreme subtleties in some languages mean that clear manuals, cheat sheets, etc., are not enough. This is why Bjarne rates himself as an "8" in C++. Truly understanding sometimes requires back-and-forth with other true experts in a language (sometimes from the applicable Standard committee).
    – frasnian
    Jan 16, 2015 at 3:28
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If we can think of a question that would directly help many people

If you can think of such a question that has not already been ask and answered, please go ahead. (That is increasingly unlikely, though)

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While I somehow agree with the other answers, I give the following potential disadvantage to consider.

The more "basic" the level of questions is, the more possible questions you have. The question in the OP can have multiple basic variations: "How to read a file into a dictionary?", "How to read a file into a set?", "How to read every n-th line of a file?" ("... into an array", "... into a dictionary", "into a set"). There is a huge number of possible variations.

This implies that we accept the fact that people don't want to read anything that doesn't answer their whole question directly with a solution on a plate, even though the answer could be easily composed from two other SO questions, for example.


TL;DR

This in turn may lead to a low SNR in the future. In our current example, people looking for something more elaborate that concerns files and lists in Python will be flooded by tons of all possible basic combinations of these notions in such basic questions.


I'm not saying that this is a definitive argument against such questions, but I think it's worth considering in the context of where do we want to put the boundary.

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    Further to this point, there is the issue of multiple languages targeting a single platform and getting platform questions for individual languages. The "duplicates" should not be marked as such, but often are.
    – Mark Hurd
    Jan 16, 2015 at 3:12
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If you know of a question that would "would directly help many people" and indeed has not been asked and answered before, than go ahead post and answer it yourself.

If, for whatever reason, you do not want to gain reputation from such post, you can turn it into community wiki.

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