All right, this may seem like a bit of an over-reaction, but something just doesn't seem 'proper' in this situation.
- I join X programming chat room with the intent of asking a relevant and education question.
- I hang around for maybe 20 minutes, view the chat etiquette page, make sure that I'm not being rude by that room's standards.
- I paste the code I would like help with into an online engine.
- Realise that my code isn't functioning properly in the online engine.
- Fire off a quick question in the chat explaining above situation.
- This chat ensues:
ME: Hi guys, just trying to throw my XXX into YYY so I can actually ask my question, but for some reason, regardless of the version of ZZZ I import, my ZZZ functionality on my XXX refuses to appear
ChatBot: @ME automatic post for first time comment about looking at rules, be polite ect.
RoomHost: Flagged.
Person1: @RoomHost going to flag for mod attention; I think someone needs to talk to this idiot
RoomHost: Moderator has already seen it. he's one of the closers. and the comments have already been purged once.
Now, I've never been in this room before, I waited to ensure no one else was being helped before interjecting and asking my own question, no one had spoke in over 20 minutes besides me, so I'm sure the comments were directed at me.
Also, the chat's recent history consisted of a spam of memes and GiFs, rather than users helping each other, so I don't see how trying to get help should be shot down so quickly and harshly when the whole point of the room is to get help?
I guess my question is, are certain chat rooms really just that toxic or have I somehow offended people?
I've blanked out usernames, and other descriptive features so that the users I'm pointing out can't be traced back from this. I'm not out to cause more grief or offend anyone.
Edit: people aren't satisfied unless I name the culprits, so here's a transcript: https://chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/17/2015/5/1/21-24