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I have been a Stack Overflow user for quite a while and I would like to mention that my life as a programmer is incomplete without it.

With that said, I would really like to know why my questions are almost always ignored by the community despite the fact that they are completely legit, original and could potentially help a lot of people whereas questions which are relatively much much simpler, are often praised highly. Take this one for example and you can look at many others here.

My questions are to the best of my knowledge very genuine and useful and it saddens me to see that questions that simply require a single search on Google and read the first documentation page that shows up are often the ones that are very popular.
Can you help me figure out what I could do? Should I post my questions little bit differently (like more or less explanation)? Should I not post questions complicated question at all, until I have much higher reputation?

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  • 7
    Is it really surprising that more complex questions may take longer to be answered?
    – yannis
    Jul 24, 2016 at 18:05
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    Referring to your initial example stackoverflow.com/questions/38549153/… - this seems like a complex question that hasn't been as much ignored as it hasn't been seen. It was viewed 12 times when you posted this - that is very little. Not sure what to recommend except a bounty - if a Python veteran is willing to confirm it's a good and deserving question I'll be more than happing to put one on it
    – Pekka
    Jul 24, 2016 at 18:09
  • @Yannis I have changed the example. Please take a look.
    – ArafatK
    Jul 24, 2016 at 18:09
  • "experts resemble a herd of hungry velociraptors, eager to leap on any answerable question. The questions that get ignored are not 'hard', they are poor questions for the site..." (Mechanisms helping questions that didn't receive enough attention)
    – gnat
    Jul 24, 2016 at 18:10
  • @gnat This is not a duplicate. My questions are almost never downvoted, they are sometimes upvoted and sometimes they are left as it is.
    – ArafatK
    Jul 24, 2016 at 18:11
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    I took a random sample of your questions and all were answered and accepted. I don't see your point. Jul 24, 2016 at 18:11
  • duplicate is not about getting downvotes either, this was only a very minor point in the question there and neither of answers mentions it, all focus only on the ways to get more attention to the question
    – gnat
    Jul 24, 2016 at 18:14
  • @gnat Thanks for the funny description. If you look at the question stackoverflow.com/questions/36970663/ruby-extensions-from-c-stl You will find that this is a very reasonable question and could help hundreds of developers to speed up up there code. I now have the knowledge to make use of what I asked and I have greatly benefitted from it to the point that I made a very popular repository.
    – ArafatK
    Jul 24, 2016 at 18:14
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    You received so many comments. When I did find an unanswered question, I found it to be too broad. Plenty of comments. Guess what? I have a higher unanswered ratio than you. IMHO, stop feeling so entitled. Nobody has to answer your question. And so many people tried to answer your question via comments. Jul 24, 2016 at 18:14
  • @uoɥʇʎPʎzɐɹC I have answered quite a few of them myself when no one took a try.
    – ArafatK
    Jul 24, 2016 at 18:15
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    This question of yours is just way too broad and/or lacks to ask a question (a bit like your initial revision on this meta question). It might benefit if you run your questions against the checklist.
    – rene
    Jul 24, 2016 at 18:16
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    @ArafatK a lot of your questions are way too broad. look at the [mcve] guide and the How to Ask guide. Do your homework. Jul 24, 2016 at 18:21
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    "tell if you really think that this deserves 1400 upvotes" stackoverflow.com/questions/948135/… has been viewed half a million times over seven years. Your questions are less than six months old. There is no basis for comparison there.
    – jscs
    Jul 24, 2016 at 18:28
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    @uoɥʇʎPʎzɐɹC not to sound negative here. But I am sure that most likely this bounty will go to waste and I would have to figure it out myself.
    – ArafatK
    Jul 24, 2016 at 18:30
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    @ArafatK it's been one day. you can't expect people to notice your question instantly. one out of seven days. you haven't placed a bounty yet, so you don't know. Jul 24, 2016 at 18:31

4 Answers 4

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At the begin, also I had a hard time. Looking to your questions, they seem not so bad.

Fight more, and answer more questions.

A little suggestion: you can draw much more attention if your question is easily understable already on the first spot. Consider, what the answerers see: 50 questions in a column, and it is up to them, where do they click. Correctly formulating the title is not a negligible thing, it is a critical one!

If you have at least a single golden badge, it has significant a psychological effect. Getting an elector badge is quite easy.

Yet another little tip: I've seen you don't like to end questions with a "?". Do it from now.

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    I don't agree with the seem quitte high quality. Based on what?
    – rene
    Jul 24, 2016 at 18:26
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    @rene I've checked his post history and found mainly interesting and HQ questions there, especially in the Ruby-C++ integration topic. He should invest more effort in the formalities, that's all.
    – peterh
    Jul 24, 2016 at 18:28
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Things don't quite seem to be the way you describe them. Out of your 22 questions, only 3 have some appearance of being ignored with no votes, no comments and no answers. Out of those 3, one was posted this Sunday and the two other ones had elves that posted junk answers that were immediately deleted again.

Don't expect a flood of answers on a weekend. And surely those elves could have done a much better job by editing the question to re-activate it.

I don't really understand that kind of attitude. But I suspect when SO gets to be the catch-all for things you don't want to have to do in your job then you'll have a lot more disappointment ahead.

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I understand that you feel ignored by the community.

There are only a few things I suggest.

As mentioned in the comments by @pekka-웃 you can put a bounty on your question...

To be honest the reason the simpler questions get praised highly, is because they are simply easier to understand.

To get people to answer longer more difficult question I think @pekka-웃 is right, give the community something in return.

Don't take lack of answers or votes as us ignoring you...

Hope you get your questions answered!

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  • Search for answers on Stack Overflow and on Google. A lot of your unanswered questions could be answered with a Google search
  • Use proper English.
  • Let the system work. Wait a day or two before thinking your question is unnoticed.
  • Try asking very nicely on Stack Overflow chat rooms.
  • Read the How to Ask and creating a Minimal, Verifiable, Complete Example pages! This is very important.

And if none of those work...

  • Set a bounty.

Don't have the rep? Well...

  • Contribute to Stack Overflow Documentation

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