Recently, the question Is it ever okay to ask obvious question raised a bit of a discussion.
As a matter of fact, this type of questions has saved me a lot of time over the years.
On the downside, the easy questions drown out the really tough ones. About 20% of the questions go unanswered. 2,225,102 at this time.
Tough questions require more knowledge, take more time to answer and are quickly drowned by the flow of new questions.
Meanwhile, tough questions offer little reputation compared to simple but popular questions. A simple, obvious question means many answers and many upvotes (people search for common problems, and they are more able to understand and validate answers to these questions).
A tough question, on the other end, is a question where only a few people know the answer and often targets an obscure area of programming. Most people can't upvote because they might not even understand the question nor the answer, and few people will look for the question either.
Answering tough questions paradoxically gives much less reputation than answering simple already-in-the-manual type of questions.
One way to alleviate the problem could be to implement a challenge rating for questions. It could work this way:
easy, regular, tough, pro, elite
- Users <2k rep can mark their questions as "easy" or "regular".
- users >2k rep & <5k rep can mark questions as "easy", "regular" & "tough"
- users > 5k rep & < 10k rep can mark questions as "easy", "regular", "tough" & "pro"
- users > 10k rep can mark questions as they please.
The person rating a question as "tough" or above can not answer the question for a week (meaning you would rate a question as tough only if you don't know the answer).
Questions would produce rep based on their challenge ratings, giving extra incentive to answer tough questions.
Additionally, a question challenge rating would automatically increase over time if unanswered. If something ranked easy isn't answered within a day, obviously it wasn't that easy and so it becomes "regular". If there is still no answer within a week, the question was probably tough, and so on.
Questions with high challenge ratings would be easy to find and act as puzzles for the top guys who can't be bothered with the pedestrian questions.
On the other end of the spectrum, "Easy" questions could/should be capped in terms of reputation. As useful as obvious questions are, you really shouldn't be able to earn 4,910 points for quoting 2 lines from Python's manual, let alone earning 1,885 points for asking how to do basic IO in Python.