If a question simply asked "I need an efficient way to detect that the numbers in an integer array appear exactly twice." should it be closed as too broad?
https://stackoverflow.com/q/29337568/1493294 basically asks that. It certainly seems to show little effort as it appears to be a cut and paste from a homework assignment but that is all it's asking.
However, there is nothing about it that seems too broad to me. It is well defined and solvable. It just makes no attempt to hide that it is homework.
What I read in the help center and on meta indicates such questions should just be down voted. Yet I keep finding them closed. Am I missing something?
Answer well-asked questions
Not all questions can or should be answered here. Save yourself some frustration and avoid trying to answer questions which...
- ...are unclear or lacking specific details that can uniquely identify the problem.
- ...solicit opinions rather than facts.
- ...have already been asked and answered many times before.
- ...require too much guidance for you to answer in full, or request answers to multiple questions.
- ...are not about programming as defined in the help center.
I don't see "homework" or "zero effort" in that list.
See:
https://stackoverflow.com/help/how-to-answer
https://meta.stackoverflow.com/a/260909/1493294
https://meta.stackoverflow.com/a/253890/1493294
Gnat claims this question is a dupe of How should I flag a “non-effort-at-all” question in Triage? [duplicate] However this question has no answer nor does it cite anything with authority and is itself a duplicate. It is conflating the issue of an ignorant OP who would require to much effort to answer and an OP who simply hasn't demonstrated effort. These are not the same issue.
I want to write an app which shows applications send or receive data over internet and which ip address and port they use. How can I write this in python?
Now that is a broad question. It happens to also show very little effort. That doesn't mean every zero effort question is too broad. That is faulty logic.