I hope I'll be forgiven something that's about as much of a rant as a real question, but my frustration over this topic has been building for some time.
We seem to have a fair (well, to be honest, completely unfair) number of self-appointed "moderators" who've taken it upon themselves to write a comment to essentially every question that doesn't include at least one code snippet, telling the poster that he needs to include code showing what he's tried, along with what problem he's had with that code.
In some cases, that's sensible--especially when the poster makes it clear that what they're dealing with is a bug in existing code, that's perfectly reasonable advice.
There are, however, quite a few perfectly reasonable questions that are basically asking what algorithm or approach will work to solve a particular kind of problem. The poster clearly hasn't written code yet--the help he needs is specifically with how to get started solving the particular problem at hand. This question (screen shot for the rep-challenged) triggered my writing about the problem, but it's just one of many in what looks to me like a growing trend.
Now, the reality is that this is a very specific question. There is at least one specific answer that produces correct results. The OP has written enough to make it absolutely clear what the correct results are. Shog has previously written that:
But many specific, answerable questions don't include attempted solutions because... There's nothing to attempt: either you know the answer or you don't. Indeed, this can be a hallmark of a properly-scoped question: have you managed to narrow it down to the one piece you don't know before asking?
I think this question (among, as already noted, many others) fits that description perfectly. So, in my mind there's no real room for argument that there's anything at all wrong with the question itself.
My question is about what we can do to discourage (undoubtedly well-meaning) people from posting comments like the one on this question, that led the poster to almost immediately delete what was a perfectly good question, and much more likely than not leave SO in disgust over the narrow-minded jack-asses who occupy it (or something on that order).
So, what can we do to make it clear that this sort of comment needs to be restricted to cases where it really applies? It clearly doesn't apply in this case, and although it's less clear in some other cases, this is clearly far from the first time this situation has arise either.
My own nomination would be that there be a flag reason of "doesn't include necessary code snippet", and we add a review queue for these flags (and the comment added semi-automatically when/if it's approved). I realize that 1) doesn't prevent people from writing comments anyway, and 2) is likely to cause some delay in the comment being added, even when it really is needed. Neither of these, however, strikes me as being (even close to) as problematic as the current situation of losing perfectly good questions (and probably good contributors) just because a few people are over-zealous in attempting to enforce a requirement that doesn't really even exist in the first place.
I'll also note for the record that this clearly is not just a "gimme the codez" kind of question. The OP doesn't request code at all. It's entirely possible to provide an answer that's entirely narrative and describes what needs to be done without getting into a particular language at all:
For the moment, let's ignore that it's a subset of something else, and only consider the subset you want to work with. Now think of a binary number with one bit for each element in that set. Take that binary number, and count from 1 to 111...1. Each number you generate represents a subset. For each number, a 1-bit represents an element that's present in that subset (and a 0-bit represents an element that's not present).
Optionally, one might want to add references to terms that would help in further research, but they're not really necessary to answer the question itself.