In the wake of the "SO is not very welcoming" blog post, I'd like to draw attention to another kind of comment that drives people away - at least, anecdotally. Let's take a look at a random question:
What's the best way of implementing a buffer of fixed size when using fread in C++?
The questioner is obviously knowledgeable enough about the subject: he understands the terms in use, he has thought through some possibilities for implementation, and he needs someone with a bit more expertise to confirm his options.
Yet, the top-rated comment: "My question would be why are you using fread in C++?"
This sort of "don't do that" answer is all too common on SO questions. Yes, there are some times when the user is clearly trying to hammer a nail with a screwdriver - but more often, the commenter is just knee-jerk reacting to keywords in the post, bypassing the intent of the question. "Oh! This post is tagged C++, but has no mention of iostream. 'WHY ARE YOU DOING IT WRONG?' Looks like my job here is done."
Who is helped by this? Would we be better served by e.g. a bot that just auto-comments to any post tagged "optimization" with "Did you profile your code?" Or one that drops by a post tagged "iOS 7" and says "iOS 7 is outdated, why don't you update?" Or one that trawls the XML posts and says "Why not switch to JSON?" ... As though the OP hadn't already considered these "solutions" and rejected them, for reasons unrelated to their question?
Comments like this put the asker on the defensive. They make the blatant assumption that the OP is completely ignorant, and force them to "prove" their worthiness in asking. This does nothing but reinforce the idea that SO is full of elitist answerers.