Jay Hanlon is right about SO being pretty elitist, rude and not being very welcoming. I addressed this myself in my 2015 article The decline of Stack Overflow, which currently has 347,000 views, 1,970 likes and 146 comments (after going viral twice).
The vast majority of the comments on my article are moderately to extremely supportive of its content. Here's just a handful of those comments:
I have been a contributor for many years. Lately i have felt that the
site has become more bully. I think stackoverflow.com should come with
a warning that “Don’t join this site if you are not a pro, or you
don’t have a masters degree in english, or you cannot guess how the
vaguely written forum rules are interpreted by existing gangs on the
site”
I’ve thought about and wanted to write an article like this so many
times it’s just unbelievable. A few years ago Stackoverflow was
amazing. In Its origins I loved using it, but i am honestly scared to
post on it anymore. While i still read answers on it frequently the
fact of the matter is the gamification of it and sadly somewhat
socially inept “experts” that often run it mean the stakes are just to
high which Make it almost impossible to post on. Programming sites
might be better if a user could award a title to a user and focused
less on punishing users and scaring them away. It needs to figure out
a system that rewards considerate users and lets trolls be tucked away
in their caves where they belong.
Basically, the SO moderators are guys with personality problems. SO is
a “venting outlet” for them.
Either you are a professional interested in your work or you spend
your day long downing others questions/answers. It is a way to grow up
in your own eyes, to forge a personality, otherwise you do not have.
More or less all question-sites are having the same problem. Human
nature. Or better said “stupid-human nature”.
I’ve used Stack Overflow for years, as someone who occasionally
browsed the site for answer to simple HTML/CSS related issues I had.
I recently created an account to start answering questions and asking
occasional question about JavaScript projects I’ve been working on.
The collection of thoughts, quotes, and links you have put together
here, sum up my experience accurately.
The Lord-of-the-Flies mansplaining exhibited by some (but not all, or
even most) SO participants is kind of endemic to the software
development profession. I’m not sure a different approach can fix it.
What’s telling is that the SO answers that top the search results are
often closed for various reason even though they contain reasonable
answers — along with some BS, and various SO trolls duking it out with
other participants and themselves. Still, it’s useful.
Personally, I tried commenting and answering on a handlful of
questions when I first joined and soon came to the conclusion that I
didn’t want to spend the time or effort to join the club.
SO is like Wikipedia; everyone uses it every day, but agree it’s
completely broken.
“Nobody goes there anymore. It’s too crowded.” Yogi Berra
You sir deserves a cookie, oops, a medal of honor for that post. I
totally agree with you. S.O. is full of trolls, I was an active user
once trying to answer every question that I saw that I could be of
some help, I would also post very detailed questions, just so I might
avoid the duplicate or down vote thing, yet, I lost like 3 accounts
due to down votes and decided to stop participating. Today I only use
it for asking questions and I have many different accounts for that.
Even when I place the most detailed question, they down vote it. My
conclusion is that those trolls down vote questions on purpose because
it’s a system based on reputation, so everything they can do to harm
someone else’s reputation, they will do. The main problem is the down
vote function, it should be disabled by default and only be allowed to
be used by highly reputable users, or disabled for once.
If you look at those comments, however, you'll also see that the people who wrote them are mostly male and White. So I have to disagree with Jay Hanlon the notion that issue has anything to do with "women, people of color, and others in marginalized groups".
In my experience, the unfriendliness on SO is not a gender or race thing. I believe the real problem here is that programmers (on average) just happen to be rather elitist and have below average social skills. This is reflected in the way people are treated in an online community that's filled with programmers. And this affects people across gender and racial lines.
The often ambiguous or outright nonsensical rules makes things worse by encouraging people to downvote or close well-written questions that real with real life programming issues that could help many thousands of people, just because it happens to break some arbitrary rule that makes sense for only a sub-group of the questions it applies to.
While I do believe that replacing the current set of rules by more common sense rules could improve this community significantly, things can only improve if the owners and moderators of this website acknowledge that there is a problem and that their rules have something to do with it. Unfortunately, I've only encountered denial when addressing this with moderators in the past.