I'd like to see the loop closed on what we need to do with the site's cultural perception of "niceness", and eliminate any ambiguity. While I understand that there are some things which will be codified as part of our Code of Conduct, I'd like to see if we can head it off even further.
Note that this is definitely not a dupe of Can we please have the "Lacks Minimal Understanding" close reason back?. That question wishes to bring back a horribly abused close reason to "help" deal with this. What I'm proposing instead is a cultural revolution.
I wanted to take a moment to figure out what the "problem" was after the now-infamous blog post went up, and to see what could be done about it, but every time I thought about it, and even after I was lambasted for meekly proposing a solution to what I thought was the problem, I realized that there's...not really a "problem" per se.
The main issue with Stack Overflow is one of a complete misunderstanding as to what Stack Overflow's purpose is within the world. This misunderstanding is present on both sides, from low and high rep users alike.
Stack Overflow is used as a place to learn.
Honestly, this is fine at face value; upon reading new and insightful information, you have gained new knowledge (i.e. have learned something) and are now better for it. This is fantastic! Experts are sharing their knowledge, and non-experts alike are getting more and more confidence in what they have to do on a daily basis.
However..."learning" is a double-edged sword. Remember...
Stack Overflow is used as a place to learn.
This can mean that a user learns stuff while they're here and can also mean that they have an expectation of experts to teach them.
So in this, we have a problem: users are using Stack Overflow to learn, which by extension, means that they ask questions which are blatantly questions which would require us to teach them on how to use a technology or concept.
I want to write a Java batch program to execute this DB script and pass those records into method in batch of 500. Kindly help in this with code snippet.
Anybody had problems running an app implementing firebase database, as in the app just crashes at startup
Can I create an Arraylist like
ArrayList<Integer, Integer> arrList = new ArrayList<>();
in Java ?What I actually require is store a pair at each element of an ArrayList and sort in non-decreasing order based on the first element of each pair.
The best questions we have on our site are questions which are looking for help. That is, they're looking to solve a particular and specific problem and don't require us to author miniature lectures on the subject. The best answers we have on this site are the ones who concisely illustrate the problem and solution.
Therefore, I propose that we carefully define what it is we mean when we state that we're here to "help", specifically in the FAQ. I'm no wordsmith—I failed for about 3 days attempting to come up with something here—but something along the lines of the below would be enough in my eyes.
Asking for Help
Automatically, when you ask a question on Stack Overflow, we assume that you're asking for some kind of help with a problem, which is fine - we're happy to help you out. However, questions which ask the community to fundamentally teach you a new concept are frowned upon, simply because it takes a lot of energy—on both sides—to be sure that the concept is properly communicated.
Some examples of teaching questions include:
- How do I implement FooWidget in Android?
- I want to write this application which foos the bar and creates baz at specific times of day. Can anyone help me do it?
- When and why would I use Quux technology and how would I test it?