NOTE: I'm not trying to be inflammatory or contradictory with this question. I genuinely want to understand.
Now that I've explored Meta a bit, I keep seeing a surprising comment on the purpose and use of Stack Overflow. It usually goes something like:
Stack Overflow is not a personal help desk for solving individual problems. It is meant to be a useful reference.
Given the overwhelming majority of questions and answers that go against that policy (at least the way I'm interpreting the questions and answers), it makes me wonder what Stack Overflow is supposed to be exactly and how it's supposed to be used.
More specifically, if a question is about a specific personal programming problem, how are we supposed to respond to it?
It appears that marking as a duplicate is a common practice, but sometimes, there isn't a duplicate for that specific problem. Only a somewhat related question that may or may not actually be helpful (but gets marked as a duplicate anyway).
I've also seen some even suggest turning SO into a reference guide by finding the most general version of the question, and editing both the question and answer so that they give good general advice about how to solve those problems, and then marking the question as a duplicate of the more generalized question/answer.
But if that is the case, then wouldn't it be easier to simply have a collection of community created language and IDE usage references that most questions can be directed toward? (like a wiki)
For example, if someone is having a null pointer error in an array manipulating loop, wouldn't it be easier to refer the asker to a reference on null pointers, a reference on array manipulation, and a reference showing how to use their IDE to debug issues, all in their current language?
I ask because from what I'm seeing, it's more useful to do either one (be a help-desk) or the other (be a reference). Trying to be both results in a lot of frustration between the users to see SO from opposing perspectives, usually between the majority of users who see Stack Overflow as a help-desk and the longstanding users who see Stack Overflow as a programming reference.
The question and answer format makes it clear that it isn't simply a reference, but the way it's moderated makes it clear that it isn't exactly a help-desk either. So what is it exactly?
I guess my question really breaks down as: Where does one draw the line between assisting with a specific problem and simply referring to (or just giving) a more generalized answer?