I have come across questions like this frequently, and have always noted that such questions are usually asked by newbies, who do not know how to ask on SO. However, I think such questions can be prevented if we put in place a mechanism to allow a non-code question to be allowed by an account only if the account has >10
reputation. Why don't we put in place such a constraint?
2 Answers
This has nothing to do with "newbies" and is also not related to how to ask a question on SO but rather how to generally ask a good and precise question that can be answered by someone else. SO is not special in about judging if it is a useful or not useful question.
To improve this you need to change people's attidute and/or their education (non-coding related), their empathy for getting into the potential answer's mind or simply their time constraint and in some cases probably also their layziness.
No tool, restriction, whatsoever will prevent those kind of questions to happen.
Posting the entire problem description is annoying, but at least it's better than a vaguely specified problem, where you have to extract the necessary details bit by bit via comments, and meanwhile answers come rolling in by people who are trying to guess those details...
The real issue with that question isn't with what the OP posted, it's with what they didn't post: they didn't ask an actual question, and they didn't give us even a hint of their thoughts on how to write code for that homework assignment / coding challenge.
IMHO, we don't need some automated system to block such questions. The standard tools of down & close voting are sufficient. True, sometimes rep farmers will manage to post an answer before the question is closed, but that's only a problem if those answers are upvoted, since that makes it harder for the question to be deleted.
Of course, it's possible that the OP will respond to comments and convert their "homework dump" into a useful question. But that doesn't happen very often, IME.
please help
(formatted as code).this
count as code?