You've raised a lot of points, so there's quite a few things to be discussed here.
First off, you need to stop and appreciate the irony of referring to other users' behavior as "trolling" while simultaneously complaining about "unfriendly" and "unfair" treatment. Dismissing someone else's comments as "trolling" is neither friendly nor fair on your part. A lot of what you're upset about—reasonable or not—doesn't even come close to the level of "trolling". You just found someone on the Internet whom you disagreed with. Welcome to the club.
- First, a user ranted saying how "these contest/challenge/competitive coding/hacking sites" are useless. He even downvoted the question, setting a precedent for rest of the question viewers. The issue is, he never tried to understand what I (as an OP) wanted. Like I commented below it, I am not particularly learning C++ but algorithms. And perhaps without reading the question at all he thought that I am complaining about slow code (while I am not).
First, they are pretty useless. That much is objectively true. We see a lot of people who show up here asking questions based on misunderstandings that they've gathered from these types of sites. Maybe you are not one of those people. That's great! But we have no way of knowing that. And so, based on our experience and our generosity, we are attempting to share what we know with you: a word of caution. Please don't take that the wrong way. The comment wasn't a personal attack. They weren't calling you "useless", only these "contest/challenge/competitive coding/hacking sites". It's an important distinction to make. Sam's advice is good, and you should take it to heart, if you don't already know it. (Although it seems you do, which is great, as I said above. In that case, you can simply ignore it; it's not doing any harm.)
For the sake of transparency, in case the comment gets deleted, I've reprinted it here:
What do you hope to learn from these contest/challenge/competitive coding/hacking sites? If it's to learn C++, you won't learn anything there. Like in this case, the correct solution is based on a mathematical or a programming trick. If you don't know what the trick is and attempt to code a brute-force approach, the program either runs slow, or fails to handle an obscure edge case. If you're trying to learn C++, you won't learn anything from meaningless online contest sites but only from a good C++ textbook.
–Sam Varshavchik
You go on to say that "he even downvoted the question". You don't know that. You have absolutely no way of knowing that, and you should not make these assumptions. You might think that's what happened, based on the time of seeing the comment and receiving the downvote, but that's just a coincidence. On a site operating at the scale of Stack Overflow, "unlikely" coincidences happen several times per hour. At the time Sam left the comment, your question was on the first page of questions tagged c++, and we have a lot of users looking at such questions. It's not unlikely that someone downvoted the question while Sam was writing the comment.
But even if Sam did downvote your question—so what? That's what users here are encouraged to do if they think that "[The] question does not show any research effort; it is unclear or not useful" (from the tooltip on the downvote arrow). If Sam thinks that the question is arising from some quirk of these "content/challenge/competitive coding/hacking sites", then that's a good basis on which to declare it "not useful", and thus a reasonable basis on which to downvote the question. Maybe he did; maybe he didn't. You don't know, and I don't know, either. But if he had, it wouldn't really be problematic behavior, certainly nothing to get upset about. We encourage each user to vote on posts as they see fit, based on the quality of the post. Votes aren't about users; they're about content.
You claim that "he never tried to understand what I (as an OP) wanted", but: (A) you have no basis for that assumption, (B) making this assumption makes it clear that you are not assuming good faith, either, which is unfair, and (C) even if he didn't try to understand what you wanted, that's irrelevant. Stack Overflow is not a help desk. The only function that the OP provides is asking the question. From that point on, questions take on a life of their own, serving as a resource for future viewers just as much, if not more so, than the original asker. As I said above, even if you were not suffering from misapprehensions about the utility of these "contest/challenge/competitive coding/hacking sites", then it's still possible that future viewers might be, thus making Sam's comment relevant.
You don't have any basis on which to claim that Sam didn't read the question at all. Yesterday, I read and thought about a question for a good half-hour, but I still left several comments that fundamentally misunderstood the question. Oops. None of us are perfect. I hope that doesn't make me unfriendly or a troll!
- Second user then said that the problem is not minimally reproducible. I have pasted the entire function - that is all that is required to understand what I am trying to do. I could've posted the
main()
function, but really, would that keep things minimal? The problem is in the posted function - not in main()
. Anyway, that is not the issue - the issue is 'trolling'. He copy-pasted it and complained that it is not 'minimally reproducible' since it is not 'runnable' - I am afraid Stackoverflow must clarify that 'minimally reproducible' also means 'runnable' (I cannot see it there in the description). Is such trolling expected?
Actually, πάντα ῥεῖ said more than that. What he said was:
@UmedhSinghBundela Please provide us a minimal reproducible example as required, including an appropriate testcase, and your observation when you've been debugging that code line by line. Otherwise it's unlikeley you'll get helped here.
–πάντα ῥεῖ
Now, I don't always agree with πάντα ῥεῖ's comments, but I don't see anything objectionable about this one (other than the misspelling of "unlikely"). Note that he didn't just say "you need a minimal reproducible example". He specifically pointed out that you needed to include "an appropriate test case" and your observations from debugging.
And, yes, as is pretty clear from both the name and the corresponding Help Center page, a "minimal, reproducible example" needs to be runnable. How else is it going to reproduce the problem? Note the explanations on that page, including "Don't sacrifice clarity for brevity when creating a minimal example", "Make sure all information necessary to reproduce the problem is included in the question itself", and "Double-check that your example reproduces the problem!" I could go on, quoting additional language from the page and explaining its applicability, but I really think it speaks for itself.
More fundamentally, neither of these comments were "trolling". He claimed, quite reasonably, that you needed to update your question to include the necessary debugging information. You responded that you already provided this. He responded with evidence to the contrary. You're free to disagree with his interpretation, but that doesn't make it trolling. That just means—as I said above—that you disagree with someone on the Internet.
Finally, there's a broader lesson to be learned here. When you're asking for help, it's in your interest to make it as easy as possible for them to help you. That just might mean that you need to put in a little bit more work than is strictly necessary (e.g., to include a main
function that the other person could easily figure out how to write themselves). Whether or not you agree it's truly necessary, why do you choose to come out with disagreement when asked to provide it, rather than just updating your question?
- Then, I pasted two links from the second users profile saying that they aren't runnable either and in all fairness, asked him to downvote and comment on them too. Needless to say, he didn't. Last I flagged the trolling comment of his. Interestingly, my comment was removed by the moderator - not the earlier troll. So, is it acceptable to promote such trolling content?
Uhh.... You're calling other users trolls, yet your description here sounds an awful lot to me like trolling. You went through the other user's profile and pasted links to irrelevant cases, just to try and "shame" them? Please don't. There's nothing "fair" about this. If nothing else, remember that questions here are evaluated in isolation. Prior actions of users are not relevant.
Furthermore, you shouldn't be discussing downvotes at all. Again, you don't know if πάντα ῥεῖ might have already downvoted those questions, even if he saw fit to answer them. And, whether he had or not, it's not appropriate for you to ask for others to vote in any way on posts, up or down.
You raised a flag on πάντα ῥεῖ's original comment, stating:
The user just copy pasted the code and complains that it is non-reproducible. He himself has answered questions that couldn't be run just by 'copy-paste'. If SO is welcoming then they should flag user
Yes, that flag was declined by a moderator. That's not a reason to delete a comment. I've already explained above, in answer to point #2, why the comment was reasonable and not trolling.
That moderator did, however, delete your initial comment, which said:
Care to explain why -1
?
These comments are useless; moderators regularly delete them. Interestingly, you left this comment before Sam Varshavchik left his comment (quoted above), yet you accuse Sam as having been the one who downvoted your question? The logic doesn't track here.
Later, another moderator removed your rude comment, the one where you went through πάντα ῥεῖ's history and dug up irrelevant links, inappropriately asked for downvotes on other people's posts, and attempted to bring the past behavior of users up for discussion. That comment wasn't constructive in any way. Its sole purpose was to humiliate or pick a fight with a specific user.
You steadfastly continue in your obstinance to improve the question by adding a runnable code snippet. I don't know why. Could a C++ programmer write their own? Sure. Should they be expected to do so? Meh. You're the one who wants help.