I want to remove "only can send one post on half past a hour" limit.
Because I want to answer a lot of questions, this restriction has seriously limited the opportunity to help others solve the problem. I personally want to remove this limit
The rate limit exists to stop users who are yet to demonstrate their familiarity with the site (though I personally think reputation isn't a good indicator either, but that's a different problem) from providing too much content on the site while they learn about the site. Many users who have yet to contribute to the site don't actually understand it.
As a result users that have <125 reputation must wait 3 minutes* 30 minutes between making answer posts; this is detailed in The Complete Rate-Limiting Guide. Once you get to 125 reputation then you can post answers much more frequently, and trigger a CAPTCHA if you try to post an answer more than once every 60 seconds (at 10k reputation that changes to 30 seconds).
Honestly though, I would even suggest that as a 10k user a limit is "fine". If a user is posting answers that quickly (even every 3 minutes) I would be concerned for the quality of their posts; I find that even for the most simple questions it'll take several minutes for me to read the question, understand the requirement, write a solution, test the solution, and then write an answer with an explanation alongside the solution (not to mention if it's a simple question, there's probably a duplicate I can close it as, which I frequently do).
As a new user, I don't doubt that the quality of your answer will be affected by the urgency with which you want to create them. Since my comment about the content of your answers (code-only) and score (total of -1) your total score is now -9. This will be, in part, due to the Meta Effect, but also demonstrates that the quality of your answers isn't good. One user has expressly informed you that your answer doesn't do what they want/need and though I'm an SME in SQL Server (not MySQL), the technologies are similar enough I can understand both the question and your answer to know that they are worlds apart. This clearly demonstrates that you didn't take the time to understand the question or test the solution you offered.
Instead, you need to take a step back; stop trying to provide lots of "ok" or even bad content. Instead contribute good answers, which you might do once every few hours or even once a day (as an 86k user I have only contributed about 25 answers in the last 30 days yet have earned about 640 reputation this month; though some will be from older answer volume <> more reputation). Excellent, well-written answers are far more likely to be well received, especially when the question is well written too. Then, once you reach 125 reputation, you'll be able to answer a little more frequently. For now, I suggest you be more "choosey" on the questions you answer, and take the time to write them well, by doing your own testing and providing explanations.
* Previously Stack Overflow used to allow <125 reputation users to post answers every 3 minutes, however, due to (new) users (ab)using ChatGPT and other OpenAI products to provide huge volumes of uncited, plagiarised, and generallybad/wrong AI-generated content, the rate limit was increased to 30 minutes to help stem the flow of content. It's because of those users you can't have nice things.
If you really want to post that many answers in such a short amount of time, that indicates that you may not be putting a lot of thought into them. I would encourage you to dedicate more time to each individual answer; make sure you understand the question thoroughly, test your solutions, and provide clear explanations. One well-thought-out answer is much more helpful to future readers than several answers that you haven't thought through thoroughly.
One more suggestion: I would encourage you to save yourself some frustration and only answer well-asked questions. For example, this question shows very little effort on the OP's part and really doesn't merit an answer. The only possible answer to the question is to do the whole thing for the OP, which is exactly what your answer does. (Also, the answer there could be greatly improved by adding more explanation).
const req = bT(o, h); // call buildTree function
you shouldn't need to comment what this line does. Yet the comment is therebecausebT
is not namedbuildTree
thus hard to follow.