As I've said in a few comments on c++-faq questions a few days ago, I feel that this is circumvents most of what makes Stack Overflow work.
We've always had the ability to give "RTFM" answers. Direct people to the C++ FAQ Lite, a good book or whatever else floats your boat. And the problem has always been the same: when people ask a question, they want an answer, they don't want to be sent on some kind of treasure hunt to find the One Canonical Answer, written by a domain expert two years ago. They want an answer that covers their question at their premises using their wording.
I think the one thing that more than anything else has made Stack Overflow such a success is the "question first" approach. It is not a collection of knowledge, but a collection of actual questions, asked by people at varying skill levels, with associated answers. It is aimed squarely at servicing the people asking the question, rather than the people answering. Yes, I wish everyone would just know that i++ + ++i
is undefined, but they don't. And us pretending to ask the question and then providing our own super-polished answer isn't going to change that.
As recently decreed, duplicates aren't a bad thing, and I feel that this FAQ is the wrong tool to "solve" it.
It would be great if there was a convenient way to make the good versions of commonly asked questions easily accessible, but this tag is rapidly devolving into experts jerking off with their experts knowledge, rather than actual beginners getting answers to their beginners questions.
Put bluntly, if these questions are asked so often, *then why do we need to ask them as well? If you must, add this tag to one of the existing questions, the ones asked by actual beginners who actually needed the answer.
There have been a few very good, and well justified, "made-up" questions under this tag. They have been clear and easily readable answers to things that people don't ask, but which they need to know, and so they become resources that we can point to from our answers, rather than replacing the answer.
GMan's question here is a nice example of what I feel is good usage of the tag. It doesn't seek to replace the actual questions that people want to ask. Instead it supplements them, by posing a question that people don't typically ask, but which they typically need to know, and which is a relevant starting point for many answers to other questions.
Where I feel it is a slippery slope (and one that we're already too far down) is when experts try to replace the beginners asking the questions. Questions that are already asked dozens of times, and where the only thing distinguishing the c++-faq one from the rest is that it's fake: it's asked by an expert who knew the answer, and asked it with the vocabulary and assumptions of an expert, which makes it less likely to be discovered or found useful by a beginner who wants that question answered.
it is making SO a site for experts to streamline the process of showing off, rather than a site making it easy to get answers to your questions.
We already have wikis all over the web. SO isn't a wiki, so why does it need to pretend to be one? Why not point people to a wiki if we want to provide wiki-like information written and edited by experts?
And the reason it won't work is the assumption that "I can create the perfect answer to this question". You can't, because the perfect answer is one that is tailored to the specific question and the specific person asking it. It is easy to write an answer that an omniscient C++ expert will find perfect, but that answer almost certainly won't be considered perfect by the people who want to ask that question. As such, this attempt at taking the actual question askers out of the loop just means that the information people find here is going to seem less immediately usable. A beginner is going to have to parse a lot of standardese in order to get his question answered. And an intermediate user is going to have to slog through a lot of needless explanation of details that have to be there for the beginners reading the question. So no, you can't make the "perfect answer", and to be honest, I think trying to do so is just adding yet another instance of negative behavior to the list of things that may discourage people from using the site.
I know I feel demotivated when I look at the list of recent C++ answers and see that a number of them are asked by the same four expert users. This tells me that they're not answering questions that people want answered. They are lecturing what they feel needs to be lectured. One may also get the impression that they are rep-whoring (I doubt this because I know the people in question to be above that, but it's easy to get the impression, and I think it's a bad impression to leave, and a bad example to set for less experienced SO users.
On a more constructive note, I do agree that the "fastest gun in the west" thing, and the way in which it just isn't worth trying to reference existing questions is a problem. And it is a problem that expert users are getting so frustrated with the system that they leave.
But in the long term, I feel that a tag like this may be a reason why others end up leaving. I no longer feel that I am helping beginners. I have a blog I can use when I want to hear myself talk, or post resources I wrote myself. If I wanted to structure it better and combine it with information written by others, then I could use one of the countless wikis already available. The reason I'm on SO is because I want to help others on their premises, when they ask questions, giving them the answers that they want and that they can understand. I think this interactivity, the fact that I can ask a question and have people answer me, rather than tell me where to look up the pre-written answer is crucial to SO.
And to be honest, I suspect that it's pretty common, maybe even unavoidable, that experienced users grow tired of this sooner or later. And maybe that's ok. Surely, the number of times we've all answered C++ questions of all levels means that if and when we start getting annoyed at people asking "is it safe to delete a null pointer", maybe it is just time for us to leave and let the people we've effectively been teaching take over. I think I prefer this over trying to bend SO to our grumpy and weary attitudes and shortened patience. But trying to force beginners to stop asking question and instead just read those nuggets of wisdom we wrote last year is just foolish. It can't work, anyone who's ever been in any kind of teaching position can tell you that. Anyone who's ever answered questions from a buddy who's learning programming knows it.
And I feel that a tag like this is pulling SO in the opposite direction, making it less relevant for those who actually want their questions answered, and for those of us who want to help those users.