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wjandrea
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A lot. An absurd amount. In fact, asking a question on Stack Overflow is the absolute last thing you ever want to do. It is a horrible shame that will forever haunt you and your descendants. If the information that you need already exists, then you should be able to find it before asking.

You want to

  • Search. Like mad.
  • Read documentation.
  • Test your code.
  • Troubleshoot.
  • Read blogs.
  • Find books.
  • Follow tutorials.

After you have reached the end of your rope and the pain of not having the answer exceeds the shame of posting a question, that's when you can go ahead and ask. Because at that point, you will have done whatever research necessary to make it a good question worth asking.

...

That may have been a tad bit hyperbolic.

The important thing is that we want to help you, but you also need to help yourself. The more effort you put into your question, the more benefit you and future readers will get out of the answer(s). Understand that our time is not free, although we do not charge for it. Answering low quality, poorly researched, and/or duplicated questions becomes tiresome and does not contribute meaningfully to our goal of building a knowledge base, so please do your part to avoid this.

Doing enough research ensures that you'll have notes you can share to help inform the folks answering as to what you need. You'll have the necessary background information to understand those answers when they arrive. You won't have to contend with a poorly-written duplicate of a better answer that already exists somewhere else on the site. And you won't get frustrated by having your question closed, and the folks reading it won't get frustrated by having to close it.

With that said, if the critical comment you're receiving is indeed rude—you should flag it. But you should also assume good faith, try to understand the frustration that motivated it, and strive to do better in the future. That might include showing your work: what did you search for, what did you find, and how didn't it help?

Searching and researching is a skill, and mastery is achieved only through practice. The abilities you gain on the road to asking questions here will serve you long into the future.

A lot. An absurd amount. In fact, asking a question on Stack Overflow is the absolute last thing you ever want to do. It is a horrible shame that will forever haunt you and your descendants. If the information that you need already exists, then you should be able to find it before asking.

You want to

  • Search. Like mad.
  • Read documentation.
  • Test your code.
  • Troubleshoot.
  • Read blogs.
  • Find books.
  • Follow tutorials.

After you have reached the end of your rope and the pain of not having the answer exceeds the shame of posting a question, that's when you can go ahead and ask. Because at that point, you will have done whatever research necessary to make it a good question worth asking.

...

That may have been a tad bit hyperbolic.

The important thing is that we want to help you, but you also need to help yourself. The more effort you put into your question, the more benefit you and future readers will get out of the answer(s). Understand that our time is not free, although we do not charge for it. Answering low quality, poorly researched, and/or duplicated questions becomes tiresome and does not contribute meaningfully to our goal of building a knowledge base, so please do your part to avoid this.

Doing enough research ensures that you'll have notes you can share to help inform the folks answering as to what you need. You'll have the necessary background information to understand those answers when they arrive. You won't have to contend with a poorly-written duplicate of a better answer that already exists somewhere else on the site. And you won't get frustrated by having your question closed, and the folks reading it won't get frustrated by having to close it.

With that said, if the critical comment you're receiving is indeed rude—you should flag it. But you should also assume good faith, try to understand the frustration that motivated it, and strive to do better in the future.

Searching and researching is a skill, and mastery is achieved only through practice. The abilities you gain on the road to asking questions here will serve you long into the future.

A lot. An absurd amount. In fact, asking a question on Stack Overflow is the absolute last thing you ever want to do. It is a horrible shame that will forever haunt you and your descendants. If the information that you need already exists, then you should be able to find it before asking.

You want to

  • Search. Like mad.
  • Read documentation.
  • Test your code.
  • Troubleshoot.
  • Read blogs.
  • Find books.
  • Follow tutorials.

After you have reached the end of your rope and the pain of not having the answer exceeds the shame of posting a question, that's when you can go ahead and ask. Because at that point, you will have done whatever research necessary to make it a good question worth asking.

...

That may have been a tad bit hyperbolic.

The important thing is that we want to help you, but you also need to help yourself. The more effort you put into your question, the more benefit you and future readers will get out of the answer(s). Understand that our time is not free, although we do not charge for it. Answering low quality, poorly researched, and/or duplicated questions becomes tiresome and does not contribute meaningfully to our goal of building a knowledge base, so please do your part to avoid this.

Doing enough research ensures that you'll have notes you can share to help inform the folks answering as to what you need. You'll have the necessary background information to understand those answers when they arrive. You won't have to contend with a poorly-written duplicate of a better answer that already exists somewhere else on the site. And you won't get frustrated by having your question closed, and the folks reading it won't get frustrated by having to close it.

With that said, if the critical comment you're receiving is indeed rude—you should flag it. But you should also assume good faith, try to understand the frustration that motivated it, and strive to do better in the future. That might include showing your work: what did you search for, what did you find, and how didn't it help?

Searching and researching is a skill, and mastery is achieved only through practice. The abilities you gain on the road to asking questions here will serve you long into the future.

Clarity/grammar: "serve you well ..." looks like "... well long"
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wjandrea
  • 32.6k
  • 21
  • 36

A lot. An absurd amount. In fact, asking a question on Stack Overflow is the absolute last thing you ever want to do. It is a horrible shame that will forever haunt you and your descendants. If the information that you need already exists, then you should be able to find it before asking.

You want to

  • Search. Like mad.
  • Read documentation.
  • Test your code.
  • Troubleshoot.
  • Read blogs.
  • Find books.
  • Follow tutorials.

After you have reached the end of your rope and the pain of not having the answer exceeds the shame of posting a question, that's when you can go ahead and ask. Because at that point, you will have done whatever research necessary to make it a good question worth asking.

...

That may have been a tad bit hyperbolic.

The important thing is that we want to help you, but you also need to help yourself. The more effort you put into your question, the more benefit you and future readers will get out of the answer(s). Understand that our time is not free, although we do not charge for it. Answering low quality, poorly researched, and/or duplicated questions becomes tiresome and does not contribute meaningfully to our goal of building a knowledge base, so please do your part to avoid this.

Doing enough research ensures that you'll have notes you can share to help inform the folks answering as to what you need. You'll have the necessary background information to understand those answers when they arrive. You won't have to contend with a poorly-written duplicate of a better answer that already exists somewhere else on the site. And you won't get frustrated by having your question closed, and the folks reading it won't get frustrated by having to close it.

With that said, if the critical comment you're receiving is indeed rude—you should flag it. But you should also assume good faith, try to understand the frustration that motivated it, and strive to do better in the future.

Searching and researching is a skill, and mastery is achieved only through practice. The abilities you gain on the road to asking questions here will serve you well long into the future.

A lot. An absurd amount. In fact, asking a question on Stack Overflow is the absolute last thing you ever want to do. It is a horrible shame that will forever haunt you and your descendants. If the information that you need already exists, then you should be able to find it before asking.

You want to

  • Search. Like mad.
  • Read documentation.
  • Test your code.
  • Troubleshoot.
  • Read blogs.
  • Find books.
  • Follow tutorials.

After you have reached the end of your rope and the pain of not having the answer exceeds the shame of posting a question, that's when you can go ahead and ask. Because at that point, you will have done whatever research necessary to make it a good question worth asking.

...

That may have been a tad bit hyperbolic.

The important thing is that we want to help you, but you also need to help yourself. The more effort you put into your question, the more benefit you and future readers will get out of the answer(s). Understand that our time is not free, although we do not charge for it. Answering low quality, poorly researched, and/or duplicated questions becomes tiresome and does not contribute meaningfully to our goal of building a knowledge base, so please do your part to avoid this.

Doing enough research ensures that you'll have notes you can share to help inform the folks answering as to what you need. You'll have the necessary background information to understand those answers when they arrive. You won't have to contend with a poorly-written duplicate of a better answer that already exists somewhere else on the site. And you won't get frustrated by having your question closed, and the folks reading it won't get frustrated by having to close it.

With that said, if the critical comment you're receiving is indeed rude—you should flag it. But you should also assume good faith, try to understand the frustration that motivated it, and strive to do better in the future.

Searching and researching is a skill, and mastery is achieved only through practice. The abilities you gain on the road to asking questions here will serve you well long into the future.

A lot. An absurd amount. In fact, asking a question on Stack Overflow is the absolute last thing you ever want to do. It is a horrible shame that will forever haunt you and your descendants. If the information that you need already exists, then you should be able to find it before asking.

You want to

  • Search. Like mad.
  • Read documentation.
  • Test your code.
  • Troubleshoot.
  • Read blogs.
  • Find books.
  • Follow tutorials.

After you have reached the end of your rope and the pain of not having the answer exceeds the shame of posting a question, that's when you can go ahead and ask. Because at that point, you will have done whatever research necessary to make it a good question worth asking.

...

That may have been a tad bit hyperbolic.

The important thing is that we want to help you, but you also need to help yourself. The more effort you put into your question, the more benefit you and future readers will get out of the answer(s). Understand that our time is not free, although we do not charge for it. Answering low quality, poorly researched, and/or duplicated questions becomes tiresome and does not contribute meaningfully to our goal of building a knowledge base, so please do your part to avoid this.

Doing enough research ensures that you'll have notes you can share to help inform the folks answering as to what you need. You'll have the necessary background information to understand those answers when they arrive. You won't have to contend with a poorly-written duplicate of a better answer that already exists somewhere else on the site. And you won't get frustrated by having your question closed, and the folks reading it won't get frustrated by having to close it.

With that said, if the critical comment you're receiving is indeed rude—you should flag it. But you should also assume good faith, try to understand the frustration that motivated it, and strive to do better in the future.

Searching and researching is a skill, and mastery is achieved only through practice. The abilities you gain on the road to asking questions here will serve you long into the future.

Add back hyperbole/satire: The way this answer was originally written implied that some people ask for too much effort, but over time that tone has been edited away. On the other hand, it also wasn't obvious enough that it was satire originally (tone is hard online), so make that extra clear.
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wjandrea
  • 32.6k
  • 21
  • 36

A lot. AskingAn absurd amount. In fact, asking a question on Stack Overflow should beis the absolute last step inthing you ever want to do. It is a horrible shame that will forever haunt you and your process for finding an answer—ifdescendants. If the information that you need already exists, then you should be able to find it before asking.

You want to

  • Search. Like mad.
  • Read documentation.
  • Test your code.
  • Troubleshoot.
  • Read blogs.
  • Find books.
  • Follow tutorials.

After you have reached the end of your rope withand the pain of not having the answer exceeds the shame of posting a question, that's when you can go ahead and ask. Because at that point, you will have done whatever research necessary to make it a good question worth asking. You'll have notes you can share to help inform the folks answering as to what you need 

. You'll have the necessary background information to understand those answers when they arrive. You won't.

That may have to contend with a poorly-written duplicate ofbeen a better answer that already exists somewhere else on the site. And you won't get frustrated by having your question closed, and the folks reading it won't get frustrated by having to close ittad bit hyperbolic.

It isThe important to emphasizething is that we want to help you, but you also need to help yourself. The more effort you put into your question, the more benefit that you and future readers will get out of the answer(s). Understand that our time is not free, although we do not charge for it. Answering low quality, poorly researched, and/or duplicated questions becomes tiresome and does not contribute meaningfully to our goal of building a knowledge base, so please do your part to avoid this.

Doing enough research ensures that you'll have notes you can share to help inform the folks answering as to what you need. You'll have the necessary background information to understand those answers when they arrive. You won't have to contend with a poorly-written duplicate of a better answer that already exists somewhere else on the site. And you won't get frustrated by having your question closed, and the folks reading it won't get frustrated by having to close it.

With that said, if the critical comment you're receiving is indeed rude—you should flag it. But you should also assume good faith, try to understand the frustration that motivated it, and strive to do better in the future.

Searching and researching is a skill, and mastery is achieved only through practice. The abilities you gain on the road to asking questions here will serve you well long into the future.

A lot. Asking a question on Stack Overflow should be the last step in your process for finding an answer—if the information that you need already exists, then you should be able to find it before asking.

You want to

  • Search. Like mad.
  • Read documentation.
  • Test your code.
  • Troubleshoot.
  • Read blogs.
  • Find books.
  • Follow tutorials.

After you have reached the end of your rope with the pain of not having the answer, that's when you can go ahead and ask. Because at that point, you will have done whatever research necessary to make it a good question worth asking. You'll have notes you can share to help inform the folks answering as to what you need. You'll have the necessary background information to understand those answers when they arrive. You won't have to contend with a poorly-written duplicate of a better answer that already exists somewhere else on the site. And you won't get frustrated by having your question closed, and the folks reading it won't get frustrated by having to close it.

It is important to emphasize that we want to help you, but you also need to help yourself. The more effort you put into your question, the more benefit that you and future readers will get out of the answer(s). Understand that our time is not free, although we do not charge for it. Answering low quality, poorly researched, and/or duplicated questions becomes tiresome and does not contribute meaningfully to our goal of building a knowledge base, so please do your part to avoid this.

With that said, if the critical comment you're receiving is indeed rude—you should flag it. But you should also assume good faith, try to understand the frustration that motivated it, and strive to do better in the future.

Searching and researching is a skill, and mastery is achieved only through practice. The abilities you gain on the road to asking questions here will serve you well long into the future.

A lot. An absurd amount. In fact, asking a question on Stack Overflow is the absolute last thing you ever want to do. It is a horrible shame that will forever haunt you and your descendants. If the information that you need already exists, then you should be able to find it before asking.

You want to

  • Search. Like mad.
  • Read documentation.
  • Test your code.
  • Troubleshoot.
  • Read blogs.
  • Find books.
  • Follow tutorials.

After you have reached the end of your rope and the pain of not having the answer exceeds the shame of posting a question, that's when you can go ahead and ask. Because at that point, you will have done whatever research necessary to make it a good question worth asking. 

...

That may have been a tad bit hyperbolic.

The important thing is that we want to help you, but you also need to help yourself. The more effort you put into your question, the more benefit you and future readers will get out of the answer(s). Understand that our time is not free, although we do not charge for it. Answering low quality, poorly researched, and/or duplicated questions becomes tiresome and does not contribute meaningfully to our goal of building a knowledge base, so please do your part to avoid this.

Doing enough research ensures that you'll have notes you can share to help inform the folks answering as to what you need. You'll have the necessary background information to understand those answers when they arrive. You won't have to contend with a poorly-written duplicate of a better answer that already exists somewhere else on the site. And you won't get frustrated by having your question closed, and the folks reading it won't get frustrated by having to close it.

With that said, if the critical comment you're receiving is indeed rude—you should flag it. But you should also assume good faith, try to understand the frustration that motivated it, and strive to do better in the future.

Searching and researching is a skill, and mastery is achieved only through practice. The abilities you gain on the road to asking questions here will serve you well long into the future.

The majority of "not enough research" questions I've encountered could have been resolved by pulling up the documentation for that language/library/tool. Seems worthwhile to add here, though I understand this isn't meant to be an exhaustive list.
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Sean
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Rollback to Revision 33: the vast majority of style guides do *not* recommend spaces on either side of an em-dash, and even if you prefer it, that is not a valid reason to impose your personal, subjective preference on someone else's answer. There is definitely no readability issue. (comment edited Aug 26, 2022 at 4:20)
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Cody Gray Mod
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Just two spaces between dash
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added 13 characters in body
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added 291 characters in body
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Cody Gray Mod
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Post Locked by Cody GrayMod
Notice added Comments only by Cody GrayMod
Reapplying an edit from the history to remove reference to a non-existent comment
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pppery
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Post Unlocked by Cody GrayMod
Notice removed Content dispute by Cody GrayMod
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Rollback to Revision 3
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George Stocker Mod
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Rollback to Revision 4
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George Stocker Mod
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Rollback to Revision 12
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user4639281
user4639281
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Add specific research resources and be more explicit about sharing the research in the Q itself.
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Dan Bron
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Rollback to Revision 12
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Cody Gray Mod
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Rollback to Revision 21
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jpmc26
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How many times and in different ways do we need to emphasise the need to research before asking, and the answerer's time considerations?
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Noob Saibot
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How many times and in different ways do we need to emphasise the need to research before asking?
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Noob Saibot
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Rollback to Revision 19 - Beating dead horse
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Noob Saibot
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trying to replace the apparently controversial text; ending on "tiresome" is kind of abrupt
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jpmc26
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