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Used the official name of Stack Overflow - see section "Proper Use of the Stack Exchange Name" in http://stackoverflow.com/legal/trademark-guidance (the last section).
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Peter Mortensen
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I joined StackoverflowStack Overflow when I was a student and completely new to programming. I've been on the site now for around 3three years, and I've not experienced any elements of elitism in that time.

In this time I have asked 42 questions and out of those only 1 received downvotes and was closed (and rightly so).

All you really need to do is search before you ask and practise rubber duck debugging, and you'll never ask a question that deserves downvoting.

I did make a point, as I do with all online communities, to read and absorb the rules before posting anything, but that only really takes minimal effort to do and that's all that is all I expect of newcomers. It's not elitist to expect people to make an effort to understand the rules.

I joined Stackoverflow when I was a student and completely new to programming. I've been on the site now for around 3 years and I've not experienced any elements of elitism in that time.

In this time I have asked 42 questions and out of those only 1 received downvotes and was closed (and rightly so).

All you really need to do is search before you ask and practise rubber duck debugging and you'll never ask a question that deserves downvoting.

I did make a point, as I do with all online communities, to read and absorb the rules before posting anything but that only really takes minimal effort to do and that's all that is all I expect of newcomers. It's not elitist to expect people to make an effort to understand the rules.

I joined Stack Overflow when I was a student and completely new to programming. I've been on the site now for around three years, and I've not experienced any elements of elitism in that time.

In this time I have asked 42 questions and out of those only 1 received downvotes and was closed (and rightly so).

All you really need to do is search before you ask and practise rubber duck debugging, and you'll never ask a question that deserves downvoting.

I did make a point, as I do with all online communities, to read and absorb the rules before posting anything, but that only really takes minimal effort to do and that's all that is all I expect of newcomers. It's not elitist to expect people to make an effort to understand the rules.

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Amicable
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  • 14

I joined Stackoverflow when I was a student and completely new to programming. I've been on the site now for around 3 years and I've not experienced any elements of elitism in that time.

In this time I have asked 42 questions and out of those only 1 received downvotes and was closed (and rightly so).

All you really need to do is search before you ask and practise rubber duck debugging and you'll never ask a question that deserves downvoting.

I did make a point, as I do with all online communities, to read and absorb the rules before posting anything but that only really takes minimal effort to do and that's all that is all I expect of newcomers. It's not elitist to expect people to make an effort to understand the rules.