The purpose of answering a trivial question would be to help a newcomer learn.
It is bad for the learner if the teacher spoon feeds an answer.
It is also bad for the learner if the teacher spoon feeds where to get the answer. Good teaching builds persistence.
Many learners just don't know the easiest route to expertise. For some learners, the desire to get an answer to a question from SO is not lazy as much as misguided. Flagging and closing does not reduce the number of people posting such questions and doesn't help a reader with a similar question who lands on the page. Homework ought to teach people to effectively use resources, including SO, tutorials, office hours, and their textbook. Flagging and closing uses a lot of SO member labor. Closing helps learners answer their questions if the closure message communicates how to learn. The best resolution of the beginner's original post, however achieved (human flagging and closing, automated redirection to a crafted answer, ...?) ought to answer two questions: "What's the easiest way to learn this? What's ok to post on Stack Overflow?" Teach them how to learn, aim to have them add human power to SO as their expertise grows, and minimize the noisy disruption to others who are using Stack Overflow.
The best answerresponse for the sake of the learner might include these elements,
- Keyword(s) that describe what they are trying to learn
- A suggestion that beginners' tutorials are good places to learn rudimentary elements
- A suggestion on how to find tutorials
- A link to a tutorial or official docs
- A suggestion to use the tutorial/documentation's index, search bar, or control-F.
"You are trying to access an element of a list using an index. Tutorials are better than SO for the basics. Try searching for "tutorial Python." I recommend How to Think Like a Computer Scientist. Look through the table of contents for your topic."