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To start with, yes, we should be closing these down. They're not useful questions. StackOverflow's goal is to be an information repository for people to learn from, not a free code debugging service. Questions at this level of specificity and that lack research are not going to be useful to other people. It is a completely appropriate action to close these as duplicates of questions that have answers explaining the real meaning of the error and how to go about fixing it. So as stated in the comments, find an appropriate dupe (or create a canonical) and start closing.

You have a gold badge in Python as well, meaning you can unilaterally close these. You might be hesitant to use this ability on such a large number of questions, but I would encourage you to go ahead with it. The close hammer has been called a "resounding success""resounding success", and this kind of trash clean up is exactly what it was intended to aid with. If you need help, coordinate with other users (here, chat).

I do think that posting on meta asking about issues like this is a good idea. Given the sheer number of affected questions, this isn't something you want to start doing without making sure you're on the right track. Maybe we need a catchy phrase to describe these kinds of efforts, like tag removal has "burnination."

As for going forward, the efforts to clean up the existing mess may not stop the flood of incoming questions of this variety, but if people do bother to Google, they may find that a huge pile of results linking them to a single question to be a sign they need to read that question. It certainly can't hurt, and it may help a little going forward. It also establishes example behavior here for the users who are answering these questions; perhaps some of them might start flagging to close instead of answering. Bottom line: it won't end these questions, but it's a nice start in the right direction, and ignoring the problem will only allow it to get worse.

To start with, yes, we should be closing these down. They're not useful questions. StackOverflow's goal is to be an information repository for people to learn from, not a free code debugging service. Questions at this level of specificity and that lack research are not going to be useful to other people. It is a completely appropriate action to close these as duplicates of questions that have answers explaining the real meaning of the error and how to go about fixing it. So as stated in the comments, find an appropriate dupe (or create a canonical) and start closing.

You have a gold badge in Python as well, meaning you can unilaterally close these. You might be hesitant to use this ability on such a large number of questions, but I would encourage you to go ahead with it. The close hammer has been called a "resounding success", and this kind of trash clean up is exactly what it was intended to aid with. If you need help, coordinate with other users (here, chat).

I do think that posting on meta asking about issues like this is a good idea. Given the sheer number of affected questions, this isn't something you want to start doing without making sure you're on the right track. Maybe we need a catchy phrase to describe these kinds of efforts, like tag removal has "burnination."

As for going forward, the efforts to clean up the existing mess may not stop the flood of incoming questions of this variety, but if people do bother to Google, they may find that a huge pile of results linking them to a single question to be a sign they need to read that question. It certainly can't hurt, and it may help a little going forward. It also establishes example behavior here for the users who are answering these questions; perhaps some of them might start flagging to close instead of answering. Bottom line: it won't end these questions, but it's a nice start in the right direction, and ignoring the problem will only allow it to get worse.

To start with, yes, we should be closing these down. They're not useful questions. StackOverflow's goal is to be an information repository for people to learn from, not a free code debugging service. Questions at this level of specificity and that lack research are not going to be useful to other people. It is a completely appropriate action to close these as duplicates of questions that have answers explaining the real meaning of the error and how to go about fixing it. So as stated in the comments, find an appropriate dupe (or create a canonical) and start closing.

You have a gold badge in Python as well, meaning you can unilaterally close these. You might be hesitant to use this ability on such a large number of questions, but I would encourage you to go ahead with it. The close hammer has been called a "resounding success", and this kind of trash clean up is exactly what it was intended to aid with. If you need help, coordinate with other users (here, chat).

I do think that posting on meta asking about issues like this is a good idea. Given the sheer number of affected questions, this isn't something you want to start doing without making sure you're on the right track. Maybe we need a catchy phrase to describe these kinds of efforts, like tag removal has "burnination."

As for going forward, the efforts to clean up the existing mess may not stop the flood of incoming questions of this variety, but if people do bother to Google, they may find that a huge pile of results linking them to a single question to be a sign they need to read that question. It certainly can't hurt, and it may help a little going forward. It also establishes example behavior here for the users who are answering these questions; perhaps some of them might start flagging to close instead of answering. Bottom line: it won't end these questions, but it's a nice start in the right direction, and ignoring the problem will only allow it to get worse.

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jpmc26
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To start with, yes, we should be closing these down. They're not useful questions. StackOverflow's goal is to be an information repository for people to learn from, not a free code debugging service. Questions at this level of specificity and that lack research are not going to be useful to other people. It is a completely appropriate action to close these as duplicates of questions that have answers explaining the real meaning of the error and how to go about fixing it. So as stated in the comments, find an appropriate dupe (or create a canonical) and start closing.

You have a gold badge in Python as well, meaning you can unilaterally close these. You might be hesitant to use this ability on such a large number of questions, but I would encourage you to go ahead with it. The close hammer has been called a "resounding success", and this kind of trash clean up is exactly what it was intended to aid with. If you need help, coordinate with other users (here, chat).

I do think that posting on meta asking about issues like this is a good idea. Given the sheer number of affected questions, this isn't something you want to start doing without making sure you're on the right track. Maybe we need a catchy phrase to describe these kinds of efforts, like tag removal has "burnination."

As for going forward, the efforts to clean up the existing mess may not stop the flood of incoming questions of this variety, but if people do bother to Google, they may find that a huge pile of results linking them to a single question to be a sign they need to read that question. It certainly can't hurt, and it may help a little going forward. It also establishes example behavior here for the users who are answering these questions; perhaps some of them might start flagging to close instead of answering. Bottom line: it won't end these questions, but it's a nice start in the right direction, and ignoring the problem will only allow it to get worse.

To start with, yes, we should be closing these down. They're not useful questions. StackOverflow's goal is to be an information repository for people to learn from, not a free code debugging service. It is a completely appropriate action to close these as duplicates of questions that have answers explaining the real meaning of the error and how to go about fixing it. So as stated in the comments, find an appropriate dupe (or create a canonical) and start closing.

You have a gold badge in Python as well, meaning you can unilaterally close these. You might be hesitant to use this ability on such a large number of questions, but I would encourage you to go ahead with it. The close hammer has been called a "resounding success", and this kind of trash clean up is exactly what it was intended to aid with. If you need help, coordinate with other users (here, chat).

I do think that posting on meta asking about issues like this is a good idea. Given the sheer number of affected questions, this isn't something you want to start doing without making sure you're on the right track. Maybe we need a catchy phrase to describe these kinds of efforts, like tag removal has "burnination."

As for going forward, the efforts to clean up the existing mess may not stop the flood of incoming questions of this variety, but if people do bother to Google, they may find that a huge pile of results linking them to a single question to be a sign they need to read that question. It certainly can't hurt, and it may help a little going forward. It also establishes example behavior here for the users who are answering these questions; perhaps some of them might start flagging to close instead of answering. Bottom line: it won't end these questions, but it's a nice start in the right direction, and ignoring the problem will only allow it to get worse.

To start with, yes, we should be closing these down. They're not useful questions. StackOverflow's goal is to be an information repository for people to learn from, not a free code debugging service. Questions at this level of specificity and that lack research are not going to be useful to other people. It is a completely appropriate action to close these as duplicates of questions that have answers explaining the real meaning of the error and how to go about fixing it. So as stated in the comments, find an appropriate dupe (or create a canonical) and start closing.

You have a gold badge in Python as well, meaning you can unilaterally close these. You might be hesitant to use this ability on such a large number of questions, but I would encourage you to go ahead with it. The close hammer has been called a "resounding success", and this kind of trash clean up is exactly what it was intended to aid with. If you need help, coordinate with other users (here, chat).

I do think that posting on meta asking about issues like this is a good idea. Given the sheer number of affected questions, this isn't something you want to start doing without making sure you're on the right track. Maybe we need a catchy phrase to describe these kinds of efforts, like tag removal has "burnination."

As for going forward, the efforts to clean up the existing mess may not stop the flood of incoming questions of this variety, but if people do bother to Google, they may find that a huge pile of results linking them to a single question to be a sign they need to read that question. It certainly can't hurt, and it may help a little going forward. It also establishes example behavior here for the users who are answering these questions; perhaps some of them might start flagging to close instead of answering. Bottom line: it won't end these questions, but it's a nice start in the right direction, and ignoring the problem will only allow it to get worse.

added 102 characters in body
Source Link
jpmc26
  • 29.8k
  • 8
  • 78
  • 118

To start with, yes, we should be closing these down. They're not useful questions. StackOverflow's goal is to be an information repository for people to learn from, not a free code debugging service. It is a completely appropriate action to close these as duplicates of questions that have answers explaining the real meaning of the error and how to go about fixing it. So as stated in the comments, find an appropriate dupe (or create a canonical) and start closing.

You have a gold badge in Python as well, meaning you can unilaterally close these. You might be hesitant to use this ability on such a large number of questions, but I would encourage you to go ahead with it. The close hammer has been called a "resounding success", and this kind of trash clean up is exactly what it was intended to aid with. If you need help, coordinate with other users (here, chat).

I do think that posting on meta asking about issues like this is a good idea. Given the sheer number of affected questions, this isn't something you want to start doing without making sure you're on the right track. Maybe we need a catchy phrase to describe these kinds of efforts, like tag removal has "burnination."

As for going forward, the efforts to clean up the existing mess may not stop the flood of incoming questions of this variety, but if people do bother to Google, they may find that a huge pile of results linking them to a single question to be a sign they need to read that question. It certainly can't hurt, and it may help a little going forward. It also establishes example behavior here for the users who are answering these questions; perhaps some of them might start flagging to close instead of answering. Bottom line: it won't end these questions, but it's a nice start in the right direction, and ignoring the problem will only allow it to get worse.

To start with, yes, we should be closing these down. They're not useful questions. StackOverflow's goal is to be an information repository for people to learn from, not a free code debugging service. It is a completely appropriate action to close these as duplicates of questions that have answers explaining the real meaning of the error and how to go about fixing it. So as stated in the comments, find an appropriate dupe (or create a canonical) and start closing.

You have a gold badge in Python as well, meaning you can unilaterally close these. You might be hesitant to use this ability on such a large number of questions, but I would encourage you to go ahead with it. The close hammer has been called a "resounding success", and this kind of trash clean up is exactly what it was intended to aid with. If you need help, coordinate with other users (here, chat).

I do think that posting on meta asking about issues like this is a good idea. Given the sheer number of affected questions, this isn't something you want to start doing without making sure you're on the right track.

As for going forward, the efforts to clean up the existing mess may not stop the flood of incoming questions of this variety, but if people do bother to Google, they may find that a huge pile of results linking them to a single question to be a sign they need to read that question. It certainly can't hurt, and it may help a little going forward. It also establishes example behavior here for the users who are answering these questions; perhaps some of them might start flagging to close instead of answering. Bottom line: it won't end these questions, but it's a nice start in the right direction, and ignoring the problem will only allow it to get worse.

To start with, yes, we should be closing these down. They're not useful questions. StackOverflow's goal is to be an information repository for people to learn from, not a free code debugging service. It is a completely appropriate action to close these as duplicates of questions that have answers explaining the real meaning of the error and how to go about fixing it. So as stated in the comments, find an appropriate dupe (or create a canonical) and start closing.

You have a gold badge in Python as well, meaning you can unilaterally close these. You might be hesitant to use this ability on such a large number of questions, but I would encourage you to go ahead with it. The close hammer has been called a "resounding success", and this kind of trash clean up is exactly what it was intended to aid with. If you need help, coordinate with other users (here, chat).

I do think that posting on meta asking about issues like this is a good idea. Given the sheer number of affected questions, this isn't something you want to start doing without making sure you're on the right track. Maybe we need a catchy phrase to describe these kinds of efforts, like tag removal has "burnination."

As for going forward, the efforts to clean up the existing mess may not stop the flood of incoming questions of this variety, but if people do bother to Google, they may find that a huge pile of results linking them to a single question to be a sign they need to read that question. It certainly can't hurt, and it may help a little going forward. It also establishes example behavior here for the users who are answering these questions; perhaps some of them might start flagging to close instead of answering. Bottom line: it won't end these questions, but it's a nice start in the right direction, and ignoring the problem will only allow it to get worse.

added 14 characters in body
Source Link
jpmc26
  • 29.8k
  • 8
  • 78
  • 118
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Source Link
jpmc26
  • 29.8k
  • 8
  • 78
  • 118
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