How am I supposed to use it, as a reader who is seeking information?
This has been recognized (by at least myself, but I'm sure others have said similar things) as one of the flaws in example-focused documentation.
Your example is about async/await. This is a complex feature, and merely showing people working examples that use it are insufficient to actually explain the feature. That is best done via Tutorial or even better Conceptual (blog-post/wiki/etc)-style documentation.
But that's not how Docs.SO works. As such, Docs.SO works best for constructs whose use is reasonably obvious by example. But really, Docs.SO is at its most effective for tasks of things. That is, rather than trying to document the language/library, you show examples of how to do a wide variety of things using the language/library. The idea (presumably) being that some set of that will also teach the reader the specifics of how those tools work.
Just look at the developer's ideas of what a good use of Docs.SO looks likeDocs.SO looks like. You couldn't read that and say that you've learned Bosun. So clearly being comprehensive and in-depth is not the point of Docs.SO (or if it is, it really fails at it).
You should not go to Docs.SO expecting to get a grounding in the specific behavior of some subsystem. You should go there when seeking information about how to use a system to do some activity. That's what examples are good at conveying, and that's what Docs.SO as a system is best and handling. To be more concrete, if you want to know what an OpenGL shader is, you go to the OpenGL Wiki page. If you want to know how to load a shader, you go to... well, also the OpenGL Wiki, but Docs.SO has some examples tooDocs.SO has some examples too.
Of course, the fact that most editors of Docs.SO are trying to turn it into a comprehensive collection of information rather than a collection of tasks to perform makes this a non-trivial problem.