This proposal, like many others before it, all suffer from the same fatal flaw:
determine a minimal understanding
Let me be as blunt as I can here.
"Minimal understanding" is subjective.
I'm a software engineer with five years of experience in the industry. I've participated on this site for a little over five years. When I first came on, the understanding I had was limited to what I knew from college course work and my own experimentation with Python, and I used that to great success.
When I asked my first question here, any number of arguments could be made that I didn't have a "minimal understanding" of what the problem domain was.
- Was the issue IO bound or CPU bound?
- Was I experienced enough to understand any potential answers coming my way? (Obviously not)
- Would I get the most value from an answer here, or would I be better served on some godforsaken forum elsewhere?
Or what about one of my more recent questionsone of my more recent questions? An argument could be made for me not having a "minimal understanding" of the framework I'm using.
- I had failed to check the actual produced JAR for any duplicates - I had thought that simply wasn't a thing.
- I had considered the Oracle forums to see if they knew anything or had any insights, but stopped short due to their relatively slow response time and lack of cohesion.
- Six answerers simply could not figure out what it was I was trying to get at, which led me to think that I was the one with the communication issue. (Turns out, they were guessing wildly.)
Or what about my worst question? I had demonstrated some understanding of Rails, and none of the patterns that Rails teaches you even apply to something like this. So, I sheepishly asked the community if they knew this was even possible.
- Oh, I got slaughtered on this question. Worse, there's nothing I can do to fix it; that was a job ago and that code base is long since gone anyway.
So I'll say this again.
"Minimal understanding" is subjective.
Of the three questions I've provided for you above, what test could possibly be administered to determine that a potential OP has some level of minimal understanding to even ask this?
Let me tell you what wouldn't be useful:
- Name three programming languages.
- Name a programming IDE.
- What is 67 + (6*3 + 9)/2 - 1000?
None of these questions tell you if the person is competent at programming, or capable of answering a test. And I truly doubt that any test that could do that would mean that we'd get better questions. Quite the opposite; now that a decent-sized test has come up on Stack Overflow, we're not going to bother with Stack Overflow because asking is genuinely too much of a hassle.
I don't deny that there are a lot of crap questions out there. But there's no way to pre-screen the kind of askers you get here that will truly evaluate their level of experience or intellect.
And we haven't even begun to talk about ESL...