How to handle the stream of new-user questions (Caveat: the **subset of beginner questions [on the topic of Python classes] that are good, as in "a practical, answerable problem that is unique to software development", per the SO FAQ: what's on-topic. Rants about bad questions and how badly they deserve to die are offtopic)
Since even the good ones get closed (often mistakenly) as offtopic they'll never get any canonical, so in order to not be unwelcoming to beginners, when we handle/close the good ones, what else should we do/not do? There is a real and non-trivial paradigm shift when migrating to Python from PERL, Java or SQL.
- are they on-topic for CodeReview.SE? SoftwareEngineering.SE? if not, then where in SE universe to migrate to? if nowhere, then isn't that damaging to how SO handles (good) beginners' questions?
- also, it's often ok to vote-to-migrate/close, but why should quality questions get downvoted heavily (as long as the code is near-working, shows effort, and the question is not VLQ/Too Broad, asks a coherent albeit offtopic for SOquestion)? Seems unreasonable.
- should we tag them? class, oop or what? (Incidentally, this is also a clear reason why suggestions to burninate class would make SO/SE new-user-unfriendly)
Examples:
- When is it necessary to use a class?
- Python classes and how to use them style-wise
- python: need direction on how to use classes properly
- How to use Classes in python?
- python: how to use/declare variables in a class
- how to use classes in python
- Python classes object
- How to use classes to inherit variables and methods in Python 3?
- ... and many more ...