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Jan 2, 2019 at 7:54 comment added Raedwald "User could not debug their code" already has a close reason: the reason that asks for a MCVE. The request for an MCVE is a stealth request: truely producing an MCVE would be doing some debugging, and either solve the problem or produce an interesting question.
Mar 9, 2018 at 16:05 comment added Andy Clifton Nope. Q&A. But I see almost no way to avoid a tiny bit of mentoring - that's what happens when you engage with someone. You've changed the relationship.
Mar 9, 2018 at 15:54 comment added Makoto ...Do you view a site like Stack Overflow as a mentorship site?
Mar 9, 2018 at 15:16 comment added Andy Clifton Hmm. To me, it is mentorship in this case because B & C attempted to help. What I was trying to get at with my answer was how to move beyond not giving user A any help at all, but at the same time how to avoid having to engage in a lengthy one-on-one dialog with that user (been there, done that). Also, not everyone gets how to debug. Another part of the problem today is that there's a really cool website called stackoverflow that makes it seem like you can get a specific answer really quickly, where as before most of us used to build skills by RTFM'ing because dialup was so slow...
Mar 9, 2018 at 14:29 comment added Makoto I should be clear here. This isn't a mentorship situation. This is a vanilla, someone-asked-a-question-and-can't-debug-their-code-period situation. It seems that the desire to help is there, which is...kind of the issue? It doesn't scale well to mentor and tutor everyone who just doesn't know how to fundamental and basic things like debugging. Even the students I tutor - some of which have had no formal CS background - understand the concepts of figuring out how their code works. Interestingly enough I believe they had that before I got there...
Mar 9, 2018 at 9:34 history answered Andy Clifton CC BY-SA 3.0