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Nov 13, 2018 at 16:40 comment added halfer Righto @TerryCarmen, thanks. I see what you mean now!
Nov 13, 2018 at 16:37 comment added Terry Carmen @halfer I was agreeing with you. Can't find your original comment right now.
Nov 13, 2018 at 16:35 comment added halfer @TerryCarmen: I don't think I have ever taken the view that it is wrong to ask for help. Can you indicate what remark I made that gave you that impression, so that I might clarify it? I believe the themes I have covered in this thread are (1) begging and (2) requests for free work (i.e. overly broad requests).
Nov 13, 2018 at 16:32 comment added Terry Carmen @halfer There's nothing wrong with asking for help. I've been writing SQL queries since the 80's but sill ended up asking for help because I had been staring at the same 5 lines all day. It turns out that MySQL will happily stuff a DATETIME into a DATE and truncate the time portion and not complain. Everybody needs help sometimes.
Nov 9, 2018 at 19:52 comment added Robert Niestroj Thier English is poor and they cant find the solution in their native not-English language.
Nov 9, 2018 at 17:14 comment added Tim Also: they want the answer quickly, and asking someone who knows is always perceived as being faster than googling it. Although as pointed out by others here, googling isn't any slower than posting a stack overflow question (and then patiently waiting for an answer; I once waited 8 months!) It's just that perception that someone who knows can just quickly tell you, whether or not it's a true assumption. The attitude of, if I can find someone who knows, I don't need to know. Personally, I not only want to learn for myself, but also document it so that 1) I don't forget, and 2) others benefit.
Nov 9, 2018 at 8:47 comment added halfer @PeterCordes: your implication that readers are susceptible to manipulation to greatly varying degrees is worth thinking about. I wonder if I am irritated by it to a high degree because I know that, to some extent, I am affected by it. It feels coercive. (In my link above, I explored the idea that some of this phenomenon is affected by the cultural background of both writers and readers. In my Stack Overflow experience, some countries normalise pleading behaviours in which a sense of helplessness and deferentialism is encouraged, which I find embarrassing).
Nov 8, 2018 at 22:36 comment added halfer @senderle: absolutely; well put.
Nov 8, 2018 at 22:29 comment added Bill K +1 I've programmed forever but sometimes I just can't figure out the magic phrase to get google to spit out the correct results to some software dilemma. I've asked questions where I absolutely knew there was an answer out there but 10 minutes of searching had lead to nothing at all of use! I'll post on SO, continue to search, then get an answer on SO while still not having found an answer myself, just because I was missing some magic word I hadn't considered.
Nov 8, 2018 at 21:33 comment added Peter Cordes @halfer: That's a good analysis of why begging is such a bad thing: as you say readers become responsible for that suffering if they do not help. I've felt that way with followup comments on my answers sometimes. Begging right in the question itself has nearly no emotional impact on me, though. SO is completely the wrong place for "help me now" requests, and they're usually the lowest future value questions that are just clutter to future searchers. (Trivial variation on something common, or full of too many errors and misconceptions for one answer. SO isn't a tutoring service.)
Nov 8, 2018 at 20:07 comment added senderle @halfer, I do see your point. I would still say that some begging is communicative rather than strategic or manipulative (consciously or otherwise). But telling the difference is not trivial. This is one of many instances of the more general dilemma the site faces -- identifying and redirecting bad actors without driving away good ones.
Nov 8, 2018 at 18:42 comment added halfer (I'd be willing to use other descriptive words if you find my language too strong - I am using these words merely in their descriptive capacity, rather then something that is intended to be excessively condemnatory).
Nov 8, 2018 at 18:40 comment added halfer @senderle: I see your point regarding emotional manipulation. I don't mean to suggest it is fraudulent; what I am getting at here is that writers are telling readers that their suffering and woe will end if only a kind soul will help them. In other words, readers become responsible for that suffering if they do not help. I think that can reasonably be called manipulative, even if it is not necessarily an entirely conscious strategy.
Nov 8, 2018 at 18:37 comment added halfer @mbrig: I think Meta is of the view that begging is not sufficiently important as to require a mod flag. When I see it, I edit out the chatty material and paste a boilerplate comment, and downvote if the begging was particularly egregious (e.g. it amounts to title vandalism). This is perhaps more educational than before, where I would just edit and downvote.
Nov 8, 2018 at 18:34 comment added halfer @senderle: I hear you. The view I take is that begging can be added for two reasons: (1) as an emotional release from frustration, which is understandable, and (2) to indicate that the writer would like a fast response or priority treatment over other questions. My objections to begging stem entirely from the second category. It is not that I wish to be hard on people; indeed, the purpose of my policy is to protect valuable helpers, so they are encouraged to help over the long term.
Nov 8, 2018 at 16:11 comment added mbrig @halfer indeed, I didn't mean to imply that begging should be rewarded (especially here on SO), just that I no longer get angry at such people. DV/Flag/etc as needed and move on is my plan now.
Nov 8, 2018 at 15:09 comment added senderle @halfer, describing begging as "a form of emotional manipulation" is pretty cynical. There's a big difference between expressing false emotion to manipulate people and expressing true emotion resulting from genuine suffering and need. Presumably some begging falls into the former category, but all of it?
Nov 8, 2018 at 13:32 comment added Joe W One thing that should also be pointed out is that two people can google with the same search and get completely different results since google does customize the search results for everyone
Nov 8, 2018 at 8:06 comment added halfer I have tried to explore this theme on this question here.
Nov 8, 2018 at 8:05 comment added halfer @mbrig: begging is to be strongly discouraged, even though we can understand what gives rise to it. It is, by definition, a form of emotional manipulation, and is beyond the pale when used against volunteers one does not know. On IRC, where one has pre-existing relationships (or with colleagues where one knows there is a greater available well of kindness) it is perhaps more forgivable. My general concern is helper burn-out, which comes from people being manipulated to assist more than they have energy for.
Nov 8, 2018 at 5:10 comment added mbrig @halfer before I get too mad at those people I try to remember the time I spent three hours trying to work with a non-zero indexed array (from a VBA library) in C# before basically begging on IRC for somebody to solve my problem. Not my finest hour, but I think we all have those days...
Nov 7, 2018 at 19:39 comment added halfer • They have got sick of their problem/homework and want someone to finish it (just this once).
Nov 7, 2018 at 10:31 comment added Jongware • Their variables have different names.
Nov 6, 2018 at 22:39 history answered BSMP CC BY-SA 4.0