Timeline for What happens to my questions that are never answered?
Current License: CC BY-SA 4.0
11 events
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Jun 4, 2019 at 15:33 | comment | added | Heretic Monkey | @TinyGiant I take some umbrage with the word "outlandish". I'm not sure how you got to that from asking someone to research how to add two numbers in C#. Not to mention how you went from my insistence on showing a modicum of research effort to wanting "garbage debugging questions" (which are often garbage because they don't do research). In any case, I doubt we'll see eye to eye on this, so I will take my leave. | |
Jun 4, 2019 at 15:17 | comment | added | user4639281 | @HereticMonkey what tends to drive experts away more is when everyone insists that all questions must be garbage debugging questions, or must include so much research as to be rendered pointless. I want interesting questions to answer, not useless debugging questions or walls of text from people just trying to satisfy your outlandish research requirements. | |
Jun 4, 2019 at 15:14 | comment | added | Heretic Monkey | I guess we'll just have to disagree then, @TinyGiant. I feel that your standard will lower the quality of questions asked on the site to such a degree that it will drive away experts looking for interesting questions to answer and the site will suffer for it. | |
Jun 4, 2019 at 15:04 | comment | added | user4639281 | @HereticMonkey no that's entirely the point. If you find such a question not useful then downvote it. Questions don't lack research effort because the answer is obvious to you, or even because the information may exist elsewhere on the internet. The only research that is relevant on Stack Overflow is research on Stack Overflow. | |
Jun 4, 2019 at 12:04 | comment | added | Heretic Monkey | @TinyGiant "If there is no duplicate then the question cannot possibly show a lack of research effort." That's one of the most ludicrous statements I've heard for a while. "How do I add two Int32 values in C#?" may not have a duplicate, but it certainly shows a lack of research effort. It may not be closeable for that reason, but that does not absolve the questioner's obvious lack of research. | |
Jun 4, 2019 at 1:45 | history | edited | Pang | CC BY-SA 4.0 |
Added link to help page for privilege for setting bounties.
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Jun 4, 2019 at 1:33 | history | edited | Peter Mortensen | CC BY-SA 4.0 |
Active reading.
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Jun 3, 2019 at 22:50 | comment | added | user4639281 | Only debugging questions require minimal reproducible examples. How-to questions do not require code of any sort, nor do they require an attempt to solve the problem or any other evidence of effort solving the problem. If they show a lack of research effort they should be closed as a duplicate. If there is no duplicate then the question cannot possibly show a lack of research effort. How-to questions must be reasonably scoped (asking about 1 thing, not 5 things) and well-defined (they must be unambiguous, not open to interpretation). | |
Jun 3, 2019 at 17:17 | vote | accept | Mister SirCode | ||
Jun 4, 2019 at 18:18 | |||||
Jun 3, 2019 at 15:09 | history | edited | cs95 | CC BY-SA 4.0 |
deleted 1 character in body
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Jun 3, 2019 at 15:06 | history | answered | cs95 | CC BY-SA 4.0 |