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Removed condescension
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Dexygen
  • 12.5k
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You've been a member of SO for over a decade, and you've only just realized this? Really?

Anyway, the reason for this is the lack of a requirement for showing effort. Not having this requirement made perfect sense back in the day when Stack Overflow actually attracted users who were capable of asking questions that were more theoretical in nature, or that encompassed a large amount of research and dead-ends that would've just cluttered the question.

We no longer live in that better time, and nowadays 99% of questions posted that don't show effort are also questions that expect us to do the asker's work for them. Hence the "requirement" to show effort evolved: it's a quick-and-dirty litmus test to determine if the asker merely neglected to provide context to answer their question, or if they're just trying to take advantage of this community.

The problem is, asking/requiring effort to be shown is a waste of time. If the person asking the question hasn't provided enough context to answer it - and failing to show effort is almost always a lack of context - that shouldn't be your problem. If they wanted an answer, they should have written their question properly in the first place, so vote to close, downvote, and move on.

Always remember: close reasons don't matter; getting rid of bad questions does. (Until or unless we get a close reason that allows us to stab people in the face over the internet, of course.)

You've been a member of SO for over a decade, and you've only just realized this? Really?

Anyway, the reason for this is the lack of a requirement for showing effort. Not having this requirement made perfect sense back in the day when Stack Overflow actually attracted users who were capable of asking questions that were more theoretical in nature, or that encompassed a large amount of research and dead-ends that would've just cluttered the question.

We no longer live in that better time, and nowadays 99% of questions posted that don't show effort are also questions that expect us to do the asker's work for them. Hence the "requirement" to show effort evolved: it's a quick-and-dirty litmus test to determine if the asker merely neglected to provide context to answer their question, or if they're just trying to take advantage of this community.

The problem is, asking/requiring effort to be shown is a waste of time. If the person asking the question hasn't provided enough context to answer it - and failing to show effort is almost always a lack of context - that shouldn't be your problem. If they wanted an answer, they should have written their question properly in the first place, so vote to close, downvote, and move on.

Always remember: close reasons don't matter; getting rid of bad questions does. (Until or unless we get a close reason that allows us to stab people in the face over the internet, of course.)

Anyway, the reason for this is the lack of a requirement for showing effort. Not having this requirement made perfect sense back in the day when Stack Overflow actually attracted users who were capable of asking questions that were more theoretical in nature, or that encompassed a large amount of research and dead-ends that would've just cluttered the question.

We no longer live in that better time, and nowadays 99% of questions posted that don't show effort are also questions that expect us to do the asker's work for them. Hence the "requirement" to show effort evolved: it's a quick-and-dirty litmus test to determine if the asker merely neglected to provide context to answer their question, or if they're just trying to take advantage of this community.

The problem is, asking/requiring effort to be shown is a waste of time. If the person asking the question hasn't provided enough context to answer it - and failing to show effort is almost always a lack of context - that shouldn't be your problem. If they wanted an answer, they should have written their question properly in the first place, so vote to close, downvote, and move on.

Always remember: close reasons don't matter; getting rid of bad questions does. (Until or unless we get a close reason that allows us to stab people in the face over the internet, of course.)

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Ian Kemp
  • 29.8k
  • 12
  • 116
  • 167

You've been a member of SO for over a decade, and you've only just realized this? Really?

Anyway, the reason for this is the lack of a requirement for showing effort. Not having this requirement made perfect sense back in the day when Stack Overflow actually attracted users who were capable of asking questions that were more theoretical in nature, or that encompassed a large amount of research and dead-ends that would've just cluttered the question.

We no longer live in that better time, and nowadays 99% of questions posted that don't show effort are also questions that expect us to do the asker's work for them. Hence the "requirement" to show effort evolved: it's a quick-and-dirty litmus test to determine if the asker merely neglected to provide context to answer their question, or if they're just trying to take advantage of this community.

The problem is, asking/requiring effort to be shown is a waste of time. If the person asking the question hasn't provided enough context to answer it - and failing to show effort is almost always a lack of context - that shouldn't be your problem. If they wanted an answer, they should have written their question properly in the first place, so vote to close, downvote, and move on.

Always remember: close reasons don't matter; getting rid of bad questions does. (Until or unless we get a close reason that allows us to stab people in the face over the internet, of course.)