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Active reading [<https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/sugarcoat#Verb> - in this context it is not about syntactic sugar for code].
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Peter Mortensen
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My experience was just fine. But I was already a programming veteran when SO appeared, so my experience is not typical.

I'm actually writing this answer because I have a general objection to the idea that it is possible to make the first question on a general Q&A site a good experience.

The first time you do anything is rarely a good experience.

First time playing the violin, your first dance, your first marriage, you name it. You have no clue, and it shows. That's unavoidable. Don't try to "sugar-code""sugarcoat" it. Sure, the reactions should not be actively mean. But:

It is not only unavoidable but desirable that people tell you that you have no clue.

We really don't want your next question be equally stupid. Most good first questions have one thing in common: They were not asked.

My experience was just fine. But I was already a programming veteran when SO appeared, so my experience is not typical.

I'm actually writing this answer because I have a general objection to the idea that it is possible to make the first question on a general Q&A site a good experience.

The first time you do anything is rarely a good experience.

First time playing the violin, your first dance, your first marriage, you name it. You have no clue, and it shows. That's unavoidable. Don't try to "sugar-code" it. Sure, the reactions should not be actively mean. But:

It is not only unavoidable but desirable that people tell you that you have no clue.

We really don't want your next question be equally stupid. Most good first questions have one thing in common: They were not asked.

My experience was just fine. But I was already a programming veteran when SO appeared, so my experience is not typical.

I'm actually writing this answer because I have a general objection to the idea that it is possible to make the first question on a general Q&A site a good experience.

The first time you do anything is rarely a good experience.

First time playing the violin, your first dance, your first marriage, you name it. You have no clue, and it shows. That's unavoidable. Don't try to "sugarcoat" it. Sure, the reactions should not be actively mean. But:

It is not only unavoidable but desirable that people tell you that you have no clue.

We really don't want your next question be equally stupid. Most good first questions have one thing in common: They were not asked.

Source Link

My experience was just fine. But I was already a programming veteran when SO appeared, so my experience is not typical.

I'm actually writing this answer because I have a general objection to the idea that it is possible to make the first question on a general Q&A site a good experience.

The first time you do anything is rarely a good experience.

First time playing the violin, your first dance, your first marriage, you name it. You have no clue, and it shows. That's unavoidable. Don't try to "sugar-code" it. Sure, the reactions should not be actively mean. But:

It is not only unavoidable but desirable that people tell you that you have no clue.

We really don't want your next question be equally stupid. Most good first questions have one thing in common: They were not asked.