Skip to main content
added 200 characters in body
Source Link

Regarding

Obviously we wouldn't expect someone new to programming to spend months learning .... just for them to realize that calling a recursive function in an infinite loop will cause a stack overflow.

The status of the questioner should have nothing to do with how members should respond to questions (including voting and closing) since the key is and always has been the question quality and relevance itself, regardless of who asked it or where they currently are in their programming journey. This isn't a forum or even a help site but rather a question and answer site where the goal is to have a repository of questions and answers that help future visitors. So you ask "where that line is drawn", and my answer is: "there is no line". A question stands and falls on its own.

Having said this, I will add that direct help often is obtained but more of as a beneficial side-effect of the site.

I will also add a useful point brought up by "Andreas detests censorship", in that is usually not fruitful to make assumptions as to why someone voted the way that they did, unless they tell you specifically, and then you're not assuming.

Regarding

Obviously we wouldn't expect someone new to programming to spend months learning .... just for them to realize that calling a recursive function in an infinite loop will cause a stack overflow.

The status of the questioner should have nothing to do with how members should respond to questions (including voting and closing) since the key is and always has been the question quality and relevance itself, regardless of who asked it or where they currently are in their programming journey. This isn't a forum or even a help site but rather a question and answer site where the goal is to have a repository of questions and answers that help future visitors. So you ask "where that line is drawn", and my answer is: "there is no line". A question stands and falls on its own.

Having said this, I will add that direct help often is obtained but more of as a beneficial side-effect of the site.

Regarding

Obviously we wouldn't expect someone new to programming to spend months learning .... just for them to realize that calling a recursive function in an infinite loop will cause a stack overflow.

The status of the questioner should have nothing to do with how members should respond to questions (including voting and closing) since the key is and always has been the question quality and relevance itself, regardless of who asked it or where they currently are in their programming journey. This isn't a forum or even a help site but rather a question and answer site where the goal is to have a repository of questions and answers that help future visitors. So you ask "where that line is drawn", and my answer is: "there is no line". A question stands and falls on its own.

Having said this, I will add that direct help often is obtained but more of as a beneficial side-effect of the site.

I will also add a useful point brought up by "Andreas detests censorship", in that is usually not fruitful to make assumptions as to why someone voted the way that they did, unless they tell you specifically, and then you're not assuming.

Source Link

Regarding

Obviously we wouldn't expect someone new to programming to spend months learning .... just for them to realize that calling a recursive function in an infinite loop will cause a stack overflow.

The status of the questioner should have nothing to do with how members should respond to questions (including voting and closing) since the key is and always has been the question quality and relevance itself, regardless of who asked it or where they currently are in their programming journey. This isn't a forum or even a help site but rather a question and answer site where the goal is to have a repository of questions and answers that help future visitors. So you ask "where that line is drawn", and my answer is: "there is no line". A question stands and falls on its own.

Having said this, I will add that direct help often is obtained but more of as a beneficial side-effect of the site.