This question was asked and, somewhat predictably, closed:
The question (reproduced at the bottom in case of deletion), to my mind, was horrible (though most of that was due to the terrible spelling, but that's salvageable, and had I considered the question sufficiently worth asking, I would have corrected the spelling and grammar happily enough) and was closed put on hold as 'too broad.'
In the comments, though, I had a discussion with another user (it's public information, and visible by following the link, but I'll not name that user since it serves no purpose to do so):
other-user-1: These broad questions can often end up being very usefull for beginners that are new to web development.
other-user-2: Exactly - how are people supposed to learn about modern web design if they have no idea what to even Google or how things work? The only place to start is with a broad question. Instead of making StackOverflow a welcoming place for a new user, they got 5 down votes and their question locked.
me: "how are people supposed to learn about <subject>" - elsewhere, via any means they like. This isn't a beginners, or basics, site: it's a site for 'professional and enthusiasts.
other-user-2: you have seen the front page right? People get help for all kinds of basic questions. Looking at your history, half of the questions you asked when you were starting out could be classified as beginners questions. If you had gotten all of those closed and down voted instead of answered - would you have stuck around?
me: there's that, certainly; and I was lucky enough to get here when the criteria was different, and those answering were perhaps more tolerant. But this question remains, I think, too open-ended (rather than simply 'basic' or 'beginner') to be objectively answered.
other-user-2: but it was objectively answered. There are tool chains that modern front end developers use and this was the answer that was provided and it was helpful to the person that asked. This is a prime example why so many people have stopped answering questions - we try and help and then get told that the question wasn't good enough to deserve an answer. It's just gotten ridiculous and your first comment is everything that is wrong with the StackOverflow mod squad, you don't even know what this site is for anymore.
I haven't flagged the comments of that other user because I don't feel they're offensive or problematic (though the 'StackOverflow mod squad' part sort of skirts that a little closely, but I'm perhaps being too sensitive; and obviously they're 'noisy' and, now, probably 'obsolete').
He certainly raises a valid point, though, in that my early questions were genuinely basic and, had they been downvoted to oblivion and closed by others, I probably wouldn't have stuck around.
My question, I suppose, is: is this user right? Are we becoming too stringent, too abrasive, too intolerant? Or, less of the 'we': am I being too harsh? Is there any way this question could have been salvaged?
Influences on my current behaviour would include:
- Are high-reputation users answering fewer questions?
- More effective closing / downvoting of junk questions to help with the signal-noise ratio?
- Question quality is dropping on Stack Overflow
Reproduced question, for posterity:
How do web designers do complicated CSS coding?
I am new to web designing.I am in a habbit of viewing the source code of web pages by clicking right click>view page source and what i see is CSS files flooded with vast and complicated CSS code.I have learnt CSS and CSS 3. But i often think that How could designers code such vast CSS files? How much time it takes? Do they do all the coding by typing themselves or generate the code with the help of some program. Plz do reply me.