The truth is that Stack Overflow is the best source for answers to commonly asked questions about poorly documented software. The top-rated answers are always much better than the original documentation.
And let's be honest: most software documentation is poor. The conceit of "read the manual" is the fanciful notion that the manual is actually good. The manual is usually awful. Even the manuals for popular software projects tend to be disjointed, jargon-filled tomes of incomplete answers. They often only make sense to users who already know how to use the software and just need a reference for fine details.
Most software is just a collection of arbitrary design choices made by a small team of peculiar people with a limited set of skills. Then the supplicants hold up the manual like a tablet from heaven and reject anybody who does not recite the catechism.
We really shouldn't delude ourselves into believing the documentation is good or even that the software makes sense. At its best, Stack Overflow breaks through the dysfunction and provides clear, complete answers to specific, widely applicable questions.
I find it counter-productive to require users to demonstrate how much effort they put into researching the question. If they are still confused after expending a lot of effort, then they probably are not even capable of writing a concise summary of the things they have learned. Their attempted solutions are likely overly complicated. Having them list all of the things they do not understand is not going to help anyone.
But I find that even if the documentation is confusing, I can usually learn enough from reading it to ask a well-posed question.
The principal criterion should be the clarity and focus of the question (Is the question understandable, answerable, and specific?). The second criterion should be whether the question is of practical importance (will others find the answer useful, too?) The final criterion should be whether the same question has already been answered somewhere else. If it has, that is fine, just mark the question as a duplicate and provide a link to the answer. Problem solved.
If it is a clear, concise question of practical importance that has not been answered somewhere else already, then Stack Overflow ought to provide the answer. How much effort went into posing the question is completely irrelevant, especially if many others will have the same exact question.
Tell us what you found and why it didn’t meet your needs.
seems a good idea to me. Aaron Kurtzhal emphasized it from the faq. Let the community decide whether your amount of research in the particular topic was sweet, and give you helpful, constructive feedback if it needs improvement.[How much research effort is expected of Stack Overflow users?](https://meta.stackoverflow.com/q/261592/3257622)