I quite often see questions that just misunderstand what Stack Overflow is all about. I am as firm as just about anybody that people should read carefully what is and what is not on offer, but we all know that often they don't.
My direct experience is almost entirely with users of statistical software. Many of their questions would look lazy, lousy, or both to very many programmers. However, they are often naively hoping that SO may be a place to help with coding, usually when their problem is that they have no code or are working with other people's code and want to go beyond it.
I see no contradiction between firmly down-voting, voting to close, and explaining why such posters are not meeting the expectations of SO -- and also giving positive advice about where the OP might be better served, chiefly dedicated forums where there is much more tolerance, even an expectation that clueless beginners need to start somewhere.
Other answers I've read seem to lack any inclination to show any help at all. The refrain is "Such questions should not be asked, so the OP should just be told to go away." That is right, but nothing rules out adding a gentler message "Sorry, but we don't sell that here, yet X may be a better bet for you".
Although aimed at the OP, such advice should be helpful to others in a similar situation -- while a thread remains visible (and ideally that wouldn't be long).
I have no experience with Codementor and offer no comments on it. The OP's question starts with "help on other websites" and ends by focusing on Codementor.